1 Mrs. Rorer's Diet for the Sick Dietetic Treating of Diseases of the Body, What to Eat and What to Avoid in each case, Menus and the Proper Selection and Preparation of Recipes, together with a Physicians' Ready Reference List. Author of The Philadelphia Cook Book, Mrs. Rorer's New Cook Book, and many other valuable works on Cookery. PHILADELPHIA ARNOLD AND COMPANY 420 SANSOM STREET Copyright 1914 by SARAH TYSON RORER All Rights Reserved Press of George H Buchanan Company, Philadelphia UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA BARBARA CONTENTS PAGE FOREWORD 7 A WORD TO THE WISE , 9 A FEW GOLDEN RULES 15 PART ONE DISEASES ASTHMA 21 TUBERCULOSIS 25 PNEUMONIA 29 TONSILITIS 29 QUINZY 30 DISEASES OF THE HEART 30 SENILE HEART 32 ANGINA PECTORIS 34 ANEURISM 36 APOPLEXY 37 PERNICIOUS ANEMIA 39 ANEMIA (CHLOROSIS) 40 DISEASES OF THE STOMACH 45 DYSPEPSIA WITH FLATULENCY . . . . 49 ATONIC DYSPEPSIA ............. 50 HUNGRY DYSPEPSIA ,. ., 51 NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA ........... 52 ACUTE GASTRITIS 54 CHRONIC GASTRITIS 55 ULCER OF THE STOMACH 57 INTESTINAL INDIGESTION 59 ACUTE INTESTINAL CATARRH . . ., 61 CHRONIC INTESTINAL CATARRH , 62 ULCER OF THE DUODENUM 62 (3) 4 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK PAGE CHRONIC CONSTIPATION 63 APPENDICITIS 66 CHRONIC DIARRHOEA 68 ACUTE DYSENTERY 69 HEMORRHOIDS 71 PERITONITIS 72 OBESITY , 73 LEANNESS 77 GOUT 79 RHEUMATISM 81 CHRONIC RHEUMATISM 84 LIVER TROUBLES 85 CATARRHAL JAUNDICE 87 CIRRHOSIS 88 GALL STONES 88 SICK HEADACHE 90 DISEASES OF THE URINARY SYSTEM 91 URIC ACID DIATHESIS 92 ALBUMINURIA , 95 FUNCTIONAL ALBUMINURIA IN CHILDREN 96 CHRONIC BRIGHT'S DISEASE 97 ACUTE NEPHRITIS 99 NEPHRITIS 99 OXALURIA 101 CALCULI ,. 102 DIABETES 103 PREGNANCY 110 PUERPERAL 113 A FEW GOLDEN RULES FOR MOTHERS OF BOTTLE- FED BABIES 114 FEEDING OF INFANTS 116 To MODIFY MILK 117 PARTIAL MILK FEEDING 121 AFTER THE WEANING . 122 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 5 PAGE DIET FOR OLDER CHILDREN 126 MARASMUS 132 MEASLES 133 CHOREA 133 DIPHTHERIA 134 MUMPS 135 WHOOPING COUGH 135 ENURESIS 136 DIET IN RELATION TO AGE 137 COMBINATIONS SUITED TO THE AGED 139 FEEDING IN FEVER 141 TYPHOID FEVER 142 CONVALESCING TYPHOID 144 DENGUE FEVER 145 MALARIAL FEVER 145 SCARLET FEVER 145 YELLOW FEVER 147 PURPURA H^EMORRHAGICA 147 SMALLPOX 148 SKIN DISEASES 149 URTICARIA OR NETTLE RASH 149 ACNE 150 ECZEMA 152 ECZEMA IN CHILDREN 153 ALCOHOLISM 154 THE INSANE 160 CANCER 161 EXOPHTHALMIC GOITER 163 LOCOMOTOR ATAXIA 164 EPILEPSY 165 ERYSIPELAS 166 INSO"MNIA 167 ADDISON'S DISEASE 168 DIET AFTER AN ANESTHETIC . 169 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK PART TWO RECIPES PAGE PROPRIETARY FOODS 173 MEASUREMENTS 178 DIGESTIBILITY OF FOODS 178 METHODS OF COOKERY 180 SOUPS 183 FISH 210 MEATS 215 POULTRY AND GAME 228 SAUCES 236 CONDIMENTS 240 MILK 241 PEPTONIZED MILK 259 EGGS 274 VEGETABLES 282 SALADS 339 BREAD MAKING 342 CEREAL FOODS 355 FRUITS 361 NUTS 411 GELATIN JELLIES 423 VEGETABLE GELATIN JELLIES 431 DESSERTS 434 PUDDING SAUCES 439 ICE CREAM 441 BEVERAGES AND WATER GRUELS. . 443 PART THREE PHYSICIANS' READY REFERENCE LIST FOREWORD This book has been written especially for the sick. The foods here recommended for special diseases are not suited to the well. A person in perfect health must simply repair the tissues of the body with proper foods, every twenty- four hours; but when ill, the first object is to regain health, with a special diet suited to the disease. Simple, easily digested foods recommended for the sick are not necessarily good for even children or invalids; in fact, foods for the well and foods for the sick are not interchangeable. My sole desire in writing this book has been to assist those persons who must care for their sick at home, and the doctor and the nurse, without trespassing on the domain of either. In disease each case requires special attention, and the knowledge that comes from observation cannot be. sup- planted by any dictated rules. Book directions are valueless unless modified by common sense. I have purposely avoided the caloric plan of feeding, as I find many physicians who object to this theoretical and mathematical method of feeding, especially in diseases of the stomach and intestines. As an assistance to my thirty years' experience in feeding the sick, I have read most of the recent works on diet, and have added any new ideas that have been well tried out. The lists of foods given for each disease may be depended upon for ordinary cases, but each case must be watched carefully and the food changed if it does not agree. The value of a thorough acquaintance with the facts and the requirements of each individual disease cannot be too highly estimated. (7) 8 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Bartholow says : "The food supplied to the organism may be so managed as to secure very definite therapeutical results, and by employment of a special and restricted method of feeding, cures may be effected not attainable by medicinal treatment." A WORD TO THE WISE As food is the most important of our wants, it is wise to say a word about diet in health before we discuss diet in disease. "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." Food requirements vary with the occupation, climate and method of life, but a general outline may be followed by all healthy, right living persons. Do not place too much dependence on individual opin- ions. Startling announcements are every now and then made that some one form of food has produced a wonderful cure, or has made persons very ill. These statements are, as a rule, exaggerated, and many of them are advertise- ments for patented foods. Do not go off on a tangent and follow every new line of diet that is recommended. Stop, look, and listen, before you cross the road of the faddist. A correct diet must contain all the nutritive elements of the body in proper proportions protein, carbohydrates, fats, minerals, water and air. Study the chemical elements of the body, and the natural foods that will best feed these elements. Do not think too much about your food, and never talk of it at table. Keep your mind free from fear, and do not imagine that you have indigestion simply because you feel uncom- fortable after eating; you probably have eaten too much. It is not the amount of food one eats that builds the body, but it is that which is digested and assimilated. Cease eating before you have a sensation of fullness; distention of the stomach frequently makes digestion lax, and over- taxes the heart and excretory organs. One must enjoy food in order to have it do its best work; one's table must be in harmony with one's self. Eat just enough, but not an ounce too much. "Keep the patient well nourished" has taken many a person out of (9) 10 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK the world who might have lived comfortably for many years on a slim diet or a partial fast during an illness. A loss of appetite is Nature's way of saying: "fast." Give thought to your food in selection, cooking and combina- tions. Variety is necessary to keep up the appetite and produce health. Do not live, for instance, every day in the year, on roasted meat and mashed potatoes. If your neighborhood does not give full markets, change the accessible foods by different methods of cooking. For instance, beef may be broiled, roasted, baked, stewed, rolled, spiced, chopped and made into twenty different dishes, and still it is all beef. Do not eat unhealthful combinations. Flour, fruit and butter are excellent foods in their places, but when made into complicated puddings or pies, are difficult of digestion. Time, money and health have been wasted. Do not cater to habits ; they are blots upon your char- acter; get rid of them as soon as possible. If your father and mother had them, so much the greater need for you to struggle against them, that the next generation may start life without a handicap. Do not make excuses. Nature knows nothing of 'cir- cumstances. Her laws are harmonious, and if they are broken, you must pay the penalty. She never forgets, nor does she forgive bodily abuses. Knowledge is one thing, but the intelligence that puts knowledge into practice is quite another thing. Be intelligent. Do not eat when tired. Masticate thoroughly every mouthful of food, solid or liquid. . Masticate all hard foods until they are soft; do not soften them with liquids. If your digestion is already impaired, bring it back to its natural condition by selecting proper food, with not too great a variety at one meal. Good results are obtained from eating meat at one meal, and starches at another. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 11 Avoid all fried foods ; the frying pan is a remnant of barbarism. Life and vigor do not depend on the amount of meat one eats. It is far easier to keep well than to allow one's self to run down, become ill, and then try by a curative diet and drugs to get back to the right road. The dietary of the so-called civilized people of the world, has come largely from the teachings of convenience and instinct. Primitive man must have thought little about the question of dietetics. He probably knew nothing of food values, and like the Eskimo ate and drank that which was accessible, and consumed enough to keep up activity and health. Can any student of dietetics truly say that we, in this twentieth century of learning, with all our experiments and knowledge, have thought out or taught a better method? Even among the learned, the palate is still the guide, and "I like" or "I do not like" plays the most important part in the daily bills of fare. The animal of our existence is still prominent, and what we call natural instinct or natural tastes have been largely influenced by our parents and conditions of life. Modern dietitians argue that a diet composed largely of lean meats is best for the business man, and a vege- table diet is best suited to the outdoor laborer. Examina- tions, however, prove that the average United States busi- ness man breaks down between the ages of forty and fifty, with diseases that come from an over-nitrogenous diet. If the organs of the body are made to do the work in forty years instead of in eighty, as planned by Nature, a man at forty is eighty years old. We have been told over and over again that "man is as old as his arteries, digestive and excretory organs." A man is what he eats, and the diet he selects is the measure of his intelligence. We have been teaching diet, cookery and methods of serving in all our public schools for thirty years. Have you noticed any great change in the family tables of the masses? 12 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Have the fried pork and fried potatoes been replaced by carefully selected and broiled meats? Have the fruits been served in perfection, or are they still stewed with sugar for hours? Are the dining-rooms artistic and restful, or are they still semi-barbaric? I see but little change, and I do not believe that we can reach our highest attainments with- out being artistic and learned in all branches that pertain to life and living. A very young child can easily be taught the needs of the body and how to select a general diet. One need not necessarily weigh or measure every mouthful of food nor give hours to the thought and preparation of a meal at the expense of every other thing in life. Serve every meal, three times a day, three hundred and sixty-five days a year, in a simple, artistic fashion. Sit down, eat slowly and comfortably, and enjoy it. Eat to live. Health is always worth while. A little reading and a few weeks' good study will enable any housewife to create from the materials at hand, acceptable bills of fare. She must first learn combinations that go to form a balanced ration. She may have fat pork and beans, lean beef and potatoes, desserts made from starchy foods and fruits, but not eggs and milk, after a meat dinner. Bread and butter, not bread and molasses. Meat, potatoes and cauliflower or cabbage, npt meat, potatoes and rice. One starchy food, one green vegetable, one nitroge- nous dish. A puree of lentils, with baked potato and tomato salad, with bread and butter, form a complete meal. Beef or mutton, 'following puree of lentils, upsets the balance and gives too much nitrogenous food. Use plenty of pure -cold water; take it at the end of the meal, and drink it freely between meals. Do not wash your foods down with slops tea and coffee saturated with sugar and milk. If you have aches and pains, stop and think what natural law you have violated. When you discover the MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 13 error, avoid it at another time, for simple errors, repeated frequently, produce incurable diseases. The Bath Bathe every day in cold or tepid water, and rub thoroughly! to keep the skin active. Live and sleep in the open air. I have frequently noticed that persons who are afraid of air are unhygienic and uncleanly in other respects. Appetite The true natural appetite is a calling of the tissues of the body for sustenance, not the gnawing of an ill-fed stomach. When one is constantly overfed, naturally the appetite flags. A fast of three or four days, drinking plenty of water, will bring about satisfactory results. Do not tempt the appetite when it flags ; give it a rest. Do not resort to tonics or stimulants, for in nine out of ten cases, the pricking up of a flagging appetite is dangerous. Natural conditions are cast aside ; tonics, stimulants and appetizing foods are temptations. Appe- tites thus created are. unnatural; you overtax your digestion and are now really sick not because you ought to be, but because you have not listened to Nature's warning. Light breakfasts are always desirable ; they prevent the appetite from flagging. A cup of black coffee, early in the morning, with no food until twelve o'clock, is an excel- lent cure. The "torpid liver" becomes active, and the ever- present headache disappears. Cut off all sweets at the end of meals. Do not drink tea and coffee, except the one cup early in the morning. Do not eat until food tastes good. One can take the "appetite cure," as well as the "tubercu- losis cure," within the four walls of his own home, if he will only obey Nature's calling. Use the money spent for traveling, on food and conveniences, and cures will come easily. There never was a more foolish fashion than trying to get well traveling from pillar to post. Stay in comforta'ble quarters, build your own outdoor sleeping rooms, and later you may take a journey for pleasure, not for health. 14 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Avoid pies, cakes, preserves, dishes of rich meats, highly-seasoned sauces and soups. A half pint of hot, scalded, not boiled, milk, sipped before going to bed, will relieve hunger and induce sleep. As a rule, foods that are pleasant to the palate, and do not give discomfort, are not injurious. This does not mean that the nurse or caretaker must listen to the notions of the sick: Even in health, habit and early training decide the appetite. The mother likes and dislikes things, and in bringing up her children she teaches them her own short- comings. Sightly foods, with pleasant odors, nicely served, fre- quently induce a patient to eat, but as a rule, the sick will never overeat unless they are mentally deranged. Com- plete satisfaction of the appetite comes from the stomach, not from the palate. Palate appetites frequently create disturbances which complicate after feedings. The sick, more than the well, take note of results, and when once overfed they mark the discomfort and remember it, and frequently refuse even plain foods that heretofore were acceptable. Monotony will destroy even a good appetite. When only one or two articles are admissible, change the flavor by some simple method. Seek new ways of serving; use new flowers for decorations; change the china in the service. Even a new doily, or a new tray, will attract attention. Appetite is a useful, but not an infallible guide to a correct diet. A FEW GOLDEN RULES FOR THOSE WHO FEED THE SICK First of all, I should like to impress on the minds of the attendants that constant nourishment does not always bring about good conditions or cures. When the appetite flags, stop feeding. Study the case carefully, and give the food indicated by the disease. If the trouble is acute, give the parts of the body most affected by the disease, rest. If the trouble is chronic, give the parts most affected by the disease, moderately good exercise. If a person has tuberculosis, for instance, give a goodly quantity of fats and oils, eggs and milk, rich in those ele- ments which will give the lungs good healthful exercise. Pneumonia, an acute trouble, will recover more quickly on skimmed milk, beef tea and foods deficient in fat. Acute indigestion can be corrected quickly by a fast of two or three days. Chronic indigestion calls for foods that require a slight effort on the part of the digestive tract to excite the neces- sary digestive fluids. A diet for the sick is not a normal diet, and is abso- lutely unsuited to those in health. If the person is very ill, give liquid foods through a glass tube or a straw. This will excite a flow of the secre- tions of the mouth and aid digestion. Forget the isolated facts that you have stored up from everyday sayings, and apply common sense to each patient, for each is a law unto himself. Do not give four hundred calories of food, for instance, if only two hundred can be digested. Rigid rules usually have exceptions. Never overfeed the sick; it ruins digestion and hinders cure. (15) 16 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Arrange all foods in an attractive and dainty manner; see that the silver is bright, the china clean, that grease is not floating on the top of soups. A cup of unskimmed beef tea will frequently upset the patient and destroy a liking for all soups. Do not overload a dish; it robs a delicate patient of his appetite. See that all foods are well cooked, well blended and nicely garnished. Do not speak of the quality of food, nor its character, nor what you like, before the patient. Avoid conversations about food, especially while the patient is eating. While nursing is not the province of this book, I should like to say to the nurse: do not dwell on unpleasant con- ditions while the patient is eating. A patient disturbed in mind cannot get the best results from food. Any excite- ment preceding or during the feeding hour will produce unfavorable conditions, even if the food is correct. Do not think that every ounce of meat your patient eats is an ounce of nourishment or strength, for this is a great mistake. Milk is the most important of all foods for the sick; eggs, perhaps, come next, and in some cases fruit juices are of first value. Do not cram your patient. If the digestive organs are over worked, the heart will be affected and the patient generally worse : sick people, as a rule, require rest, not labor. "Keep up the nourishment" has killed many a person. "Keep the patient alive on a rational and limited diet" is a much wiser saying. Do not rely on the patient's judgment. There are thousands of misfit palates in the world. Do not dish foods before the patient; bring the tray complete. If foods must be cooked in the kitchen and brought directly to the sick room, the nurse must have them placed out of sight of the patient until she can .over- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 17 look and rearrange the tray. A dish of oatmeal porridge, with a little spilled on the outside, will frequently produce nausea. The sick are supersensitive ; every dish, no matter how simple, must be perfectly prepared and well served. Remove immediately from the sick room every particle of left-over food; do not reheat or serve it again. Do not repeat a dish in less than two days, if possible, unless the patient is on a milk diet. A mistake of this kind will fre- quently rob the patient of appetite and complicate feeding. Serve hot foods comfortably hot, on hot dishes, and cold foods comfortably cold on cold plates. If flowers are used for tray decorations, see that they have an agreeable, mild odor; heavy odors frequently destroy the appetite. Violets, roses and pansies are to be preferred. PART I DISEASES ASTHMA This disease usually overtakes those who overeat or eat hurriedly, and those who "nibble" between meals. The asthmatic patient, as a rule, is not particular as to the character of his food, if the quantity pleases his eye. The stomach is forever at work, the digestive powers are worn out, unnatural fermentations are developed, and the poisons formed are taken up by the circulation. The victim be- comes exceedingly sensitive to changes in the weather, takes cold easily, and is always looking for drafts. The great difficulty in the treatment of asthma is that the disease travels slowly, and is frequently in the chronic stage before medical advice is sought. The disease may be cured permanently if medical advice is aided by a cor- rect and restricted diet. Asthmatic patients must never dissipate; they must not overeat. Flatulency and indigestion are the forerun- ners of severe attacks, and even after a cure has been brought about, such persons can never again eat and drink with impunity. Each attack becomes more difficult to cure. Air and water are necessary accompaniments to good diet. Keep the pores of the skin open ; live in the open air both day and night. All foods must be cooked without fat. If the patient has been accustomed to taking coffee, drink a small cup early in the morning before the general breakfast. Green vegetables must be crisp, carefully washed and cooked in salted water, or served raw with olive oil and a few drops of vinegar. All foods must be thoroughly masticated. Divide the meals into convenient hours, five a day if necessary, three preferable. Use all starchy foods spar- ingly. (21) MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Clear soups Lean beef Mutton Poultry Venison Sweetbreads Tripe Broiled white-fleshed fish A little lettuce Tender celery Stewed cucumbers Squash Cress Jerusalem artichokes Globe artichokes Spinach Almonds Brazilian nuts Prunes An occasional baked apple Oranges Grape fruit Fats Fried foods Sweets Pies Cakes Puddings Starchy desserts Mashed potatoes Gravies Highly-seasoned soups Cheese Plums Strawberries Currant juice and raspberries Blackberries A little apple butter An occasional baked potato at noon Eggs Rice pudding, unsweetened Shredded wheat Whole wheat bread, twice baked Gluten bread Gluten biscuit Coffee, early in the morning A cup of weak tea in the middle of the afternoon Milk and milk preparations Buttermilk Bonnyclabber Koumys, Matzoons Orange marmalade AVOID Cabbage All cereals Breads, except twice baked Whole wheat bread Underground vegetables, as tur- nips, carrots, asparagus, salsify Pork Veal Warmed-over meats Acids, as pickles MENUS The following menus are arranged to show combina- tions of food, and how great a variety can be selected from a restricted diet. After an acute attack, give the patient only milk and milk preparations. Breakfast, seven o'clock. Two broiled chops. Peeled sliced tomato, plain. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 23 Ten o'clock. A half pint of either buttermilk or sweet milk, koumys or matzoon, taken slowly. Twelve-thirty o'clock. Rare roasted beef, spinach, lettuce salad with French dressing, almond wafer. Supper, six p. m. Three good-sized pieces of zweiback with a half pint of hot milk, over which grate the yolks of two eggs that have been cooked thirty minutes. Plain apollinaris or vichy water may be taken between meals. Breakfast, seven o'clock Broiled white fish. A slice of toasted gluten bread. Dinner, twelve-thirty. A bowl of clear .soup. Boiled mutton, mint sauce without sugar, made simply by pound- ing the mint in a little vinegar. Plain boiled cauliflower. Sliced tomato with a little French dressing. Almond wafer. Supper, six p. m. Half of a broiled chicken with two whole wheat crackers which must be thoroughly masti- cated. Breakfast. Baked apple. Two soft-boiled eggs. Two whole wheat crackers. Dinner. Clam broth. Roasted chicken. Two table- spoonfuls of boiled rice. Two tablespoonfuls of carefully- cooked spinach. An almond wafer, and an after-dinner cup of black coffee. Supper. Toasted whole wheat crackers spread lightly with two teaspoonfuls of peanut butter, masticated thor- oughly. Just before retiring, sip slowly a half pint of hot milk. Breakfast. Chopped meat, quickly broiled over a clear fire. Four tablespoonfuls of thoroughly cooked gluten, with a little milk poured over; it may be eaten with the beef. Dinner. A bowl of clear soup. A juicy broiled steak, with a baked tomato. A little finely chopped celery, with French dressing. Two almond wafers or toasted pilot bread. 24 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Supper. A pint of carefully-baked custard without sugar. A Roman meal cracker may be masticated and eaten with the custard. Breakfast. Broiled sweetbreads. A cup of clear coffee. Dinner. Clear chicken soup. The breast of a carefully- boiled chicken. Young tender peas pressed through a sieve. A little lettuce salad with French dressing. Two almond wafers. A mellow peach, or a baked apple, or a dish of stewed prunes may form the dessert. Supper. A pint of carefully-made rice pudding. Breakfast. Broiled mushrooms served on a slice of very hard-toasted bread, masticated thoroughly. Dinner. Clear soup. Roasted mutton, carefully-cooked cauliflower or Brussels sprouts, two baked onions and a small cup custard without sugar. Supper. Either a pint of buttermilk sipped slowly, or a pint of junket eaten with two almond wafers. MRS. RORER'S DI^T FOR THE SICK 25 TUBERCULOSIS Doctor Osier tells us that the cure of tuberculosis is largely a question of nutrition ; if one can make the patient grow fat, the local disease may be left to care for itself. As eggs, cream and milk are easily digested, and are rich in fatty matter, we at once turn to these as the all-important foods. It was only a few years ago that tuberculosis patients were sent to the country, where they might drink the milk warm from the cow. There seems to be more virtue and more health-giving qualities in milk with the natural warmth than in milk artificially heated. The cure of tuberculosis depends upon pure air, both day and night, and correct nutrition. The disease calls for easily-digested fatty matter cream, butter, olive oil, marrow, the yolks of eggs. I am speaking now of pulmon- ary tuberculosis. From the first the patient must be im- pressed that if a cure is to be effected, the given rules must be carefully followed, otherwise the race is not worth the running. The amount of food and the hours of feeding must be regulated by the condition of the patient. The writer can- not establish rules, as each patient is a law unto himself. Be careful, however, not to overeat. On the other hand the ap- petite must be kept up by a pleasing, well-served variety of food. I fully believe that almost any tuberculosis patient, not too far gone, can be cured at home, providing he will follow directions, better than at the average, poorly- managed sanitarium. In many sanitariums too much de- pendence is placed on climate and air and too little on correct diet. Stay at home, build an outdoor sleeping room, wear warm clothing, not necessarily wool linen is prefer- able. Take milk and eggs in large quantities between meals. To keep up the appetite change the method of serving both the eggs and milk. At one time separate the egg, beat the yolk, add the white and a little powdered sugar; later 26 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK drink a glass of milk. At another time, take eggnog; or shake the whites of eggs with milk, and use the yolks, hard boiled, grated over toast as a supper dish. Do not give too much meat ; it is not as nutritious as eggs and milk, and nourishment is of cardinal importance. Give nut dishes, Brazilian nut butter, cocoanut cream and egg occasionally, in the place of cow's milk. Use now and then for an afternoon luncheon a cup of well-made chocolate, with whipped cream, in place of egg and milk. At regular meals give puree of beans, lentils or old peas, made with good stock, and thinned with milk or cream; or cream soups, well-roasted beef and mutton, boiled rice or potato, and hard bread that will require mas- tication, breakfast bacon, with eggs, and fruits. It is necessary for dispensary nurses, who visit the patients at their homes, to select the most suitable from foods that are accessible and within their price limit. If eggs and cream are expensive, substitute bacon, meat stews, hominy, lentils, peanut and bean soup, cornmeal mush, oat- meal, milk and suet puddings, and the cheaper fruits, stewed prunes and baked bananas. Arrange the meals for ordinary patients as follows: Early in the morning give a cup of hot milk, flavored with strong coffee, no sugar. The patient may rest a half hour, then bathe, then rest again for half an hour, and breakfast. Give orange juice or other fruit, and a well-cooked cereal with cream, or two shirred eggs with two slices of broiled bacon and a half ounce of butter on a bit of toast. For variety, if the patient is a meat eater, give a couple of broiled chops, or a meat cake, or fish, in the place of eggs. If breakfast is taken at eight o'clock, at eleven give a glass of milk and egg shaken thoroughly together. At twelve-thirty or one (be careful not to crowd the patient) give puree of lentils, and a slice of zweiback, with a half ounce of butter; or broiled meat and a baked potato, with cream or butter ; or meat and boiled rice, or carefully- boiled hominy grits, or mush bread, with a half ounce of MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 27 butter; followed by a "heart" of lettuce with olive oil and a drop of lemon juice. In the middle of the afternoon, give either a bowl of junket, or koumys, or leban, butter- milk or zoolak, without other food; or eggs and milk. At six o'clock, a bowl of cream soup, with zweiback, well but- tered ; a little piece of steak or chop ; a small dish of care- fully-cooked macaroni with cream sauce ; a toasted cracker, well buttered, and a bit of cheese. At bedtime, a glass of modified milk, with a double quantity of cream, or plain milk. If for any reason the patient should have an attack of indigestion, stop all vegetable foods at once and substitute modified milk, albumin and milk, chopped meat cakes, and whole wheat bread only. Large quantities of foods are called for, but if the digestion is upset the whole scheme fails. Avoid too great a variety at a meal. Do not give preparations to aid digestion; they fre- quently upset the stomach and cause a "set back." All drugs should be avoided, except those ordered by the physi- cian. Do not give cod liver oil unless ordered. Depend for your fatty foods on cocoanut cream, milk and eggs, olive oil, nut soups, nut milks, especially those made from black walnuts and Brazilian nuts. The nurse who has charge of tuberculosis patients should study carefully the character and idiosyncrasies of each patient. Recovery usually follows an increase of weight; if the patient loses weight, the road to recovery is difficult. Constipation should not be allowed ; foods that do not agree should not be repeated. If egg and milk disagree, give milk and barley water, or milk with cocoa- nut cream. If the taste of milk is disagreeable, change its flavor by adding articles recommended under the head- ing of "Milk and Milk Preparations," in the Second Part of this book. The care of the mouth is of great importance. Wash a half pound of water cress carefully, pick the leaves from the stems, chop them fine, and rub them to a pulp ; stir MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK them into a pint of water, add two teaspoonfuls of salt, strain, bottle and cork. Use this as a mouth wash once or twice a day. It must be made fresh once a week. If cress is not obtain- able, Listerine, Glycothymoline, or salt and water are rec- ommended. The following list may offer suggestions to the care- taker : MAY EAT Eggs, raw, in milk Egg flip Eggnog Beaten white of egg on orange juice, on grape juice or fresh apple juice Hard-boiled yolk of egg on cream toast Hard-boiled egg grated over creamed chicken Ceylon chicken Plain milk Milk and barley water Milk and rice water Junket cream Koumys Leban Matzoon Zoolak Meiggs' Food Eskay's Food Whole wheat bread Graham bread Toasted pilot bread Crisp rolls Baked potato Broiled steak Panned steak Hamburg steak Smothered meat Broiled chops Roasted lamb or mutton Roasted beef Sweetbreads Tripe Broiled chicken Creamed chicken Chicken timbale Boiled rice Carefully-boiled hominy Fresh peas pressed through a sieve Lima beans with cocoanut sauce Lettuce heart with cocoanut cream Olive oil Carefully-cooked spinach Cocoa Chocolate Alkathrepta Racahout Puree of dried peas, beans and lentils A few ground oily nuts (not with meals) Fresh ripe fruits AVOID All bulk foods Coarse vegetables Pork ; veal ; duck ; goose All acid foods sorrel, rhubarb, lemons, limes, pickles Pears Bananas, unless well cooked Strong tea Pastry ; sweets in general All fried foods Hot breads ; white bread MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 29 PNEUMONIA Pneumonia, an inflammatory disease of the lungs, calls for light stomach-digested foods quite free from fat. The fever and weak heart action that are always pres- ent must also be taken into account. Give skimmed milk shaken with whites of eggs, or plain milk containing not over three per cent, of fat. Continue this, if it agrees, during the acute stage of the disease. Then add, at alternate feedings, beef juice, nutritive beef tea, almond milk, strained, once a day. The white of egg shaken with skimmed milk, if it is well borne, should be continued four times a day until the physician orders a change. Give no solid foods of any kind and be careful not to over feed, as the heart action, already very weak, must not be overtaxed. During Convalescence Add Milk foods such as Beef panada Zoolak Bouillon Koumys Veal broth, strained Matzoon Scraped beef cake Sour buttermilk A little milk toast Eggs, raw, with milk Zweiback Egg, coddled TONSILITIS In the acute stages of this disease, give egg flip, junket, koumys, matzoon, sweetened cream frozen slightly, or choc- olate or coffee ice cream, about four ounces at a feeding. Lemon and orange gelose. Plain frozen cream may be given twice a day. When convalescence begins, give egg- nog, laibose, panada, bouillon, beef juice, fruit juices, frozen cream, milk with dry albumin, junket, zoolak, buttermilk. Later scraped meat cake, ground mutton cake with almond meal, gluten mush, aleuronat with cream, raw egg and sherry. 30 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK QUINZY Dietetic treatment is the same as for tonsilitis. If the patient is anaemic give in the very beginning four raw eggs and a quart of milk a day, and four ounces of frozen cream twice a day. DISEASES OF THE HEART There are certain general rules that may be followed to a great extent in all cases of cardiac trouble, no matter whether the defects are partly counterbalanced or not. It is now recognized by all dietitians that the prolific source of heart troubles is an irregular mode of life, an unbalanced dietary or foods badly cooked. The road to relief is by a straight and narrow diet. Foods must be well selected, simply cooked and easily digested; and a sufficiently long time allowed after each meal to digest it thoroughly. Eating between meals must be strictly prohibited. Even a glass of water taken long after the meal but before digestion is completed may give rise to flatulency and produce a paroxysm. All indigestible foods, coarse vegetables, dense raw fruits, such meats as pork, veal, lobsters, clams, pink-fleshed fish, coarse breads, badly-cooked cereals, effervescing drinks, strong tea, coffee and chocolate, must be avoided. The stomach must never be overloaded or palpitation will occur. In each case the digestive capacity of the patient must be carefully studied, and each meal must be just enough, not an ounce over. Any residue of undigested food remain- ing in the stomach and intestines will set up unnatural fermentations and again cause flatulency and a paroxysm. Palpitation When this occurs stop all solid foods at once. The meals have been too heavy, or the patient has eaten too much. Give milk, or milk and barley water, koumys or matzoon, every two hours, for several days. Then add an egg, and go gradually on to the usual spare MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 31 diet. Persons who have "heart trouble" must never eat eggs, milk and meat at the same meal, acid fruit with bread or cereals, drink coffee or tea at meals, nor should they take soup at the beginning of a meal. All rich sauces, salads, cooked fats, sweet dishes and over-starchy dishes must be avoided. A baked potato mashed with cream, and a little well-cooked dry rice are allowable two or three times a week. If Edema Occurs Give for several days predigested foods, milk, hot peptonized milk, peptonized milk gruels, peptonized beef and oysters, or such easily-digested foods as plain junket or egg junket, koumys, matzoon or leban. Constipation This complication is usually the fore- most among the symptoms of heart trouble, and follows gastric disturbances. For relief add a tablespoonful of milk sugar to a glass of plain milk, or give the juice of two oranges, or a small cup of cafe au lait, following a glass of water, early in the morning, or a saucer of Roman meal mush with cream. Do not give purgatives unless ordered by a physician. 32 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK SENILE HEART Most patients with this disease are thin and rather lighter in weight than is their usual habit. Avoid soups at the beginning of meals. If cream soups with bread agree they should form the meal, and no other food should follow. From five to six hours should be allowed between meals. The heavy meal should be taken in the middle of the day. A cup of chocolate or Meiggs' food, or any of the sour milk preparations, with a bit of bread, make an exceedingly nice supper. All indigestible or coarse foods must be avoided. White fish, chicken, mutton and boiled beef are the only meats allowed. A tablespoonful of boiled rice, or a small baked potato, are the admissible starchy foods. Spinach, asparagus tips and raw tomato, with olive oil or cocoanut cream, may be taken now and then. Bread may be well-baked whole wheat or stale white bread. Avoid alcohol and all stimulating foods, unless ordered by the physician. If the patient is thirsty give a cup of hot water, rather than a glass of cold water; or give the juice of an orange. In arranging meals, give for breakfasts one poached or soft-boiled egg, with one slice of hard bread, well but- tered. An hour before this, a cup of coffee, half milk, or the juice of two oranges. Variation must come from the different methods of cooking, as the diet is limited. For dinner, the main meal of the day, which should be as near noon as possible, unless the breakfast has been very late, give any of the meats mentioned, with either a little spinach or baked potato. Do not give a green vege- table and a starchy vegetable at the same meal. Dessert may consist of ripe grapes, or a sliced orange, or a simple custard. If the patient feels hungry in the middle of the afternoon, give a cup of weak, clear tea, abso- lutely alone, with not a mouthful of any other food. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 33 Supper, which should be not later than half past six or seven, may consist of a warm custard with hard toast, or toast and milk, or milk toast, or milk and albumin, with a crust of bread, or any of the milk preparations. When the patient is ready for bed, let him sip slowly a cup of hot milk. MAY EAT Tender lamb Chopped beef cake, broiled Chicken, broiled or boiled White-fleshed fish, broiled or boiled Oysters when in full season Whole wheat bread, well baked Eggs Warm custards in place of meat Fruit juices Milk and milk preparations Cream soups, with bread, as a meal Almond meal soup Well-cooked spinach Asparagus tips An occasional baked potato Boiled rice Almond milk AVOID Salads All raw vegetables Coarse vegetables, as cabbage, onions, string beans, old beans, peas, turnips, carrots Pears Plums Cherries Fruits cooked with sugar Mashed and fried potatoes Green corn Melons Cantaloupes Hot breads Very hot and iced foods All fried foods Rich soups and sauces Pastry Cakes Preserves Hot puddings Tea, coffee and chocolate meals Effervescing drinks with 34 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ANGINA PECTORIS In this disease the stomach must be kept in the best possible condition. The food must be just enough, and not one ounce too much. Flatulency must be avoided. Like many other troubles of the circulatory system, the disten- tion of the stomach presses against the diaphragm, and in turn against the heart. The heavy meal should be taken at noon. Breakfast should be light and composed largely of well-cooked cereals and cream, or poached or soft-boiled eggs and toast. Do not give liquids with meals. If the patient has been accustomed to coffee, give a cup of coffee an hour before the regular breakfast. Tender boiled, broiled or baked meats may be given in moderation. Pork, veal, and such dense meats as rabbit, or fatty meats as duck, goose and turkey, must be avoided. Fresh fruits and fruit juices are to be recommended. Such green vegetables as spinach, well cooked, lettuce, or cooked cress and asparagus tips, do not, as a rule, cause flatulency. Hot water may be taken a half hour before each meal, in the place of soup. The patient must avoid all highly-seasoned foods, rich sauces, sea foods with the exception of oysters and white-fleshed fish, rich desserts, sweets and salads. Unleavened bread, or any hard bread that requires mastication, is best. If flatulency occurs in the early morning, give the patient two tablespoonfuls of clam broth, or two table- spoonfuls of moderately strong coffee mixed with four tablespoonfuls of milk ; this must be sipped slowly. Some- times a cup of hot water will have the desired effect. If flatulency is persistent in the mornings, give a cup of hot water, and follow with two tablespoonfuls of strained lemon juice. Continue this, and the flatulency will usually be entirely corrected. The patient should never try the second time a food that has not agreed at first. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 35 If constipation occurs, give a scraped apple, or Roman meal mush, or four ground almonds. A good motto is "Eat less than you- want." MAY EAT Eggs , Tender green vegetables, as Milk and milk foods spinach, cooked cress, aspara- Leban gus tips, tender cauliflower, Koumys summer squash Buttermilk Oysters lightly cooked, either Well-cooked cereals, with cream soups, stewed or broiled White bread, stale or dry A little white-fleshed fish, broiled Fresh fruits, and fruit juices Stewed prunes alone Baked apples Cream soups Scraped mutton cake, broiled Predigested milk and oysters, if A little broiled young chicken necessary Rice An occasional baked potato AVOID Hot breads All sea foods except oysters and Fresh breads . white-fleshed fish Cakes Rabbit Buns Rare steak Pies Rare roasted beef Sweets of all kinds Turkey Pickles Duck Meat salads Goose Pork All coarse vegetables Veal Cereals with sugar All fried foods Starchy vegetables with the ex- ception of rice 36 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ANEURISM This disease calls for a non-stimulating diet. The heart beat must be kept even and slow, to lessen as much as pos- sible the arterial pressure. . The diet must necessarily be rather monotonous, get variety by changing the method of service and flavorings. Easily-digested combinations must be rigidly enforced. Flatulency is always dangerous. If the patient is to be helped without surgical aid, a limited diet must be continued for some time. BREAKFASTS Glass of milk, one-third barley water, sipped slowly ; or two ounces of stale bread with four ounces of milk; or four ounces of any of the milk gruels; or two ounces of fruit juice over a small saucer of dextrinized cereals of some sort; or the top of a shredded wheat biscuit, toasted, with milk; or the top of a shredded wheat biscuit, toasted, with two ounces of grape juice ; or the beaten white of egg on orange juice, and a wafer; or the yolk of an egg, beaten with four ounces of milk ; or the white of an egg thoroughly shaken with six ounces of milk. DINNERS Two ounces of scraped meat, broiled, with two ounces of zweiback, pulled bread or stale bread; or two chops (a quarter of a pound) with stale bread ; or a mutton cake (two ounces) with stale bread or cracker; or chicken timbale (three ounces), stale bread or cracker; or four ounces of broiled sweetbread, stale bread or pulled bread; or four ounces of cream of potato soup, with one ounce of toast. SUPPERS Three slices of milk toast (two ounces of bread and six ounces of milk) ; or six ounces of gelatin milk ; or two ounces of toast, four ounces of hot milk poured over, cov- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 37 ered with the grated hard-boiled yolk of egg ; or six ounces of beef meal gruel, with two ounces of toast. If at any time the quantities here given should be more than can be easily digested, cut them down. Quantities really have no place in a book ; they should be regulated by the physician and the nurse. APOPLEXY Follow the first attack by a fast of two, three or four days, as is deemed necessary by the physician. It fre- quently becomes necessary to give predigested foods by rectum. As this disease often occurs in the obese, absti- nence from food for even five days is advantageous. This must, however, be done by the physician's orders, and under his observation. When the coma has passed and the patient can swallow, give predigested, condensed liquid foods by teaspoonfuls, and see that each quantity is swal- lowed before a second is given, otherwise the patient may choke and draw the fluid into the lungs, causing inspi- ration pneumonia. As the patient progresses and swallow- ing becomes more natural, if there is facial paralysis, keep up the concentrated liquid foods. Eggs and milk; puree made with milk and vegetables ; cream and milk mixed ; "ye perfect food"; rice boiled in milk until tender, and pressed through a sieve; rice cooked in chicken broth for an hour, and pressed through a sieve; puree of split peas may all be given if they can be swallowed. Later, if the patient has no facial paralysis, whole wheat bread, baked potato, boiled rice, chopped chicken made into a timbale, soup a la Reine and scraped mutton cake, are next in order. If the patient is constipated, give two ounces of fruit juices or almond milk, two or three times a day. All foods must be nutritious but non-stimulating. Chicken and a little mutton should be the only meats used. The less meat, the better. The patient must not overeat. A little cold water, early in the morning, and between meals, is advisable. 38 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK Alcoholic liquors should not be given unless ordered by a physician. If the patient recovers from this attack he must, as long as he lives, keep ,up a vegetable diet, substi- tuting eggs, nuts and milk for meats. He must eat less than the appetite calls for. A "full meal," "just a little dissipation," frequently brings on a second and fatal attack. MAY EAT, WHEN SUFFICIENTLY RECOVERED Cream soups Milk and milk preparations "Ye perfect food" Cornmeal mush Chicken noodle soup Eggs in all forms except hard boiled and fried White meat of chicken Boiled white fish Baked potato Boiled rice Summer squash Topground green vegetables lightly cooked Desserts made from vegetable gelatin Fresh fruits without skin Fruits stewed without sugar, as prunes and figs Dry, hard bread Gluten gems Swedish bread Unleavened bread Cocoanut sticks Soups, maigre Custards Warm baked custards Occasionally tender lettuce, Ro- maine, tender celery, with 'French dressing Fresh fruits, except rhubarb Cooked bananas Light milk puddings Milk and cream toast Mock charlotte Sago snow A few coffee-flavored desserts Cream of Wheat, farina, well cooked Toasted shredded wheat, with hot milk and cream Rice pudding Rice a I'lmperatrice Rice dumpling Rice cream Rice pudding with malt Fruit toasts elderberry, black- berry and raspberry Apples, simply cooked MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK AVOID Meats Pink-fleshed fish Oysters Crabs Clams Lobsters Shrimps Scallops All made-over dishes Fried foods Rich soups and sauces Boiled and mashed potatoes Fried potatoes Hot breads All sweets Pies Puddings Cakes Preserves Stewed fruits with sugar Ice creams and ices at the end of a meal Pickles Condiments of all kinds Rhubarb Raw apples, unless scraped Concentrated beef soups, like beef tea The internal organs of animals, as sweetbreads, tripe, and liver All coarse vegetables White bread made with sugar and lard PERNICIOUS ANAEMIA The defective assimilation of proteids seems to be the chief obstacle to overcome in the feeding of this disease. It is always a question whether those from animal or from vegetable foods are more easily assimilated. In a well-known sanitarium in this country, pernicious anaemia patients are put on a diet rich in proteids, but free from the flesh of animals. Milk and eggs, with such vegetables as ground and cooked . nuts, and the leguminous seeds, are substituted. The eating of fatty foods, butter, cream, cocoanut cream and nut oils, is encouraged to the limit of toleration and digestion. In severe cases, it is wise at first to predigest all foods given. Specially-peptonized milk, milk jelly and milk punch are to be preferred. If starches are given, arrow- root, rice flour and potato flour cooked in milk, are best, and they should be given alone, between meals. Home- made pemmican is a food par excellence in this disease. The marrow must be taken from the long beef bones, and if the patient refuses to eat it raw, it may be boiled and then 40 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK broiled and served on toast; but it is far better chopped, uncooked, and mixed with an equal quantity of stale bread crumbs ; season it with a little plain salt or celery salt. MAY EAT Eggs, raw, with milk Egg flip Raw egg with sherry Raw egg with cream Milk with cream "Asses' milk" "Tigers' milk" Orgeat Wheat germ food with cream Beef meal Beef panada Soup a la Reine Milk soups with whole wheat bread Meigg's food Chocolate Cocoa Arrowroot Rice flour Potato flour cooked in milk Boiled rice Laibose Meltose Samatose Roborat Revalenta Arabica Albuminized milk Modified milk Whey with cream Whole wheat bread, well buttered Ground almonds in milk Almond butter on bread Brazilian nut butter Cocoanut cream Cocoanut milk and egg Albuminized cocoanut milk Broiled sweetbreads Predigested sweetbreads Predigested milk Broiled scraped beef Broiled scraped mutton Stewed tripe Arrowroot Rice flour Potato flour Puree of dried peas Puree of lentils Beef marrow, raw and cooked Homemade pemmican Milk, with a little cream added ANEMIA (CHLOROSIS) Acute anaemia arising from hemorrhage, needs the im- mediate care of a physician and is not considered here. These directions are for the "anaemic girl," who is fre- quently neglected and becomes a chronic invalid before any one realizes she is ill. The body is properly nourished when the condition and circulation of the blood are good. In anaemia the blood becomes thin and watery, impoverished in red corpuscles, and while MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 41 this is not a true disease in the minds of many persons, it is certainly a sign of a serious trouble near at hand that calls for immediate and special treatment. Young girls coming into womanhood are frequently over- taxed by a multiplicity of duties and social engagements. Hard study frequently lasts into the night and robs her of the proper rest and outdoor physical exercise. Indoor exercise, even if taken in a well-ventilated room, does not take the place of the outdoor romp. She eats candy before going to bed and frequently sleeps in the same room in which she has studied and without changing the air. She is simply under- going a slow process of poisoning. Headaches, lassitude, and indifference to things in general, are the first symptoms of "the breakdown." She is not hungry in the morning; but our present school system makes it obligatory for her to eat when breakfast is on the table, at a regular and early hour. She is criticised if she does not eat, so she eats and carries the food in her stomach, undigested, until luncheon time. This is the first step to serious digestive troubles. To allay the craving of her stomach she eats pickles, lemons, candy, salt, any unnatural thing she can find and keep in her room. Doctor Fothergill tells us, "Health is a long price to pay for education, and our modern system of feeding, in both boys' and girls' schools, kills off the weak, ruins the middling and makes invalids of the well." Another type is found among the society girls, whose physical foundations have been neglected from early childhood. Treatment for anaemia must continue until there is a perfect recovery. Rest is necessary ; early to bed and late to rise is a good motto. In the morning, brush the teeth and drink slowly a glass of milk or a cup of cafe au lait, before arising. Rest two hours, then take a sponge bath, with a thorough rub. Rest a half hour, then eat breakfast composed of two soft-boiled eggs and a bit of toast; or a dish of beauregard eggs ; or golden toast ; or a scraped beef cake, broiled ; or two eggs with a slice of whole wheat bread well buttered; or oatmeal or cornmeal mush with cream; 42 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK or poached eggs on broiled bacon or toast; or a broiled chop, with creamed potato. The noonday meal should consist of concentrated foods, broiled steak, chop or chicken, baked potato or boiled rice, eggs, except fried or hard boiled, tender hearts of lettuce with French dressing. Between dinner and supper give a glass of milk, quarter cream ; for the sake of variety this may be alternated with koumys or zoolak. For supper give cream toast; whole wheat bread well buttered, with sliced tomato covered with cocoanut cream ; old-fashioned rice puddings ; Wheatena and cream ; dates and milk ; corn bread, or baked apples and cream with hard bread ; stewed prunes with rice and cream ; steamed figs with cream and corn gems ; or a bowl of cream soup with whole wheat bread. At the close of the noonday meal, if a salad is not eaten, sip slowly, almost drop by drop, a teaspoonful of olive oil, and eat, masticating thoroughly, six blanched and dried, not toasted, almonds. Anaemic girls frequently continue in their lassitude until they can assimilate a goodly quantity of easily-digested proteids and raw fats such as butter, cream, cocoanut cream and olive oil. However, they must avoid fat meats; to be palatable and wholesome the fats of meat must be cooked, and heat renders fats less liable to agree with a delicate stomach. Bacon is the exception ; if it is relished, give two slices every other morning. It is an agreeable addition to poached eggs on toast. If olive oil cannot be taken from the spoon, make it into French dressing with a few drops of lemon juice, and use it over tender lettuce, imported endive, tender celery, cold, carefully-cooked spinach, string beans, or cress. Plenty of fresh air without violent exercise is of equal importance with correct diet. A short walk each day is to be recommended. In walking, hold the body erect, draw the abdomen in, put the ball of the foot first to the ground. The clothing must be loose, light, warm and suspended MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 43 from the shoulders. Skirts should be of light material, wool preferably; they should be comfortably narrow and short, and buttoned to the bottom of a loose waist or corset. Shoes must fit the feet, and have broad soles and low, broad heels. Gloves should be sufficiently loose not to press the circulation at the wrist. Under no circumstances must the patient become weary ; better spend all day in a hammock in the open air than have a moment's fatigue. Avoid bulk foods ; the appetite becomes satisfied before a sufficient amount of food has been eaten. If the appetite flags, and it usually does in the early morning, give the juice of two oranges, or two ounces of good percolated coffee with two ounces of hot milk; these are light and desirable stimulants. Some authorities object to coffee, but the writer can see no harm in a cup of good coffee, taken alone in the morning. In cases where anaemic conditions are of long standing, a selected diet must be continued for months. MAY EAT Cream soups Whole wheat bread Noodle soup Corn bread Chicken jelly Gluten breads Beef jelly Milk and milk preparations Broiled white-fleshed fish Eggs in any way but fried and Boiled fish hard boiled Planked fish Cup custards Beef Vegetable gelatin desserts Mutton Whipped cream desserts Chicken Fruit juices Turkey Fresh fruits Occasionally duck Unleavened bread and crisp bis- Game of all kinds cuits Tender green vegetables Fruit tapioca with cream Baked potato Oatmeal occasionally Boiled rice Wheat germ cereals Macaroni with cheese Farina Macaroni, Italian fashion Cream of Wheat, with cream 44 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Continued Simple plain salads, with French dressing Occasionally cold chicken with mayonnaise ; cold fish with may- onnaise A little ripe cheese Cottage cheese; schmierkase Chocolate, occasionally, and cocoa Milk and cream Leban Koumys Matzoon Buttermilk Junket with cream Butter Olive oil A small quantity of rich cream Cocoanut cream Soft custards Wheatlet Wheatena Oatmeal occasionally Top ground green vegetables Puree of lentils Portuguese soup Beef gruel Ye perfect food Golden toast Beauregard eggs Cocoa Desserts of rice and milk Prunes, figs and dates, without sugar Sweetbreads Tripe Brown bread Rye bread Tender cauliflower Peas Summer squash Sweet corn Very young turnips, stewed with cream Asparagus tips Spinach A little water cress, lettuce and imported endive Pork Veal Salt meats Salt fish Pink-fleshed fish Lobster Crabs Shrimps Clams Oysters Made-over dishes Rich made' dishes Warmed-over meats Hot bread White bread Skimmed milk MUST AVOID Tea Coffee, except in the morning All coarse vegetables Mashed potatoes Fried foods Sweets Pies Puddings Cakes Candies Ice water Rhubarb Lemons ' Limes Pickles of all kinds Highly-spiced dishes MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 45 DISEASES OF THE STOMACH In all diseases of the stomach cures are effected by diet that are quite unattainable by drugs. No absolute rules can be formulated that will enable people to cure them- selves. The term "dyspepsia" is used to cover a multitude of sins ; in fact, every pain in the stomach or discomfort after eating is called by most persons dyspepsia or "indigestion." Food is correct, as a rule, when it produces no discomfort in the stomach and passes into the intestines without creat- ing gas and flatulency. "Intestinal indigestion" starch indigestion is by far the most common among the people of the United States, and is perhaps most easily cured. Gastric troubles are much more difficult to regulate, as almost invariably the motor, as well as the secretory action, is impaired. In such cases the food eaten must be most easily digested and yet it must be very nutritious. Dyspeptics like rheumatics are found in two classes : the hearty eater who lives on rich foods until the digestive powers are over taxed, and the "moderate" eater, who eats toast, tea, fruits stewed with sugar, fried meats, fried pota- toes, pies and layer cakes, which for some unknown reason he considers a simple diet. The latter class are by far the morg difficult to cure. The first class are, as a rule, greatly benefited by a fast for two or three days, then a milk diet for two weeks, coming back gradually to a normal diet, composed of milk soups, stale breads, chopped broiled beef, and simple well-cooked green vegetables. The second class will do well to live on milk, eggs and meat, bread and rice, for one or two months, as case may require. They must avoid all fried food, tea and coffee. To keep up the balance a patient in bed requires one- fifth the food of an active person in health. In all gastric disorders the appetite is never keen nature's warning to eat but little. Rest the stomach as much as possible. A two or three days' fast frequently forms a foundation on which to build a cure. 46 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK A FEW GOLDEN RULES FOR THE ORDINARY DYSPEPTIC Masticate everything twice as long as you think it is necessary. Do not drink while food is in the mouth. Do not soften hard foods, as toast or bread crusts, by dipping them in water, milk, tea or coffee. Never drink tea and coffee at meals. A cup of milk flavored with coffee may be taken in the morning. Weak tea, with lemon and sugar, may be taken between the noon- day and night meals. Leave the table before you feel quite satisfied. Eat food at moderate temperatures, never too hot nor iced. Rest, but do not sleep, thirty minutes after each meal. AVOID at all times and under all conditions, even after a so-called cure is effected: All fried foods Preserves Sweets Iced food at the end of the meal Cooked fats on meat Pickles Tea and coffee with sugar and Boiled cabbage cream with meals Boiled dinners in general Chocolate with meals The outside pieces of baked or Salads with mayonnaise dressing roasted meats Pork Hot breads, except crisp, well- Veal baked waffles Sausages Fruits stewed with sugar Highly-seasoned sauces Sea foods, except white-fleshed fish Meat gravies of all kinds Thick rich soups Pies Wines at meals Cake Where there is too little hydrochloric acid in the gas- tric secretions, give peptonized milk, peptonized oysters, skimmed milk gruels, white of egg and whey, well-cooked MRS. RORERS DIET FOR THE SICK 47 light cereals, with skimmed milk, vegetable gelatin with very little sugar and orange juice ; puree of chestnuts made without cream or butter; rice pudding made from skimmed milk; albumin and skimmed milk; milk toast without but- ter; rice flour custards; potato flour custard made with white of egg, no yolk; buttermilk; matzoon; koumys; samatose. Later, if conditions allow, give a scraped meat cake, broiled; eight blanched, dried and grated almonds, mixed with four times the quantity of scraped mutton, broiled ; cocoanut milk custard ; lightly cooked eggs ; a little broiled young chicken; boiled rice; Cream of Wheat, with skimmed milk; stale white bread; fruit juices alone; almond wafers. A plain, simple diet must be continued for some time. Other easily digested foods that are neither sweet nor fatty, may be added gradually. MAY EAT Peptonized milk Peptonized oysters White of egg and whey Skimmed milk gruels Well-cooked Cream of Wheat and farina with skimmed milk Baked potato with salt, no but- ter Scraped beef cake, broiled Scraped mutton cake, mixed with eight blanched, grated almonds; broiled Cocoanut milk custards Lightly cooked eggs Boiled mutton Boiled chicken Rice pudding made from skim- med milk Skimmed milk koumys Stale bread without butter Daintily cooked top-ground vegetables, skimmed milk sauce Nut butter Tender hearts of lettuce with lemon juice Albumin in skimmed milk Albumin whey Beef panada, made with water An occasional clear beef soup Chestnut puree made from skim- med milk Boiled rice Carefully baked banana without sugar or butter Bananas stewed in water, very slightly sweetened Fruit juices Fresh ripe soft fruits without skin or seeds 48 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK AVOID All fatty foods, as cream, butter, olive oil, cOcoanut creams Hot dishes Iced dishes Iced water Strong tea and coffee Chocolate Pork ; veal Goose Turkey Fried foods Sweets Puddings Pies Cakes Coarse underground vegetables Hot breads, as muffins, gems, etc. Rich cream soups All sea foods, with the excep- tion of white-fleshed fish and oysters, broiled All spiritous liquors, unless or- dered by a physician If there is an excess of hydrochloric acid in the gastric secretions, fatty foods are called for. Cream, olive oil, but- ter, cocoanut cream, an occasional piece of broiled bacon ; cereals with cream ; baked potatoes with butter or cream ; minced chicken in cream sauce ; broiled steak with butter sauce ; broiled chop ; boiled pigeon ; tender green vegeta- bles with cream sauce, may all be used for dinner. Give for the night meal, cream toast, or the yolks of two eggs beaten with a half pint of milk, and dry toast ; stale bread, with milk and cream ; rice puddings, cup custards or well- cooked cereals with cream. MAY EAT Whole milk Milk soups Cream on cereals Whipped cream desserts Nut dishes Nut milk Whole wheat and white bread one day old, well buttered Eggs, lightly cooked, not fried Koumys Matzoon Buttermilk Leban Dainty green vegetable salads with French dressing Baked potatoes, mashed, with cream Boiled rice Gluten bread, well buttered Broiled meats in a small quan- tity Puree of lentils Purees of fresh green vege- tables Broiled bacon Beef meal Cocoa Chocolate made from milk with whipped cream One hour before meals a table- spoonful of olive oil MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 49 AVOID Excessive meat diet Coarse underground vegetables Pickles; spiced foods Pork; veal All sweets Duck Soft breads; hot breads Goose and turkey, except a Fruits stewed with sugar little white meat Fried foods Ice creams and ices Fish; Crustacea; mollusks All spiritous liquors, unless or- Tea and coffee dered by a physician Milk and meat at the same meal Malt liquors Eggs and meat at the same meal Iced drinks Sauces and rich soups Nibbling between meals In dilatation of the stomach, the selection of the proper quantity of correct food is quite difficult. There may be an excess or a deficiency of hydrochloric acid in the gastric secretions ; this, of course, will be determined by the phy- sician, who will from his analysis formulate a diet. In this disease bulk must be given to excite the motor action of the stomach, and bulk is frequently the very thing to avoid on account of accompanying conditions. If there is dilatation and a deficiency of hydrochloric acid, exclude all fats and fatty foods. Give a full diet of broiled lean meats, boiled mutton, with baked potatoes, rice, spinach, cauliflower, lettuce, cress, stewed summer squash, stewed cucumber, fruit tapiocas, dried fruits stewed without sugar, farina, Cream of Wheat, milk puddings and fruit vegetable gelatins ; stale whole wheat or white bread, or toasted pilot bread, potato sticks or cocoanut fingers; any hard bread that requires mastication. On the other hand, if there is an excess of hydrochloric acid, cream may be added to the preceding diet in quanti- ties determined by the physician. "Dyspepsia" with Flatulency This usually comes to persons who drink tea and coffee, with sugar and milk, with their meals, and to those who eat soft foods, and to those who bolt most of the solid foods. To correct these conditions, avoid all starches, sugars, all made-over dishes, tea and coffee, liquids with meals; in fact, it is better to 50 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK take meat at one meal, and vegetables at another, if vege- tables do not cause flatulency. Sip a half pint of hot water a half hour before each meal, and drink a cup of weak tea, with lemon and no sugar, in the middle of the afternoon. Take clear orange juice early in the morning in place of hot water. Sometimes four tablespoonfuls of black coffee, hot, may be sipped in the morning to advantage. This may be followed by two soft-boiled eggs and a bit of very stale bread, nothing more. If hunger comes in the middle of the morning take a glass of modified milk, or beef tea, mutton broth, or chicken broth. For the noonday meal, eat boiled meats, or chopped meats, broiled or panned, and eat with them a saucer of sliced oranges, or a few white grapes, and one dozen blanched and dried, not roasted, almonds. These fruits may be alternated with a tender heart of lettuce, a slice of tomato without vinegar or oil, or very tender celery or endive. For the night meal, take milk toast or milk toast with hard-boiled egg, any of the nut dishes, or cold-boiled chicken, but not any two of these together, unless it is chicken and lettuce. It is wise never to eat meat and milk, or meat and vegetables, at the same meal. A restricted diet of this kind must be kept up until a cure is effected. Atonic Dyspepsia Fruit juices are foods par excel- lence in this disease. The gastric secretions are weak. Foods must be tasty, because the appetite is slim. A baked potato, mashed with a little butter, and a drop of tabasco, is frequently relished; chopped meat cakes, seasoned with tabasco. It is preferable to use liquid pepper, as it does not contain the irritating outside hull of black pepper. Broiled steak, a chop, roasted beef, chicken, turkey, are all admissible. Meat or eggs should be given twice a day. No coarse vegetables are allowable, but dainty green vege- table salads, seasoned with French dressing oil, a drop of tabasco and lemon juice are to be recommended. Very ripe raw fruits and fruit juices, cauliflower, tender lettuce, summer squash, tapioca, flavored with fruit juice, and cream MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 51 soups, are admissible. Highly-seasoned, rich food must be given up entirely. Hungry Dyspepsia There are certain dyspeptics who seem to be always hungry. Digestion has been overtaxed for so long, that but little of the food ingested is assimi- lated, the remaining portions pass from the body in almost the same condition as when eaten. It is not the stomach that is calling for food, but the ill-fed body. The tissues are starving. Avoid all irritating foods, as bran bread, peas, husks of corn, skins of fruit, black pepper, ground spices, and coarse vegetables, that contain cellulose. To bring about a cure, eating between meals must be stopped. When hunger comes, give a glass of water, or fruit juices. The stomach must have absolute rest between each of the three meals a day. If the patient cannot be taught to restrain the appetite at the regular table, weigh the correct quantity of food, and insist upon his eating alone. Purees of old beans, peas, and lentils, cream soups, strained cereals, baked potato, boiled rice, stewed macaroni and cheese, cauliflower, nut dishes, and boiled meats, are best to allay the hunger. Do not give more than two dishes at a meal. Give meat and potato at one meal, cream soup and bread at another, or macaroni and cheese, or meat and lettuce, or eggs, bacon and bread, or cereals with milk. MAY EAT Cream soups Eggs Strained cereals Milk and milk preparations Baked potatoes Nuts (a few) Boiled rice Almonds with meat Stewed macaroni Raw pineapple, grated, served Hominy; hominy grits as a sauce to broiled meats, Baked sweet potatoes or sliced eaten with broiled Mashed and baked sweet potatoes meats Pumpkin, baked or stewed Light desserts, like fruit tapiocas Stale breads Very tender green salads Green peas Cauliflower Broiled, roasted or baked meats Spinach 52 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK AVOID Tea Spiced foods Coffee Coarse vegetables Pork Beans with hulls on Veal Underground vegetables, with the Fried foods exception of potato Sweets in general Pears Pickles Watermelons Bran bread Cantaloupes Pepper Rich soups and sauces Nervous "Dyspepsia" Nervous indigestion is a term used to cover all sorts of morbid conditions that arise from defective nutrition and physical abuses. When we speak of physical abuses, we have in mind the active business man and the editor, who are overworked and badly fed. Defect- ive nutrition does not always come from lack of food ; on the contrary, the overfed, the obese and the painfully thin, are all, as a rule, ill-nourished. Bolting- one's food pro- duces indigestion that is the forerunner of nervousness. The vital question is, however, how can we best correct these conditions? What is the royal road to cure? Keep your thoughts in the right place, and do not worry about your ailments or your business. Do not talk of them to either your family or your neighbors; it is inelegant. All forms of sickness are more or less deform- ities, not to be spoken of in public. Do not take drugs without a physician's advice; it is always dangerous. Fried foods, fruits stewed with sugar, mashed potatoes, soups, and things that can be swallowed quickly at the luncheon counter, must be given up. These foods kill the weak, ruin the middling and help many thousands to hos- pitals for the insane. Do not eat too many dead foods overcooked meats and made dishes, doughnuts, pies and puddings. Use raw fruits, fresh green vegetables, lightly cooked, and fresh green salads with French dressing. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 53 A cure is frequently brought about by eating meat at one meal, and vegetables at another; fruits early in the morning or between meals, or if you eat a hearty breakfast, eat fruit for luncheon, and depend upon a nutritious dinner for general body-building material. Avoid slops fermented liquors, weak tea and coffee loaded with sugar and cream. Eat three good meals a day. Do not drink milk rapidly as though it were water; it is not a beverage ; it is a food. Do not take milk and fruits at the same meal, nor milk and meats. Avoid rich, oily fish, as shad, pike, salmon, sturgeon, catfish, eels and mackerel ; all Crustacea, as lobsters, crabs, shell fish, clams, scallops and oysters ; condiments and hot foods covered with melted butter. Clam broth and oyster bouillon may be taken with good results. Complicated sweets and heated fats induce false fer- mentation and produce flatulency and generate an excess of undesirable acids which prevent perfect digestion. Avoid pork, veal and overfat poultry, as ducks, turkeys and geese. Eat milk, eggs, broiled steak, chops, roasted beef, mut- ton, broiled chicken and dishes made from chopped meats, carefully broiled ; now and then a baked potato ; whole wheat bread, well buttered ; crisp French bread, well but- tered; fresh green peas, spinach, tender white celery, im- ported endive, Romaine, hearts of lettuce, stewed cucum- bers, dry boiled rice, stewed spaghetti and macaroni. A dozen unroasted and unsalted almonds, well masticated, at the close of dinner, will aid, digestion. Put a bit of butter (not salt) on each piece of celery as you bite it off. Use pure olive oil and lemon juice over dinner salads, and masticate every piece thoroughly. In fact, butter, cream, olive oil or homemade cocoanut milk and cream should be used in moderate quantities once a day. 54 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK An excellent breakfast cereal is ordinary white bread, cut into inch cubes and dried, not toasted, served with half cream and half milk. An excellent plan is to use a half pint of cream a day ; use it in the morning on hard bread ; for dinner, over a light dessert ACUTE GASTRITIS Immediate treatment is necessary; do not neglect a day; incurable conditions may appear. Diet is of primary importance, as drugs frequently irritate the stomach and should never be given except under the supervision of a physician. Select a non-stimulating diet, one that will utilize the secretions formed by its presence in the stomach. The patient should have rest, and the motor action of the stomach must not be taxed in the slightest degree. A good balance can be maintained for several days by the use of milk preparations. Albuminized milk, modified milk, pep- tonized milk, sipped slowly held in the mouth a second or two before swallowing. Later, when the appetite comes, give cornmeal and arrowroot gruels, "ye perfect food," Meiggs' food, egg flip, egg cordial, almond milk and plum porridge. After this, if the patient is improving, add a little finely-minced sweetbread ; scraped mutton cake, with dry, un-buttered, bread; soup a la Reine and Salisbury meat cake. Do not, however; add solid foods too soon. Fruit juices may be given throughout the disease, not with meals, but as a feeding. If any of these foods do not irritate the stomach and seem to agree, continue for several days, changing from one to another to keep up variety. If sweet milk does not agree (and it will not unless sipped slowly) substitute modified milk, or milk and lime water, or whey, with the addition of milk sugar. This disease calls for moist, not dry foods. Well- cooked light cereals, as farina, Cream of Wheat and Wheatlet, will take the place of bread, but should be thor- oughly masticated. Hot water may be sipped thirty min- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 55 utes before each feeding, and, in fact, for several months to come give a cup of hot water an hour before each meal. Subacid fruits bananas, blackberries, raspberries and peaches may be cooked in a little water thickened with arrowroot, and strained through a fine sieve and served warm with a little whole milk. Banana meal mush, with milk, is frequently borne with greater ease than other foods. If fermentations begin, stop at once all carbohydrates (starches and sugars), substituting meat broth, fruit juices and modified milk. Lightly broiled sweetbread, chopped fine with a silver knife, seasoned with a little celery salt, makes an exceed- ingly good meal, if the patient can be induced to eat it. A scraped beef cake, mixed with two tablespoonfuls of fresh- grated pineapple, seasoned and broiled lightly usually agrees very well. Mutton may be substituted for beef. After the patient recovers, he must live on simple, carefully-cooked foods for a year, and perhaps longer. Avoid pork, veal, fried foods, lobster, clams, crabs, shrimps, rich sauces and highly-seasoned soups, coarse vegetables, raw apples, pears, condiments, excessive salt dishes, anchovies, herring, caviar, strong tea, coffee, and wine with meals. CHRONIC GASTRITIS A curative diet for this disease is milk and milk prep- arations, with stale bread, free from husks or bran ; lean meats, free from fat, scraped and broiled; carefully-boiled rice ; baked potato, potato puffs ; cream soups ; globe arti- chokes, stewed cucumbers, summer squash ; fresh fruit juices; grape fruit, ripe peaches; unfermented bread; broiled bacon; junket; all sour milk preparations, leban, zoolak, clabber, matzoon and eggs. Do not give too great a variety at one meal. If cereals are taken, they must be strained or free from husk. Very succulent vegetables may be served with meats, but starchy 56 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK foods must be served alone. Cream soups must not be followed by meats. Cream soup and bread should form the meal. At the close of the meal give half a glass of cool, not iced, water, unless soup has been eaten; then do not drink for two hours. MAY EAT Broiled tender meats White fish Cream soups Milk and milk preparations Junkets of all kinds Vegetable gelatin desserts Milk gelose Fruit gelose Carefully-boiled rice Occasionally, tender lettuce or celery Stewed prunes, without skins Eggs, carefully cooked Baked apples Scraped apple Fruit juices Cereals, strained and well masti- cated without seeds or Dark grapes, skins Crackers Pilot bread An occasional aleuronat gem Cocoanut milk Cocoanut cream Tomato with cocoanut cream Heart of lettuce with cocoanut cream Spinach Green peas Asparagus Stewed cucumbers Squash Cooked cress A little olive oil A little cream AVOID Pork Veal Oysters Clams Crustacea Salt foods Warmed-over meats Fried foods Candies Puddings Pies Cakes Sweets Hot breads Highly-seasoned foods Beef tea Tea, coffee and chocolate with meals All liquors, unless ordered by a physician Black pepper Spices Very little salt Fats in general Fruits with sugar, stewed or raw MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 57 ULCER OF THE STOMACH GASTRIC ULCER It is of utmost importance, in this disease, to protect the stomach against all sorts of irritations. The body and the stomach should have absolute rest if the case is severe. Maintain the nutrition by rectal feeding. When mouth feeding is admissible, cleanse the nose, throat and mouth before each feeding with lemon vegetable gelatin water, but do not use enough to be swallowed. The stomach must be kept empty except at feeding time, and feedings should be sufficiently far apart to give the stomach rest between. Prevent at all times the swallowing of the pus-like dis- charges from the nose, if there be any. An exclusive milk diet is best, if it agrees. If fresh raw milk does not agree, try sterilizing it. The physician who observes the case will decide the quantity of milk to be given, and the time of feedings four ounces is the usual amount, given every two hours. If sterilized milk does not agree, try modified milk; or plain milk, one-third almond milk; this frequently is more acceptable than any other food. If the stomach is still intolerant, return to rectal feeding. Frequently arrowroot milk, German flour gruel, gelose milk gruel, albuminized milk, almond milk, milk, peptonized by the cold process, and peptonized milk gruels served cold, agree and are retained without discomfort. If these foods are well borne, add now and then the beaten white of an egg to four ounces of milk ; and, if the physician believes in meat (I do not) add a teaspoonful of somatose or beef meal to a cup of fresh beef tea, or mutton broth or milk. The nourishment is reduced as soon as you begin to give meat preparations; if they are con- tinued for any length of time, without alternate feedings of milk, you cannot protect the body against loss of weight and strength. Liquid diet must be continued until all signs of discomfort are absent a month or a year. Do not begin solid foods too soon ; serious conditions are sure to reap- pear. 58 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK If no complications arise at the end of one or two months, add a little well-cooked Cream of Wheat or farina, served with cream, no sugar. Now and then well-cooked farina served with butter; milk soups; egg and milk; junkets, with and without eggs; gelose milk jelly, and Irish moss jelly with milk. Continue this diet, alternating with the first to give variety, for three or four months. Then add slowly, watching the patient most carefully, milk toast, egg soup, carefully-broiled sweetbread, soup a la Reine, a little finely-minced white meat of chicken, a mut- ton cake, baked potato, boiled rice ; a little carefully-cooked cucumber or summer squash, with butter and a little salt; two or three prunes, without skins. Fruit juices may be taken alone at almost any time during the day if they seem to agree, strained orange juice, grape juice and apple juice preferable. Avoid, for a long time, all fried foods, sweets, severe acids, coarse vegetables, hot breads, pastry, uncooked vege- tables, acid fruit juices, uncooked fruits, coarse, cereals, condiments, highly-seasoned soup, rich dishes, fruit jellies, fruits stewed with sugar. May eat, when a cure is effected Milk and milk preparations Carefully-stewed spaghetti, with- Milk and vichy out cheese Milk and apollinaris Stewed cucumbers Finely-minced meats, carefully Stewed summer squash broiled Green peas, pressed through a Cream soups sieve Broiled chop A little pulp of sweet corn, with- Broiled chicken out the husk of the grains Sweetbreads Oysters, stewed and in soup Tripe An occasional baked apple Birds Stewed prunes Baked potato Prune souffle Pulled bread Prune jelly Unleavened breads Vegetable jellies Boiled rice Guava jelly Fruit juices Warm cup custards Soft custards MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 59 AVOID All fried foods Coarse cereals; condiments Sweets; severe acids Highly seasoned sauces and All underground and coarse yeg- soups etables, as cabbage, onions, Rich dishes turnips Fruits stewed with sugar Hot breads; pastry Sea foods, except oysters Uncooked vegetables, as let- All salt foods tuce, celery Old peas, beans and lentils Uncooked fruits Fruit jellies, except guava INTESTINAL INDIGESTION Intestinal indigestion comes, as a rule, from continued overeating of starchy foods and sweets. It is found among people who eat large quantities of bread, and drink at the same time two or three cups of tea or coffee, with sugar and milk, or to those who eat large quantities of illy- cooked cereals, pastries, pies, cakes and puddings. This form of indigestion is most common, and may be cured permanently by living for three or four months on chopped beef or milk, cream soups, eggs and stale bread. In this disease, the secretions of the intestines become dull, deficient, abnormal fermentation is set up, gases are formed, the abdomen becomes distended, and, unless taken in time, the patient goes from bad to worse until he is really ill. Nervous and mental conditions have their origin frequently in intestinal indigestion. The bile is insufficient and poor in quality, and constipation follows. The skin becomes dry, dark, and loses its activity, and this overtaxes the kidneys. The care of the skin is of equal importance with correct diet. Use water freely, inside and out. Do not drink at meals. Cut down at once the quantity of food taken, especially the sugars and starches that require intestinal digestion. Give this part of the economy which is affected by disease, rest, that it may regain its lost strength. Koumys, butter- milk, leban, matzoon, milk with barley water, cream soups, white of egg and milk, may be used for a week or two in severe cases ; then add a scraped beef cake, broiled ; broiled 60 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK birds, broiled chops, breasts of chicken, coddled eggs, a piece of hard toast, well masticated; or well-baked whole wheat bread; and so continue until the patient is relieved of all unpleasant symptoms. The patient may now add broiled, boiled or roasted meats, an occasional baked potato, boiled rice, bread made without shortening, either pulled or toasted ; fruit juices alone, either early in the morning as a breakfast, or between meals; a little broiled fish; the heart of lettuce, with French dressing; mush bread, rice puddings, cup custards at meals where meat is not served; a little carefully-boiled macaroni with Parmesan cheese, and delicate green vegetables, simply cooked. Fats must for a long time be used sparingly and care- fully. A teaspoonful of pure olive oil once a day may be taken on lettuce or cress, or over carefully-cooked spinach. Use a tablespoonful of cream over the breakfast cereal, or it may be taken from the spoon, and masticated thoroughly. Bear in mind that a small quantity of food taken at frequent intervals will bring about a cure more quickly than larger meals at long intervals. Do not drink with meals. MAy Beef, mutton and chicken, broiled, boiled, baked, roasted Birds; venison White-fleshed fish, broiled or boiled Eggs, soft boiled, steamed, poached; yolks hard boiled, pressed through a sieve, on milk toast Sweetbreads, creamed or broiled Olive oil (a little) Butter (a little) Whole wheat bread, well baked Bread stick's ; mush bread Boiled rice; rice pudding Warm cup custard; junket Soft custards Koumys, modified milk Orange juice Prunes, dates, or figs, stewed with- out sugar Lettuce; celery Cream soups, as spinach, celery, or lettuce Carefully-cooked cauliflower Roquefort or other ripe cheese in small quantities The early spring mushrooms New turnips, cooked below boiling point in unsalted water, served with cream sauce Stewed cucumbers, stewed squash Baked bananas, cream, horseradish sauce Young peas pressed through sieve Cress, chicory, endive, lettuce A cup of coffee once a day Very weak tea MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 61 AVOID Boiled coffee Potatoes Boiled tea Pickles All sweets Spiced foods Fried foods Gelatin desserts White bread Red or dark fish Crackers Salt foods Cakes All the Crustacea Small acid fruits Clams Pork in all forms Oysters Veal Iced water Turkey Acid drinks Duck Flavored soda water Cooked cabbage Starchy foods and sweets in gen- Beets eral Corn, green ACUTE INTESTINAL CATARRH In this disease, the intestines need rest. Give stomach digested foods with a minimum of light starchy gruels; beef juice, albumin and water, dried albumin in broth, modi- fied milk without milk sugar, German flour gruel, arrow- root gruel, -weak tea, cocoa shells and cocoa nibs, with very little milk; blackberry cordial. Do not give whole milk. As the intestines begin to recover, add to the diet broiled white meat of chicken, broiled fish, soft-cooked eggs, broiled sweetbread. Give six ground almonds once a day, after a meat meal. MAY EAT Modified milk, without milk sugar Leban Albuminized water Koumys, occasionally Gelatinized water Strained gruels Tea Meat juice Vegetable gelatin with fruit juice An occasional bit of toast Soft-cooked eggs Grape juice Meal cake with six ground al- Strained orange juice monds Apple juice Broiled chops Blackberry toast Meat broths, with dry albumin Huckleberry jelly Zwieback, Aleurona wafers, al- Elderberry jelly mond wafers 62 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MUST AVOID All vegetable foods All fats and fatty foods Coarse cereals Puddings Fruits, except those mentioned Pies All acid foods, as pickles, etc. Cakes Highly-seasoned meat soups Rich desserts Coffee Sauces Bread Sea foods CHRONIC INTESTINAL CATARRH A person troubled with chronjc intestinal catarrh must live largely on broiled meat, dry bread or zweiback, or water crackers. Occasionally very sweet blackberries and ripe peaches, but fruits must not be indulged in too freely. Guava, quince and orange jellies are admissible. Avoid cereals and all coarse vegetables. Junket and junket prep- arations, warm cup custards, milk toast, golden toast, make pleasant supper dishes, but the diet must necessarily be more or less monotonous for a considerable period. ULCER OF THE DUODENUM Give only stomach digested foods at first white of egg and water, or whey, Meiggs' food, followed by modified milk, if mouth feeding is allowable. As the patient pro- gresses, add barley water to plain milk ; German flour gruel ; rice water and milk; milk and vichy; albuminized milk; nut milk ; fruit gelose ; mutton broth cooked with barley and strained ; Bartholow's Food ; soup a la Reine ; cocoa made from the nibs ; a little weak tea. During convalescence follow the diet given for convalescing typhoid patients. Avoid all vegetable foods, breads, coffee, cereals, fruits, except orange and grape juice; sweets; toast; fatty foods, except a little cream ; cheese ; meats except chopped beef or mutton ; rich soups, tomato especially, and sea foods. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 63 CHRONIC CONSTIPATION Many persons seem totally ignorant of what causes and prolongs constipation. The mind has a more powerful influence over this than over any other disease ; for this reason impress upon the patient that the given course of diet is curative. Among the numerous conditions which cause and prolong this disease are the overeating of starches and the drinking of tea and coffee with sugar and cream with meals. Too concentrated food, and too great a variety at a meal. Drinking too little water between meals. Softened bread or toast by dipping in tea or coffee. Overeating of sweets, stewed dried fruits with sugar. Eating heavy meals early in the morning, whether hungry or not. Disobeying the call of nature until a more convenient hour. All these things provoke indigestion, with its accom- panying nervousness, constipation and lassitude, and a dis- inclination to be well, and a delight in invalidism. Such persons could, if they would, even after long continued constipation, bring about better circulation, more natural and healthful conditions. The giddiness and faint- ness, important complaints in the mind of the patient, are always emphasized at the expense of the real trouble, which continues. Green vegetables, carefully and simply cooked, fruits, raw or cooked without sugar, between meals or taken as a meal alone, are beneficial. Stewed fruits with meals or at the end of a meal as a dessert, are nine out of ten times constipating. 64 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK The few "Dont's" that follow may help you in selecting a suitable diet: Don't eat an early breakfast, especially in bed. Don't eat fruits stewed with sugar at the end of meals. Don't drink at the beginning of a meal. Don't preface your dinner with a soup. Don't eat rich sauces. Don't eat mayonnaise on vegetables; use French dressing. Don't eat when not hungry. Fresh ingested foods meeting remnants of a preceding meal, rapidly ferment, producing sour stomach, and frequently in turn palpitation of the heart. Don't eat too great variety at a meal. Don't drink large quantities of fluids with meals ; they cause discomfort and interfere with the action of the heart. Things To Do Bathe or sponge every morning; rub until the skin is aglow. Drink immediately a glass of cool, not iced, water. In thirty minutes drink a cup of clear coffee. If hungry a little later, eat fruit, or a soft-boiled egg and bacon. Drink a pint of cool, not iced, water between breakfast and luncheon. Masticate every mouthful of food thoroughly. Drink at the end of the meal. Buttermilk and brown bread make an exceedingly good luncheon or supper. Take fruits with cereals, vegetables with meat. At bedtime eat four or five tablespoonfuls of scraped turnip, or grated carrot, or apple, or two ounces of peanut brittle, or a half pint of freshly-popped corn. When ready for bed, drink a glass of cool, not iced, water. MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 65 MAY EAT Coffee with scalded milk, no sugar Well-cooked cereals Steamed figs Dates Baked apples Plums, very ripe, without skins Grape fruit Orange juice Grape juice Apple juice Toasted shredded wheat and milk Bran mush; oatmeal mush Wheatlet All top ground green vege- tables, carefully cooked Raw cabbage salad Lettuce; cress; endive; chicory Celery Celery and apple with French dressing Stewed macaroni without cheese Baked potato Baked pumpkin Stewed squash Nut foods in place of meat Buttermilk Leban; koumys Matzoon; zoolak; kefir Broiled white fish Raw scraped apple at night Grated turnip with salt Stewed grated carrot Milk with milk sugar added Carefully-cooked spinach Kale Asparagus tips Young peas Roman meal breads Bran bread Graham bread Whole wheat bread Brown bread Corn bread Gelatin desserts Vegetable gelatin desserts Brown Betty Bread and milk pudding Chicken Lamb Mutton Chopped meat cakes Broiled steak Stewed veal Sweetbreads Tripe Sliced tomato with cocoanut cream Green vegetable salads Fruit salads, French dressing AVOID Milk with meals Cheese and cheese preparations All fried foods Pies; cakes Preserves Coarse vegetables Soft foods in general Salt foods Hot breads 5 Coffee, tea and chocolate with meals Stewed fruit with meals Pickles White bread Mashed potatoes Fried potatoes Beef tea Meat soups 66 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK APPENDICITIS Without entering into the causes or theories concern- ing appendicitis, it is frequently met with in persons who are troubled with habitual constipation, and persons who sit in unnatural positions, stooping over, as tailors, seam- stresses, and bookkeepers. The first important step toward recovery, is to correct the irregularities of the stomach and bowels. Give up one meal a day, preferably breakfast. A walk- ing patient, going every day to the office, may cut out the noonday meal, taking in its place a glass of buttermilk, matzoon or koumys. Give plenty of pure cold water between meals and a cup of hot water before dinner. If breakfasts are not eaten, give in its place a cup of cafe au lait without sugar, or the juice of two oranges, or a half glass of apple juice. If breakfasts are eaten, the food must be light and easily digested : Cream of Wheat, farina, Wheatena, wheat- let, shredded wheat, toasted corn flakes, or strained oatmeal and cream, with hard bread or whole wheat bread or Roman bannocks well buttered, are quite enough. Luncheons should be composed largely of cream soups or milk preparations. For dinners, give boiled mutton, beef, chicken or white-fleshed fish, a baked potato, or boiled rice, or carefully-cooked hominy, or plain macaroni, fol- lowed by a dainty salad of carefully-cooked string beans or cauliflower, or asparagus with French dressing. Rub the plate in which you make the French dressing with a clove of garlic, or cut the clove into slices and mash it with a fork in the oil before adding the vinegar. Garlic is a desirable stimulant in this disease. Induce the patient to stop eating while the food tastes good. Thorough mastication is of importance. Do not give desserts. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 67 If constipation is persistent, give a glass of cold water, with a half teaspoonful of salt added, at bedtime, and a glass of cool, not iced, water, early in the morning, an hour before giving the coffee. Do not depend on large quantities of meat for the nitrogenous portion of the diet; substitute eggs, milk, and ground' nuts. Whole wheat bread well buttered, milk prep- arations, as koumys, matzoon, clabber and buttermilk, are all advantageous. Avoid dried fruits, fruits stewed with sugar, pork, veal, old peas, beans, lentils, dry toast, milk toast, rich sauces, meat soups, pies, puddings, cakes, preserves, candies, pickles, and sea foods, with the exception of white-fleshed fish. MAY EAT, IN EARLY STAGES Milk and cream Prunes, steamed, without skins Modified milk with double quan- Grape fruit tity of sugar of milk Baked apple Meigg's Food Apple sauce Egg and milk Cranberry jelly Fruit juices, especially orange All fruit jellies not too sweet and apple juice Coffee, if allowable Prune pulp LATER Whole wheat bread, well but- Stewed cucumbers tered and masticated thor- Stewed squash oughly Nut roll Cornmeal souffle Almond and apple pudding Baked potato Eggs, poached, steamed, and Milk soups hard-boiled yolks Carefully-cooked strained cereals Artichokes c . , Jerusalem artichokes SP'nach Cauliflower Puree of green peas p ure - e of sorre] Asparagus tips with French Stewed rhubard dressing Boiled mutton, beef and chicken Sliced tomato without seeds White fish, broiled or boiled Puree of tomato Game 68 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK AVOID All bulk foods Skins of fruit and vegetables Pork; veal All fried foods Lobsters, crabs, clams, oysters Mashed potatoes Boiled cabbage Underground coarse vegetables, as turnips All complicated sweets Toast, dry, buttered or milk Seeds of small fruits String beans Pickles of all kinds Condiments White bread Soft drinks Lemonade Milk Chocolate; tea CHRONIC DIARRHCEA During the severe symptoms of this disease the patient must eat predigested foods, adding, as. conditions allow, mutton broth, ground rice gruel, barley water, and scalded milk; and later, a broiled lamb chop, meat juice on toast, a little minced chicken, and a scraped meat cake. Tea may be taken in the morning, and again in the afternoon, but not with other food. Moderately hot and clear, it is a stimulant. In certain conditions, even in chronic intestinal diarrhoea, the patient will be troubled with constipation. This does not mean that the disease is cured ; it is simply another phase of the same trouble. Return to the liquid diet, modified milk, or add sugar of milk to ordinary milk. Stop solid foods for the time being, and the tea. Use no purgatives unless ordered by the physician. MAY Predigested milk Modified milk without milk sugar Blackberry cordial Elderberry toast Blackberry toast Mutton broth, with barley and rice Browned rice gruel German flour and milk Barley gruel EAT Toasted crackers Zweiback Hard dry toast Weak tea Mulled port wine Port wine whey Claret whey Fresh grape juice Concord grapes Soft ripe peaches MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 69 followed later by milk soups, hard crackers, lamb chops, boiled minced mutton, Cream of Wheat, well cooked and thoroughly masticated, a little boiled rice, and an occasional baked potato. AVOID Variety at meals Puddings All vegetable foods except baked Dates potato and boiled rice Pears All uncooked vegetables Rhubarb Prunes Strawberries Figs Raspberries All fried foods Currants Coffee Citrus fruits All the crustacea, oysters, clams Pork and fish Veal Soft breads Bacon Rich sauces Ducks Soups Geese Pies Turkeys Cakes ACUTE DYSENTERY In this disease milk foods must be depended on. Dry albumin in modified milk, Meiggs' food, modified milk without sugar of milk, mutton broth boiled with rice or barley and strained; dry toast, zweiback, water crackers, boiled rice, arrowroot gruel, bouillon or consomme, "ye perfect food," cornmeal gruel, milk and barley water, German flour gruel, blackberry jelly, blackberry drink, grape juice, ripe blackberries without the core, and very ripe peaches. Give vegetable gelatin flavored with brandy once a day. Two hour feedings are recommended in acute cases. As the patient begins to convalesce, milk soups, butter- milk, leban, koumys, may be added, followed by broiled chops, boiled mutton, scraped beef cake, an occasional bit of broiled fish, with baked potato, boiled rice, and some- times a little stewed macaroni. Variety must come from change of service and cooking, as this list must be adhered 70 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK to for some time. A second attack is frequently more diffi- cult to cure than a first. MAY EAT, WHEN CONVALESCING Broiled, boiled or roasted mutton White fish, broiled Baked potato Boiled rice Cream of Wheat Farina Eggs, soft Raw eggs Milk and milk preparations Junket Occasionally tapioca, cup custards, soft custards Zweiback Pilot bread Brandy gelose Water crackers Hard toast White bread without lard Tea Vegetable gelatin desserts White of egg on orange juice Dark, ripe grapes, without seeds or skins Very ripe peaches Toast water Blackberry dishes Elderberry jelly Guava jelly Orange marmalade All coarse vegetables Bran bread Cereals Fruits, except those mentioned Fats and fatty foods Coffee Chocolate Cocoa Raw vegetables Gelatin Sweets, pastries and preserves Sea foods Pork Beef Veal Chicken Salt foods Soft bread MRS. RORERS DIET FOR THE SICK 71 DIET IN HEMORRHOIDS Strange as it may seem, diet has a marked influence over this disease. If people lived correctly, irregularities of this kind would never occur. Chronic constipation fol- lows indigestion, and hemorrhoids follow chronic consti- pation, so, after all, the stomach is the "hub" on which the body revolves. MAY EAT Baked potatoes Grated and stewed carrots Carefully-cooked spinach Cauliflower Young sweet peas All green vegetable salads especially string bean salad Onions, carefully boiled, baked, made into soup Cereals, well cooked Graham bread Unleavened bread Corn bread Whole wheat bread Nut milk Vegetable gelatin dishes Leban Koumys Matzoon Buttermilk Clabber Broiled and roasted beef Mutton Chicken Duck Turkey All fresh fruits Dates Figs Prunes, cooked without sugar Fruit juices Tomatoes, raw or baked Eggs Butter Cream Cocoanut cream Kefir An abundance of water AVOID All fried foods Pork Veal Fat meats Fruits with seeds Rhubarb Pickles Sour dishes Asparagus Boiled cabbage Old beans, peas and lentils Cheese All spiced dishes Alcoholic beverages unless ordered Strong tea Rich sauces Meat soups Puddings Pies Cakes Candies 72 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK PERITONITIS In the early stages of this disease give modified milk, white of egg beaten in water or whey, a little mutton broth, chicken tea or chicken broth, veal and lamb broth, all strained; port wine whey; junket whey; gelatin water, or toast water. As the disease subsides, add a little strained gruel, milk, koumys, leban or matzoon. When solid foods are allowable, add a little scraped meat, broiled, coddled eggs, junket and junket preparations and cream soups ; fol- lowed by a broiled chop, broiled bird, zwieback and milk toast. Avoid for a long time all starchy foods, excessive fats, the curd of milk unless it is especially treated, raw vege- tables, and fruits, except fruit juices. MAY EAT, IN EARLY STAGES Modified milk Veal and lamb broth, strained White of egg beaten with water Port wine whey Strained mutton broth Junket whey Chicken tea Gelatin water Chicken jelly Toast water Beef jelly Arrowroot gruel and milk FOLLOWED BY Strained gruels Bartholow's Food Milk Beef panada Koumys Gelatin bouillon Matzoon Bouillon a la Colbert Bonnyclabber Semi-solid beef Buttermilk Eggs LATER Scraped meat cake Golden chicken Broiled chop Ceylon chicken Stewed tripe Baked potato Oyster soup Boiled rice Oatmeal broth, with mutton Stewed prunes Cornmeal broth with mutton Baked apple Sweetbreads Fruit juices Chicken souffle; chicken puff Toast, hardtack or cocoanut Chicken in potato cases fingers MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 73 AVOID, FOR A LONG TIME Excessive fats All highly seasoned meats, soups Starchy foods and sauces Mashed potatoes Curd of milk unless especially All underground vegetables treated Coarse vegetables, as kale and Raw. fruits, except orange juice cabbage and grape fruit Condiments Sour foods Raw vegetables OBESITY Obesity is the natural result of overeating and drink- ing, and a disinclination to regular exercise. The reduction of fat, while it does not necessarily in- volve a radical change in diet, does involve great will power and patience on the part of the patient. An excess of fat must be looked upon as an objectionable form of disease. It does not come without invitation. One fre- quently notices among members of the same family, eating practically at the same table, great differences in weight, and the excuse of the overfat is they are inclined to store fat, or it is an inherited tendency from some remote ancestor. Upon observation, however, one will find that the fat person eats a large quantity of fat-producing food sugars and starches and drinks large quantities of liquids with meals, while the thin person will live largely on nitro- genous compounds lean meat, eggs and milk. Both are in danger, but it is more difficult to add fat to the lean person than to reduce the obese. The quantity of food given is of far greater importance than a radical change. If the patient has been in the habit of taking a heavy breakfast cereal, egg and toast, with coffee drop first the cereal, continue the egg and toast, and coffee ; later, drop the toast, and take the coffee early in the morning, and a raw egg and milk later. If hunger is felt in the middle of the morning, give a cup of clam broth or 74 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK bouillon, or a glass of water. A radical change frequently upsets digestion and produces undesirable conditions. In- crease slowly the exercise, both mental and physical ; this will absorb a portion of the fat already stored in the body, and you will begin at once to reduce the weight. The over- fat woman is more liable to disease than the overfat man, because she naturally takes less exercise, and to correct her unsightly figure she wears tight clothing, pushing the fat from one place to another, frequently on the diaphragm, in turn upon the heart, which reduces the circulation until she really becomes an invalid. Her face is purple, the end of her nose is red, her breath- ing heavy and short, and she is pitiful to behold. Light gym- nastic exercises, without apparatus, should be taken morn- ing and night. Strengthen the muscular tissues of the body by increasing the nitrogenous foods lean meats, old beans, peas, lentils, nut foods, milk and eggs, and decreas- ing the starches and sugars. Keep up the bulk by using green vegetables, carefully cooked, tender lettuce, cress, with a little lemon juice, and fruits and fruit juices. Give a little cool water between meals, but not with meals. A Word About Coffee Coffee is a laxative if it fol- lows a glass of cool water in the early morning; it also spares the tissues, and, in reducing weight, the patient should take a cup of good percolated coffee, at least once a day, if it agrees. In fact, the first meal of the day may consist of one cup of good, strong coffee, diluted with one cupful of scalded, not boiled, milk. The writer sees no objection to a small cup of coffee after dinner, if it does not upset digestion. The stimulating principles of coffee spare the tissues and assist the obese in reducing weight. Coffee, unlike alcohol, allays rather than increases the appetite. Give two meals a day, and no nibble between meals. For dinner, give two well-broiled chops, or two poached eggs, or a steak or chicken. For dessert, a half pound of MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 75 grapes, or one ripe peach, or one baked apple, or better still, a dish of lettuce with a few drops of oil and lemon juice, and a cracker with a bit of ripe cheese. Suppers should be light and composed of easily- digested foods, as milk toast; hard-boiled yolks of eggs and hard bread ; chopped rare meat sandwich ; koumys ; matzoon ; buttermilk ; one slice of brown bread and a glass of buttermilk; or one glass of matzoon and two Uneeda biscuits ; broiled sweetbreads, eggs in various forms, lettuce, chicory or endive salad, apple and celery salad, sliced oranges, two baked bananas with two ounces of gluten bread. The very obese should rest after the noonday meal, but after supper should take a short walk. Rest by chang- ing the occupation. Play tennis or golf every day. MAY EAT Clear vegetable soups Meat broths, strained Chicken tea Chicken jelly Chicken in jelly Broiled, boiled and baked beef, mutton and chicken; occasion- ally veal Broiled chipped beef White-fleshed fish Eggs, lightly cooked Tender green vegetables, as cooked cucumbers, squash, string beans Lettuce, chicory, celery, endive and raw cabbage, with lemon juice and a little oil Stewed turnips Spinach Kale Asparagus Onions Cauliflower Brussels sprouts Dandelions Sour dock Artichokes Olives Tomatoes Fruit juices without sugar Raw fruits without sugar Very little stale bread Cocoanut fingers Almond wafers Aleuronat gems Gluten gems Junket from skimmed milk Buttermilk occasionally Ripe cheese, as parmesan schmierkase and 76 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Continued Hazel nuts and cob nuts Soy bean preparations Coffee without sugar and cream Clear weak tea One glass of water between meals Oranges Grape fruit Ripe peaches Baked apple without sugar and cream Currants Raspberries Blackberries AVOID Milk soups Butter Cream Olive oil, except a little green vegetables Sea foods, except white fish Salt foods Pork Veal All made meat dishes Rich sauces and soups Potatoes, sweet and white Macaroni Cereals Rice, except occasionally Parsnips Beets Corn All sweet dishes and candies Malt and alcoholic liquors un- on less ordered All sweet wines, including cham- pagne Pickles Bacon Breads in general Duck Goose Liver and kidneys Dates and figs Pears Chocolate and cocoa Water in large quantities MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 77 DIET FOR LEANNESS The writer does not believe that leanness is really a disease that needs to have either dietetic or medical treat- ment, except when accompanied by anaemia, tuberculosis, or diseases of this kind. The ordinary person who is per- fectly well, and lean, is to be congratulated; he is sure to have a long and comfortable life. People with nervous activity, who are perfectly well, are apt to be lean, and it is well to let this leanness alone. "A lean dog is good for a long chase." Oils, butter, cream, milk, cocoa, chocolate, cocoanut fat, bread well buttered, baked potatoes with butter, well-cooked cereals with cream, oatmeal and corn- meal are all fat-producing foods. Such sweet dishes as figs, dates, prunes, farinaceous foods with sugar and cream, and honey, are to be recommended. A person who is lean should avoid acids, pickles, bulky foods, as turnips, cab- bage, carrots, parsnips, and substitute potatoes, rice, stewed macaroni and cereals. They may also add to the diet now and then a dish of preserves, jellies, or fruits with sugar; and may take between the morning and noon, and the noon and night meals, a glass of milk and an egg, or a glass of plain milk, or a glass of buttermilk. All foods must be thoroughly masticated. Give an ounce of butter and a third of a half pint of cream at each meal. For the morning meal, give two soft-boiled eggs, a piece of dry toast, or a piece of whole wheat bread, well buttered. If dinner is taken at noon, it should consist of a small quantity of cream soup, a piece of steak or a chop, chicken or a roast, with whole wheat bread, well buttered, a baked potato, followed by a cup of whipped cream, or some dessert over which cream can be used. For the night meal, use a cereal and cream, baked and stuffed potato, potatoes au gratin, with a chop or omelet, or broiled chicken, or sweetbread, with three or four stewed figs or prunes, with cream, or a cup custard and sponge cake. 78 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Remember, to increase weight one must keep the digestive tract in a perfectly healthy condition. If cream disagrees, stop it at once, and give milk and egg. Give a glass of water at the close of each meal, not with the meal. If digestion is slow, give six blanched, not roasted, almonds after each meal. Two or three times a week, slice two Brazilian nuts over a lettuce salad, and dress the salad with two tablespoonfuls of olive oil and 'a teaspoonful of vinegar or lemon juice. Theoretically all these foods increase fat, but they fail utterly, from a practical standpoint, if they upset diges- tion. Give three good meals a day, and egg and milk between meals. MAY EAT Cream soups Macaroni Broiled beef Hominy and hominy grits Mutton Well-cooked cereals, with cream Turkey Salads Chicken Butter Game Olive oil Breakfast bacon Cocoanut cream Good white bread, well baked Such nuts as pecans, black wal- Baked potatoes nuts, pinons, a few almonds and Asparagus peanuts Onions All forms of sweet fruits Cauliflower Light cream desserts Rice Fruits AVOID All bulk foods, as Pies, puddings and cakes Cabbage Rich sauces Turnips Liver and kidneys Kale Tripe Clear soups Pork Sea foods, with the exception of Veal white-fleshed fish and oysters Pickles, lemons, olives Candies Fried foods All salt meats MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 79 GOUT Gout, like rheumatism, may be cured on a "shilling a day," if you earn it. The overfed and underworked the idle are frequently gouty. Give plenty of pure water between meals; fruit juices, especially orange, apple and grape juice ; the yolk of an egg in milk ; the hard-boiled yolks grated over milk toast ; puree of nuts ; puree of lentils ; sweet fresh peas and corn ; an occasional bit of broiled white-fleshed fish, with an abundance of succulent green vegetables lightly cooked. In fact, such tender uncooked vegetables as lettuce, cress, celery, endive, with citrous fruits, should form the bulk of the diet. Give at least two quarts of water a day between meals, and insist upon the patient giving up all red meats, pink-fleshed fish, the Crustacea, lobsters, crabs, oysters and clams, subacid fruits, sweets and highly seasoned soups and sauces. Puree of lentil and puree of nuts must take the place of meat. Do not reduce the gouty obese patient too rapidly. The general vitality must be kept up. For this reason avoid the bulky foods, such as coarse underground vege- tables, potatoes, and white bread. Give skimmed milk in place of whole milk. Buttermilk, matzoon and zoolak are to be preferred to sweet milk. When digestion is weak and the patient emaciated, give lean chopped mutton cake, once a day; the yolk of a hard-boiled egg on toast, once a day ; sweet milk with a little cream between breakfast and luncheon. Boiled rice, stewed cucumber or boiled string beans may be given with the mutton cake. 80 MRS. RORERS DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT All forms of hard bread Milk soups without butter Vegetable soups no meat Clam broth Bellevue bouillon Skimmed milk Roquefort cheese (small quantity) Yolks of eggs occasionally Broiled bacon Chopped meat cakes, broiled Farinaceous foods and cereals Rice Sago and fruit Tapioca and fruit Strawberries, if they agree Vegetable gelatin, with fruits Nut dishes Puree of lentils Young peas French canned peas String beans Celery Stewed turnips White potatoes, occasionally Okra Artichokes, French and Jerusalem Stewed cucumbers Light salads, little oil and plenty of lemon juice Stewed summer squash Cauliflower Kohl-rabi Baked eggplant Lettuce, cress, endive AVOID Meats in general ; pork, veal and salt meats in particular All appetizers, as anchovies, caviar, herring and herring roe All warmed-over meats and entrees Fat foods in general All fresh hot breads ; buckwheat cakes Pastries, preserves and candies All sweet drinks Jams and jellies Such green vegetables as radishes, asparagus, rhubarb, spinach, to- matoes, garden cress, beets, parsnips, salsify, yellow turnips, boiled cabbage, onions,, baked beans Melons, peaches, plums, necta- rines, apricots, grapes, figs, bananas, prunes All sour foods and condiments ; pickles and spiced dishes Indigestible foods, as mushrooms sea foods and cheese The above dishes may be arranged in menus so that each meal will be attractive and appetizing and still simple. Give a cup of clear coffee, without milk or sugar, or fruit juice, early in the morning; the heavy meal at noon- day, and supper at six o'clock, composed largely of cereals. Caution If the patient has been in the habit of taking wine with every meal, cut it off gradually. If tea and coffee disagree, give an infusion of cocoa nibs or shells, MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 81 with a very little milk or cream. Rich chocolate and cocoa must be avoided. Saline waters are to be recommended for the obese. A man who has been accustomed to strong drink generally prefers a saline water, purchased at a drug store, to a good spring water. Humor him in these mat- ters. If the patient is thin and rather anaemic, do not give him saline waters. Give plain pure soft water. Watch the patient carefully, and note the results from every meal. It is of utmost importance that the stomach should be kept in good condition. RHEUMATISM One cannot decide for one's self whether one has rheumatism or not. Twinges of pain may come from other causes. Where rheumatism occurs, the care of the skin is of equal importance with food. The patient must be protected from sudden changes in the weather. A sudden change from dry to damp, from hot to cold, will fre- quently cause much trouble. On the other hand, he must not sit in a close, overheated room; this makes one sensi- tive to cold. See that the patient is warmly dressed in light wool, that he may live in the open air; this, with correct food, will aid greatly in a cure. There are two kinds of rheumatism, one a sort of first cousin to gout, which comes to the obese, the individual who always gratifies his appetite on rich, highly-seasoned foods ; the other we find in rural districts, among persons who live on illy-selected foods pork and potatoes, fol- lowed by pie, all washed down with weak tea or coffee, for dinner, and bread and butter and stewed fruit for sup- per; or those who take milk with their meals as a "bev- erage." Persons in the first class should be made to live on a "shilling a day," and earn it. Wines must be exchanged for large drafts of pure cold water. Rich nitrogenous foods, sauces, soups, entrees and sweets, must be given up entirely. 6 82 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Eggs and milk may now and then be given in the place of meat. Boiled rice and carefully-stewed macaroni, with such cereals as Cream of Wheat, farina and hominy grits, must take the place of potatoes. Milk soups must take the place of meat soups. Green vegetables in goodly quantities should be added to the diet. A dish of lettuce salad, with a little oil and lemon juice, well-cooked spinach, cucumbers, tender celery, carefully-boiled dandelions, cooked cress, Ro- maine, string beans, young green peas, okra, Jerusalem and globe artichokes, are all admissible. An occasional piece of broiled white fish, or a few broiled oysters, or a little stewed veal, are allowable in cases that are not severe. Bread must be stale and dry. Tea and coffee with sugar and milk must not be given. A cup of black coffee is admissible after the morning bath and before the breakfast. Fruits may be eaten between meals, but not with other foods. Starchy foods should consist of carefully-boiled rice, macaroni, carefully-boiled chestnuts, with now and then a sweet potato; tapioca flavored with fruit juices, and sago. Cream soups are always allowable, but must not be taken with other foods; with whole wheat bread or hard white bread they form an easily-digested night meal. Milk toast may be given for breakfast, or supper. Class two must be fed wheat germ cereals, shredded wheat or oatmeal with cream, egg and milk for breakfast. Lean beef, mutton, chicken, puree of lentils, Roman bread, corn bread, wheat bread, well buttered, cup custards, suet puddings, occasionally, for dinner. Junket, milk foods, leban, buttermilk, brown bread, milk toast, eggs and chops for supper. Rice and cream are also good. If the patient is in bed, give a tepid bath and rub about eight o'clock in the morning; then a half pint of cool, not iced, water to drink, then a rest for thirty minutes, fol- lowed by a breakfast of one toasted shredded wheat biscuit, or a saucer of Wheatlet with a half pint of pasteurized milk. MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 83 At twelve o'clock give a dinner, consisting of whole wheat bread and butter, broiled meat, with a dish of stewed prunes, or three or four ripe peaches, or a half pound of dark grapes. In the middle of the afternoon give a half pint or more of soft, cool water, not iced. There is no objection to a glass of milk in the middle of the afternoon if the patient seems hungry, but water, after all, is the keynote to recovery. At five o'clock give a puree of lentils, or any of the cream soups, leaving out all high seasoning. Vary the foods, but keep up this routine until the patient is better. A glass of milk may be given at bedtime, if necessary. Even after cured, the patient must continue a simple diet for many months. RHEUMATICS MAY EAT A little chicken White-fleshed fish Lightly-cooked eggs Milk and milk foods Puree of peanuts Milk soup Boiled rice Stewed macaroni Boiled chestnuts Popped corn Fruits, except dates, figs and prunes Fruit juices Carrots Young peas Stewed squash Stewed cucumbers Artichokes Lettuce Cress Endive Celery Cauliflower Brussels sprouts MUST AVOID All meats, except chicken Sea foods, except white-fleshed fish Fried foods Pies Cakes, cookies Candies Rich puddings Rich sauces Meat soups Jellies Preserves Tea with sugar and cream Coffee with sugar and cream Fruits stewed with sugar Liquids with meals Fresh bread Hot breads Griddle cakes 84 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK CHRONIC RHEUMATISM The treatment of chronic rheumatism differs from that of the acute disease. Most persons with this disease are underfed and badly nourished ; they have been starved in the land of plenty ; they have been ignorant of the foods necessary for perfect nutrition. It is not an unusual thing to find chronic rheu- matism among the tea and toast maidens, or the so-called vegetarians of the rural districts, who live on bread, fruit, cereals, "weak" tea or coffee, or cambric tea, or pork and potatoes all carbonaceous foods. They usually have heavy dinners in the middle of the day, go to work quickly after eating, and their suppers are "light," composed of dough- nuts, stewed fruits, white bread, all well washed down with two or three cups of tea. Persons of this type are naturally "subject to colds." They wear three or four times as much clothing as is necessary for warmth, and heavy flannels which prevent normal activity of the skin in fact, the skin is almost in a dead condition. If they remove their underclothes at night and shake them out, a fine white powder falls over the floor. They sit in a warm, unventi- lated room, and sleep in a room with the "night air" shut out. These people look on pure air and water as their greatest enemies. Feed these patients rather than starve them. Give them eggs and milk, and red meats. Lean beef is frequently found advantageous. Cream soups are advisable ; yolk of egg and milk; infant foods, as Eskay's, malted milk and Mellin's food; junket; now and then a glass of koumys. Tea and coffee can be taken between meals alone, but never with food. All foods must be thoroughly masticated. The use of sour milk and buttermilk must be determined by the physician ; in certain cases they are good, in others bad. Give cottage cheese three or four times a week in the place of meat; stale bread and rice are the acceptable starch foods. Give citrus fruits and apples. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 85 LIVER TROUBLES Just what is meant by liver troubles must be decided by the physician. Overeating of rich or badly-cooked food, and overdrinking, will frequently overtax both the digestive tract and the liver. Persons who indulge excessively in sweets, preserves and cream are apt to have what they call "torpid liver." The portal system of the liver has been overtaxed. Give it rest before it is too late. Biliousness is another term inaccurately used to express a functional disorder of the liver where there is an excessive secretion of bile. An excess of food, both in quantity and quality, may now and then be disposed of in a "bilious attack" ; if, however, this warning is disregarded, more serious troubles may result. Of all the organs of the body, the liver responds most quickly to a correct diet. Cut off at once fried foods, sweets, entrees, sauces, liquors, pork, veal, sea food, tea, coffee, chocolate, for at least a year, and note the change. Give plenty of water between meals. Substitute whole wheat bread for white. Boiled chestnuts and rice may take the place of potato. Fruits will take the place of desserts. Fruit juices should be taken once or twice a day. Give green vegetables every day, asparagus, spinach, summer squash, cucuntbers, lettuce, cress, endive with French dressing made from a little oil and lemon juice. Hard bread is to be recommended, because it requires mastication, which aids digestion, and good digestion aids in the activity of the liver. Do not give water with meals but plenty be- tween meals. If foods disagree, drop them at once. If flatulency occurs, too much starch or fat has been given. Give the heaviest meal in the middle of the day ; a light sup- per, composed of eggs, milk toast, cereals, or cocoa with toast. Buttermilk and leban are to be recommended. 86 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Chicken Beef Mutton White-fleshed fish Clam broth Oyster bouillon Nut milks Stale bread Whole wheat bread Boiled rice Leban Koumys Clabber Buttermilk Tender green vegetables, carefully cooked without fat, as spinach, string beans, asparagus, summer squash, stewed cucumbers, dan- delions cooked and raw Delicate green salads with French dressing Tender celery Fruit juices Apples Oranges Grape fruit Strawberries Raspberries Currant juice and raspberry Prunes Figs Spinach Kohl-rabi Stewed cucumbers Summer squash Young peas Water cress Watermelon Nut dishes Broiled or roasted beef, mutton and chicken Sweetbreads and tripe Grapes Eggs occasionally Junket Milk and vichy Lemonade Raspberry vinegar Blackberry vinegar Plenty of water AVOID Fatty foods Pies, cakes and puddings Sweet dishes Candy Fruits stewed with sugar Pears Cantaloupes Peaches Potatoes All spices Pepper Salt in quantities All fried foods Tea Coffee Chocolate Cocoa Veal Pork Sausages Hot breads Buckwheat cakes Crustacea Old peas and beans Corn breads Alcoholic and malt liquors Tomatoes Turnips Beets Carrots Sweet potatoes Cabbage MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 87 AVOID Continued Cauliflower; Brussels sprouts Internal organs, as liver, kidneys Kale; pickles Cereals Rich sauces and soups Such oily dishes as sardines, All salt foods canned salmon in fact all All dried fruits canned fish should be avoided Fatty Liver Salisbury restricted his patients, who had fatty liver, to a diet of from one to three pounds of chopped lean beef per day, with an orange or a half pound of white grapes. The meat must be put twice through a meat grinder, slightly salted, made into small cakes and broiled; a few drops of lemon juice may be added at the last minute. If the patient is tubercular, serve with the meat cakes a green salad, or carefully-boiled rice with a little melted butter. Between meals each day give a pint of milk and two eggs, and the juice of two oranges early in the morning. Starch Liver In this disease the diet is practically the same as for Fatty Liver, CATARRHAL JAUNDICE In this disease a fast is frequently the first aid to recov- ery. When feeding is allowable, begin with a small quan- tity of light food : whey, clam broth, albuminized water, albuminized whey, buttermilk, leban, matzoon, zoolak, lemonades, and fruit juices with effervescing waters. If these foods agree and the fever subsides, add a little nut milk, Cream of Wheat and skimmed milk, milk toast made from skimmed milk, mutton broth, beef broth, chicken broth; later, beef panada, soup a la Reine, beef pats, broiled ; a broiled chop ; zweiback or hard toast ; raw fruits alone, not with meals. If the patient has been a coffee drinker, give a small cup of clear coffee the first thing in the morning. Lemonade with effervescing waters may be used freely. Avoid all sweets, fats, eggs, fried foods, indigestible meats, as pork and veal, sea foods, 88 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK coarse vegetables, pickles, strong tea and coffee, chocolate, cocoa, hot and soft breads. CIRRHOSIS This disease, which usually accompanies alcoholism, must have very careful feeding. Usually a milk diet, inter- changed with whey and milk preparations, is used for sev- eral weeks or months. Bartholow recommended the "grape cure" and the "whey cure," but the selection of food for this disease is best left to a physician, as each individual case requires individual feeding. GALL STONES This, like a hundred and one other diseases, comes from faulty digestion. Gall stones are found more fre- quently in persons who have passed middle life, whose digestion and assimilation for fats, sweets and starches are gradually lowering, and among women who wear tight clothing, or those who sit in cramped positions, as tailors, dressmakers and sewing machine operators. In these cases give a well-cooked cereal, Cream of Wheat, gluten mush, farina, banana flour mush and taro mush with cream. Broiled white meat of chicken or white-fleshed fish, with lettuce, cress, endive, spinach, cauliflower, asparagus, oranges, grape fruit, and lemonade with very little sugar, must form the bulk of the diet. A baked potato may be eaten once a day. Yolk of egg with milk, with hard bread, may be eaten now and then between meals. Weak tea may be given in the afternoon and plenty of soft water between meals. A tumblerful of hot water the first thing in the morning and last at night, will be advantageous. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 89 MAY EAT Coffee early in the morning Tea in the middle of the after- noon, without food Olive oil in goodly quantities Lettuce and cress with French dressing Cabbage Brussels sprouts Acid fruits White bread Unleavened bread Gluten biscuits Cocoanut sticks Fruit gelose Baked potatoes ' Potatoes mashed and baked Nut dishes Hard-boiled yolks of eggs Grapes Lemonade Orangeade Effervescing waters Plain water in abundance An occasional nut dish Almond milk Leban Koumys Buttermilk Clabber Albuminized milk Albuminized whey Orange juice and white of egg Apple juice and white of egg Baked apples Strawberries Strained currant juice with effer- vescing waters Grape juice AVOID Avoid all the internal organs of animals used as food Calves' brains Tripe Kidneys Sweetbreads Liver Old peas Beans Lentils Bananas Dates Prunes All fried foods Fat meats in general Sea foods in general Yolks of eggs Peaches Carrots Figs Raisins All made dishes Sweets of every kind 90 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK SICK HEADACHE Sick headache, like biliousness, is foremost among the diseases that come from an over-rich, incorrect or badly- cooked food. It seems to be a disease of women, and strangely enough, the writer has seen a grandmother impregnate two succeeding generations of women with the idea that they must have it, because she and her mother had it. Progression would cease if such thoughts were common. Let us inherit the good, and strive to correct the bad of our ancestors. MAY EAT Breakfasts : One cup of clear coffee, or The juice of two oranges, or A grape fruit, or A saucer of prunes, without sugar, or A mellow sour apple, All without other food 10.30 : A glass of zoolak, or butter- milk, or koumys, or skimmed milk 12.30 luncheon : A bit of white-fleshed fish, or Chicken, boiled or broiled, or Boiled calf's head with lemon juice, or Acid fruits without sugar Boiled calf's feet with lemon juice, With asparagus, or spinach, cress, dandelions, endive, cauliflower, kohl-rabi, cu- cumbers, stewed summer squash, stewed young turnips, string beans with- out fat, stewed tender celery Gluten biscuit Stale bread Whole wheat bread Water between meals Acid fruits with'meat, not bread Strawberries Oranges Grape fruit Water ices, now and then MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 91 AVOID Tea Sweetbreads Coffee Tripe Chocolate Liver Soups Sea foods Pork Kidneys Veal Starchy foods, as potatoes, rice, Turkey in particular macaroni Goose White bread ; hot breads Game Sour dishes ; pickles Rich sauces Mayonnaise dressing Puddings Tomatoes Pies Old peas, beans and lentils Cakes Rice Sweets Sweet fruits Cabbage Fried foods Kale Fats in general Peppers Ice creams Carrots, except grated raw DISEASES OF URINARY SYSTEM It is a well-known fact that a large quantity of foods rich in protein throws undue work on the kidneys, and the poisons retained greatly influence the composition of the urine. Kidney troubles usually come to men who have passed forty-five or fifty, those individuals who eat meat three times a day "to keep up their strength." Diseases caused by incorrect diet are greatly modified by correct diet. In most of these troubles a skimmed milk diet is to be recommended. Large quantities of water are advan- tageous. If the patient will not take plain water, buy a good spring water and use it plentifully. I have observed that the sick feel that a bottled water purchased at a drug store has a greater curative power than a good cool, ,soft water drawn from their own spigot or spring. In many of these diseases, after a cure has been effected, a simple vegetable diet will enable the person to live comfortably for many years. All meats must be per- manently given up. Sugars and starches must be limited. 92 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Alcoholic and malt liquors are injurious. The diet must be composed largely of fruits, green vegetables, milk and milk preparations. Oranges, grape fruit and lemonade without sugar are frequently beneficial. Strange as it may seem, the fruits that contain organic acids frequently by virtue of their salts, promote alkalinity of the blood and urine. Such green vegetables as spinach, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, savoy, onions, string beans, lettuce, en- dive, celery, young turnips, and very young carrots, are admissible. There is a great variety of opinions regarding asparagus. Some physicians order it frequently for urinary troubles, others condemn it. One writer claims that the peculiar odor that is noticed after even a small quantity of asparagus is eaten, is due to an oil rich in sulphur, which is in some way digested or converted in the intestines, and has nothing whatever to do with the kidney action. The most common of these diseases will be treated under their special headings. URIC ACID DIATHESIS The causes of this disease are, as a rule, excessive eating of rich foods and lack of exercise. The blood con- tains an excess of uric acid or its salts. It frequently follows digestive troubles of long stand- ing. Uric acid should be converted into urea, if all the functions do their work properly ; but if there is any lack of oxidation in the tissues, the process is frequently upset or entirely checked, and sediment appears in the urine. When this occurs, animal foods and sugar must be reduced in amount, or better still, entirely given up. Substitute nitrogenous vegetables, such as soy beans and lentils, and milk, for meats. The morning bath and rub, and exercise in the open air, are of importance ; in fact, the patient would recover in much less time if he would live and sleep out of doors. MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 93 MAY EAT fish, broiled or Cream soups White-fleshed boiled An occasional bit of chicken Soup a la Reine Puree of lentils, peas, old peas and beans Vegetable gelatins, unsweetened Very little butter Dishes made from yolks of eggs Coffee, cocoa, chocolate, broma, alkathrepta, racahout, without sugar Skimmed milk Modified milk Whole wheat bread Oatmeal bread Unleavened bread Crisp crackers Well-cooked cereals Rice and arrowroot, but not with sugar Macaroni and spaghetti, without cheese Gluten mush Gluten bread An occasional aleuronat gem Soups, maigre Fresh green vegetables Peas Lima beans Tender hearts of lettuce Young celery Baked potato Globe artichokes Stewed turnips Jerusalem artichokes Fruits without sugar Fruit juices Roborat AVOID All sweets Red meats Sauces Meat soups Yolks of eggs Fat Pork Veal All pink-fleshed fish, Crustacea, oysters, clams Rhubarb Gooseberries Strawberries Grapes Pears Dates Figs Raisins Prunes Currants Coarse vegetables Cheese Milk, except in coffee and cocoa All milk dishes, as leban and koumys In Children This disease is frequently seen in chil- dren of rheumatic or gouty parents. As each case is a law in itself, the food must be regulated by the attending physician. A general outline, however, may be given for the benefit of the caretaker. 94 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Fothergill, in speaking of uric acid diathesis in chil- dren, says "lean meats and beef tea are equivalent to so much poison." A child under five years of age must be kept strictly on skimmed milk and milk preparations. Milk gruels made from farina, cornmeal and banana flour are to be recom- mended. The hard-boiled yolk of egg may be grated over milk toast and given once or twice a week. Baked apples without sugar, dry whole wheat bread without butter, an occasional bit of white meat of chicken, cooked spinach, cauliflower, summer squash and cucumbers, are admissible. Avoid for some time to come all fats, cream, butter, olive oil ; such foods as rice, potato, sago, tapioca, sweet dishes, sugar, red meats and the internal organs of animals used as food. Nut dishes, milk, puree of lentils, with an occa- sional egg, must take the place of meat. As the case pro- ceeds toward a cure, add to this diet weak cocoa, dry toast, zwieback, tender celery, hominy grits, plain stewed mac- aroni, watermelons, prunes, cooked without sugar ; oranges, apples, raw and baked without sugar, and baked bananas. There must be no nibbling between meals. All foods must be lightly cooked. The method of cooking is quite as im- portant as the food prescribed. Children even at the age of twelve to fourteen should not be given pink-fleshed fish, veal, pork, salt foods, dried meats, fried foods, hot breads, candies, pastry, cake, dense hard vegetables, condiments or pickles. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 95 ALBUMINURIA This disease, like most urinary troubles, comes to big meat eaters, people who "live to eat," and must have big juicy steaks every day in the week. The system is able to store surplus starch and sugar, the carbohydrates, but frequently fails in many of its functions when the proteids (tissue-building foods) are taken in greater quantity than the system requires. We can, if we cut off the carbo- hydrates, burn the proteids to produce heat and energy, but it is an extravagant and illogical way of living. In albuminuria there is a tremendous waste of tissue, which must be counterbalanced with some nitrogenous foods, but care must be taken to keep the balance equal. Of the leguminous seeds, lentils are preferable, as they supply nitrogen in an acceptable form. Skimmed milk, and modified milk without cream, may also be used for supplying the necessary albumin. If constipation occurs, substitute cream soups, and nut milks, and give orange juice in the early morning before breakfast. Avoid sweets and starchy foods as potatoes, white bread and cornstarch. Give pure soft water in goodly quantities. MAY EAT Water gruels, especially cornmeal Cereals with milk gruel Skimmed milk toast Skimmed milk Gluten toast, without butter Modified milk, without cream Baked apple, occasionally Buttermilk Vegetable gelatin preparations Skimmed milk koumys Stale breads Fruit juices Cocoanut fingers Carefully-cooked fruits, without Gluten biscuits sugar Unleavened bread Light vegetables Whole wheat bread Cream soups Corn breads Rice and rice preparations Later, add, white meat of chicken, white-fleshed fish, broiled, and occasionally hard-boiled yolks of eggs; but butchers' meats must be wholly excluded for a long while. 96 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Crisp crackers may now and then be substituted for bread. All green vegetables are admissible except boiled cabbage and onions. AVOID All red meats Meat soups in general Rich sauces Coarse vegetables Sweets Hot breads Pastries Fresh white bread Pies New beets Puddings Corn Spiced dishes Raw cucumbers Pickles Salt meats Tea and coffee Lobsters Sour salads Crabs Fried foods Shrimps Pink-fleshed fish Clams Beef tea Cantaloupes Consomme Mushrooms Bouillon Cheese FUNCTIONAL ALBUMINURIA IN CHILDREN This disease frequently comes to children who have had meat feeding too early, and sweets and starchy foods have been allowed in too large quantities. Milk and milk preparations should be the sole diet until the urine is free from albumin. Then give a grated hard-boiled yolk of an egg over a dish of milk toast ; milk soups, nut soups, fruit juices, cereals, boiled rice, rice pudding, stewed macaroni, puree of lentils, soy bean preparations, carefully-cooked spinach, cauliflower, celery, lettuce with French dressing, apples raw and baked, fruit gelose, sour milk foods, as zoolak, matzoon and buttermilk; small fruits, very ripe; stale bread, whole wheat and nut bread, and an occasional baked potato. Avoid all meats and meat soups, sea food, white of egg, raw eggs, fried foods, rich sweet dishes, pastry, cakes, preserves and candies. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 97 CHRONIC BRIGHT'S DISEASE No matter what the origin of the disease, dietetic treatment is the same. Osier says, "care in food and drink is the most important element in the early treatment of these cases." All highly-seasoned foods, meat broths and meat and eggs must be wholly excluded. Whether or not the patient needs albumin must be determined by the physician or nurse in attendance. An uninstructed care- taker, cannot feed a case of Bright's disease, without danger to the patient; for the volume of albumin in the urine is not an infallible guide to dietetic treatment. In many cases the patient may be kept, to his advan- tage, for two or three months on an exclusive diet of skimmed milk. The quantity will vary, according to the age and condition of the patient, but as a rule three quarts of milk a day will be sufficient, or two quarts of milk and one quart of barley water; rice water and German flour gruel may be alternated with barley water. If barley water is added to the milk, there will be but little danger of constipation. If it should occur, however, orange juice or a small cup of French coffee early in the morning, will correct it. This diet may seem severe at first, but if the patient is made to understand that life depends on the diet, he will submit, if his life is worth the living. Keep the throat and mouth clean and free from odor. After each feeding swab with Listerine and water, or vege- table gelatin and lemon juice or Irish moss water. As the patient improves, add milk soups, milk gruels, tapioca custards, sago custards, rice pudding, various nut dishes, carefully-cooked topground vegetables, excepting cabbage; boiled or broiled fish; a little boiled or broiled chicken, stewed chestnuts, with sauce thickened with yolk of eggs, and milk toast. Give pure soft water between meals. 98 MRS. RORERS DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT, FOLLOWING THE MILK DIET Milk toast Milk gruels Cream soups Carefully-made nut dishes An occasional puree of lentils Golden toast Occasionally boiled white fish Chicken timbale Soup a la Reine Topground vegetables Baked potato Cereals Buttermilk Skimmed milk clabber Vegetable gelatin desserts Fruits cooked without sugar Dry bread, crackers Whole wheat bread Corn bread Light green vegetable salads Weak chocolate and cocoa ; alka- threpta, broma and racahout AVOID All meats Fish Crustacea Oysters; clams Coarse vegetables All meat soups Eggs, unless ordered Hot breads Fresh white bread Tea Coffee, unless ordered All sweet dishes Pickles Spiced foods Rich sauces Pastry Cakes Preserves Fruits stewed with sugar Rhubarb All fried foods Coarse vegetables MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 99 NEPHRITIS ACUTE NEPHRITIS Diet is of equal importance with medical treatment. Foods must be easily digested, and the diet must be restricted until the activity of the kidneys becomes normal- If the case is incurable, the diet may be more variable; milk soups, light meats, freshly-killed game, broiled white- fleshed fish, are all admissible. These, however, must be given under the direction and observation of a physician. Patients should avoid coarse vegetables, even raw celery and such green vegetables as asparagus, string beans, Brussels sprouts and mushrooms. Cauliflower, young peas, tender corn, pressed from the hulls, are allowed. The patient should be kept in bed, on an exclusive milk diet for three weeks, followed by a non-stimulating diet for many months to come. Three quarts of skimmed milk alone, or modified, without cream, adding an extra half quantity of milk sugar or mixed with barley or rice water, or cornmeal gruel, strained, may be given every two and a half hours. If there is inclination to diarrhoea, give browned rice gruel or Evans's tea gruel, twice a day. If there is constipa- tion, give buttermilk, koumys or leban. Do not give more than four ounces at a time, in feedings two and a half hours apart, unless otherwise ordered by a physician. Nut milk, especially almond milk, made from Sanitas almond meal, may be substituted now and then for plain milk. Give Imperial drink, lemonade and tamarind whey between meals once a day. Avoid all salted and sweet foods. When solid foods are indicated, give a chicken tim- bale, milk toast, farina pudding, blancmange, a few green peas, boiled and pressed through a sieve, stewed tender celery, rice and whole wheat bread. Ripe dark grapes may be given at noonday. A half dozen blanched, unroasted almonds may be added to the timbales or eaten alone, if well masticated. Baked apples, a little strained orange juice, apple juice and grape juice, are all beneficial. 100 . MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK When the patient has quite recovered, a broiled chop, a little broiled white-fleshed fish, may be added to the preceding list. Oatmeal gruel is frequently very beneficial, and may be used as a breakfast food. MAY EAT Skimmed milk and barley water Alkaline waters Modified milk, without cream Effervescing waters Koumys Lemonade Buttermilk Lemon squash Meiggs' food Imperial drink Cornmeal gruel LATER Chicken timbale Occasionally a baked potato Poached egg, occasionally A piece of white-fleshed fish, Rice pudding broiled Blancmange Cream soups Bartholow's food Fresh fruits in moderation Carefully-cooked prunes Stale bread Prune souffle Gluten biscuits Minced white meat of chicken Delicate green vegetables, with Boiled rice French dressing AVOID All red meats Meat soups in general Rich sauces Coarse vegetables Sweets Hot breads Pastries Fresh white bread Pies New beets Puddings Corn Spiced dishes Raw cucumbers Pickles Salt meats Tea and coffee Lobsters Sour salads Crabs Fried foods Shrimps Pink-fleshed fish Clams Beef tea Cantaloupes Consomme Mushrooms Bouillon Cheese MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 101 OXALURIA In this disease oxalate-of-lime crystals are found in the urine. By some it is supposed they are created from eating certain kinds of food rich in the constituents they contain; by others, from faulty digestion. No matter which theory be cor- rect, the curative diet is practically the same. Such vegetables and fruits as rhubarb, sorrel, onions, garlic, chives and leeks, old turnips, both white and yellow, tomatoes, pears and sweets, especially candy, and sugar in tea and coffee, and such foods as sago, tapioca, cassava and potatoes are prohibited. The diet should consist largely of milk and milk foods; for meat-eating patients, chopped beef and mutton are prefer- able. Serve with them a little stale bread, or an occasional bunch of grapes or tender celery. A half pint of hot water should be sipped a half hour before each meal. If consti- pation occurs, give a glass of cold water early in the morn- ing, and follow almost immediately by a cup of cafe au lait, merely warm, so the patient may drink it rapidly. Give a large cup of hot water the last thing at night. MAY EAT Beef Mutton Chicken White-fleshed fish Broiled or boiled game Stale bread, with very little butter Crisp crackers Gluten biscuits Orange juice occasionally Apples Plain boiled rice, without sugar Farina Cream of Wheat Shredded wheat biscuits Cream of pea soup Cream of turnip soup Meiggs' food Cornmeal gruel Vegetable jellies, with prunes or apricots or peaches Nut dishes Milk toast, without butter Imported endive An occasional baked potato Very young turnips New green peas Lettuce Stewed cucumbers Summer squash Dandelions cooked and raw Cocoa 102 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK AVOID Chocolate Sorrel Tea Currants Carbonated waters Strawberries Rhubarb Green string beans Tomatoes Fresh green or red peppers Onions Gelatin dishes Kohl-rabi Rich sauces Asparagus Internal organs of animals, as Spinach liver, kidney, sweetbreads and Sourdock tripe Cress Meat soups Cabbage Pastries Cauliflower Cakes Bananas Fried foods Native endive Liquors Pears Alcohol CALCULI Induce the patient to drink abundantly of pure, soft water. Any good, soft spring water will answer. Distilled water, which is usually procurable in small towns and cities, is excellent. The name on the bottle makes no dif- ference whatever, so the water is pure and soft. In the early stages an exclusive milk diet is to be recommended. MAY EAT In the early stages an exclusive skimmed milk diet. If all goes well, ten days later, light cereal, as farina, Cream of Wheat, with milk, hominy grits, cornmeal mush with milk but no sugar, dry white bread, an occasional gluten biscuit, apples baked without sugar, nut purees, nut dishes in general, almond milk, blancmange, and eggs occasionally. In three weeks, add to the above a little white meat of chicken, light green vegetable salads with very little olive oil and considerable lemon juice ; orange juice, grape fruit, MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 103 endive, tender celery, lettuce, cauliflower, savoy, milk gruels between meals, koumys, zoolak, buttermilk, and milk soups. AVOID All meats, including liver, sweet- Puddings breads, kidney and tripe All rich dishes Sea foods Potatoes Fats, raw and cooked Turnips Butter Carrots Cream Cabbage Sugar Tomatoes Spices Prunes Vinegar Dates Salt foods of all kinds Figs Meat soups Grapes All small fruits, as raspberries and Guavas strawberries, unless ordered by Peaches a physician Pears Oatmeal . Alligator pears DIABETES Pathologists differ as to the cause and origin of diabetes ; some believe the disease may be definitely located in the nervous centers of the brain ; others, equally skilled, advance the idea of defective pancreatic digestion. We all know that the disease produces a peculiar nervous con- dition, and that the pancreas is, after death, found altered in size and structure. No matter which of these theories is correct, all are agreed that a proper diet is the most important, and the only treatment which will bring about a cure. In this disease the lobular or glycogenic portion of the liver is incapable of performing its natural functions ; more sugar is secreted than it is capable of holding, consequently the kidneys are taxed to eliminate sugar from the blood, a work for which they are not constructed, and as a result 104 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK the secretions are not normal ; they are more copious than usual, and are found to contain sugar. This leads us to believe that the system is overloaded with sugar, and that all food containing sugar, and starches, which are converted into sugar by digestion, must be eliminated from the diet. This being done, the patient will however for a time excrete sugar. Bartholow recommended an exclusive skimmed milk diet, while Salisbury told of his wonderful cures on an exclusive chopped meat diet. Green vegetables should take the place of starchy vegetables. Olive oil, cream and butter are acceptable, but all cooked fats must be avoided. Dense vegetables, as turnips, radishes, raw cucumbers, boiled cabbage, pickles, and spiced foods interfere with the digestion of other foods and must be avoided. If digestion is weak, give artificially- digested milk. Do not continue this longer than six or ten days, or a cure will be retarded. Begin feeding two quarts of milk a day, continuing this for two days, then add a pint for the next two days, and a pint each day after until four quarts a day can be easily taken. One fact is worth noting: a potato contains less starch than the same weight of bread, but is so easily digested and transformed that it produces in the end a greater amount of sugar in the urine. For this reason potatoes are for- bidden even for convalescing patients. Alcoholic and malt liquors must be avoided. Vichy water may be used now and then to allay thirst. The following table is for seven days' feeding: MENUS First Day 7 a. m. 4 ounces milk 3 p. m. 4 ounces milk 9 a. m. 4 ounces milk 5 p. m. 4 ounces milk II a. m. 4 ounces milk 7 p. m. 4 ounces milk I p. m. 4 ounces milk 9 p. m. 4 ounces milk MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 105 7 a. m. 9 a. m. ii a. m I p. m. Second Day Same Third Day Same Fourth Day 5 ounces milk 5 ounces milk 6 ounces milk 5 ounces milk 3 P- m. 7 P. m. 9 p. m. 5 ounces milk 6 ounces milk 4 ounces milk 7 a. m. 9 a. m. ii a. m. I p. m. Fifth Day 6 ounces milk 6 ounces milk 6 ounces milk 7 ounces milk 3 P. m. 5 P- m. 7 p. m. 9 p. m. Sixth Day Same Seventh Day Same 7 ounces milk 7 ounces milk 7 ounces milk 5 ounces milk MAY EAT Soups : Clear meat soups Tomato broth Clam broth Oyster broth Chicken broth, with celery Fish: Fresh white-fleshed fish, broiled, boiled or planked Oysters in small quantities Terrapin Meats : Beef, mutton, poultry and game; broiled, baked or stewed Calves' sweetbreads Tripe Boiled calves' heads Milk: Skimmed milk Skimmed milk junket Cheese in small quantity Vegetables : Celery Shaved raw cabbage Carefully-boiled cucumbers, without sauce Cauliflower Broiled fresh mushrooms Cress Lettuce Chicory French artichokes, with butter sauce Spinach Raw tomatoes Cymlins 106 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Continued Eggs: Eggs in all ways, except fried or hard boiled Breads : Almond wafers Almond bread Gluten bread, made from eighty percent, gluten flour Gluten gems Aleuronat gems Aleuronat zweiback Soy gems Bran loaf Bran wafers Eighty percent, gluten biscuits Beverages : Clear weak tea and coffee Plain and aerated waters Fruits : Oranges Lemons Grape fruit Strawberries In mild cases, peaches Desserts : Cup custard without sugar Almonds Brazilian nuts Fats: A little olive oil with lemon juice on lettuce Cocoanut butter may be used on vegetables Unsalted, perfectly fresh butter may be taken once a day AVOID All warmed-over meat dishes All highly-seasoned soups; milk soups with thickening Salt fish ; lobster ; crabs ; shrimps ; pink-fleshed fish ; clams and scallops Veal and pork, with the exception of broiled bacon, liver and kidneys Potatoes Parsnips Carrots Peas Salsify Old Peas Beans Lentils Sweet corn Asparagus Boiled cabbage Canned mushrooms Radishes Raw cucumbers Winter squash Sweet potatoes Yams Breads and all cereals Boiled coffee Cocoa Chocolate Wines Liquors, beer All fruits, except those mentioned All sweets, pastries and puddings MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 107 MENUS FOR DIABETIC CONVALESCENTS MAY BE ARRANGED AS FOLLOWS: BREAKFAST Orange Broiled Chop Bran Bread Clear Coffee DINNER Half pint Bouillon Rare Beef (roasted) Spinach, Cocoanut Butter Roquefort Cheese Aleuronat Gems Clear Coffee SUPPER Eight ounces Hot Milk, sipped slowly BREAKFAST Grape Fruit Half broiled Sweetbread Gluten Gems Clear Coffee DINNER Half pint Consomme Roasted Chicken Stewed Celery Lettuce, Lemon Dressing Almond Wafer SUPPER Broiled Tripe Gluten Gems Weak Clear Tea BREAKFAST Orange Juice Broiled Chicken Soy Gems Clear Coffee 108 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK DINNER Chicken Bouillon Boiled Mutton Stewed Cucumber Tomato Salad Bran Wafers SUPPER Plain Terrapin Lettuce Salad Gluten Biscuits One ounce Cranberry Jelly, no sugar BREAKFAST Grape Fruit Coddled Eggs Gluten Biscuit Clear Coffee DINNER Broiled White Fish Stewed Cucumber or Celery Lettuce Salad Bit of Cheese Aleuronat Zweiback SUPPER Cold Roast Beef Cress Salad Gluten Roll Sliced Oranges BREAKFAST Broiled Fish Soy Gems Coffee DINNER Egg Soup Broiled Meat Cake with Pine Nuts Baked Tomatoes Salad of Chicory Almond Wafers MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 109 SUPPER Broiled Chop Tomato with Cocoanut Cream Gluten Biscuit Weak Tea BREAKFAST Strawberries (if they agree) Sweetbreads, broiled Bran wafers Coffee DINNER Tomato Soup Baked Birds Fresh Mushrooms Spinach Salad of Cress Gluten Bread Floating Island, no sugar BREAKFAST Oranges Chopped Mutton Cakes Gluten Toast Coffee DINNER Oyster Bouillon Roasted Chicken Stewed Celery Cauliflower Lettuce Salad Bran Bread SUPPER Omelet Soy Gems Sliced Oranges 110 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK PREGNANCY If all is well during pregnancy, the food need not necessarily be changed (providing the patient is a normally healthy woman) until the fourth month before delivery. If complications arise, special diets must be given, which will be directed by the physician in charge. If albumin is pres- ent in the urine, cut off red meats and sweets. If vomiting occurs and is annoying, give orange juice, sterilized milk and lime water early in the morning and without other food. If the patient becomes pale and ansemic, give a diet rich in eggs, milk, cream and butter, red meats and fruits. If the appetite is physically perverted and there comes a mental desire for all sorts of indigestible foods, especially those that are inaccessible, it is purely the outcome of a hysterical mind and should not be humored. Much harm can be done, both to the mother and child, if such appetites are gratified. The desire for pickles or vinegar can usually be overcome by giving orange juice an hour before break- fast. Breakfast should be light and composed of fruits, eggs and well-buttered bread. Give plenty of water between meals. The heavy meal is best at noon, and it should consist of such foods as milk soups, broiled, boiled or baked beef, mutton, chicken or fish, with a baked potato mashed with cream, or boiled rice with a little butter, or stewed macaroni with a little Parmesan cheese, and such green vegetables as lettuce, cress, carefully-stewed carrots, turnips, celery, fresh green peas, okra, new sweet corn, and fruits. Suppers should consist of such light dishes as milk toast, cream soup, baked apple and cream, with toast, or a well-cooked cereal and milk or chocolate, or cocoa and toast. If constipation occurs give three steamed figs before retiring, or two ounces of peanut brittle, or an ounce of MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 111 raw peanuts, which must be thoroughly masticated, and a glass of water the last thing at night and the first thing in the morning. The fourth month before delivery the diet should be composed largely of carefully-cooked light meats, green vegetables and fruits. Cut off slowly all starches and sugars, and take only half the amount of liquids. Green vegetable salads are advisable. Asparagus, cress, lettuce, string beans and celery, may be served with French dress- ing. Broiled white-fleshed fish may be used twice a week, boiled mutton three times a week, broiled chicken twice a week. Beef may be used now and then, but not often. Do not follow fads; they are frequently dangerous, both to the mother and the child. MAY EAT FOR THE FIRST FIVE MONTHS Breakfast cereals Milk and milk foods Cream Whole wheat bread Corn bread Baked potato Carefully-boiled potato Boiled rice Stewed macaroni, with a little Parmesan cheese Carefully-cooked string beans Peas Okra Nut foods Fruit gelose Summer squash Cucumbers Puree of potato Lentils Old peas Beans Cream soups White-fleshed fish Mutton Lamb Chicken Sweetbreads Light puddings Custards Fruits, both raw and stewed Light desserts Sponge cake Angel's food Sunshine cake 112 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK AVOID Meat soups Rich sauces Sea foods, with the exception of white-fleshed fish Highly-seasoned complicated meat dishes Entrees Cakes Pies Puddings Preserves Candies Pickles Mayonnaise salads Alcoholic and malt liquors Hot breads Cinnamon bun Tea MAY EAT AFTER THE FIFTH MONTH Boiled mutton Chicken White-fleshed fish Sweetbreads An occasional chopped meat cake Lamb chops Fruits, raw and stewed, without sugar Lettuce, cress, endive, carefully- cooked string beans, all in salads Eggs Milk Gluten bread Gluten biscuits In this list meals must be arranged with a meat and a green vegetable, or eggs and a green vegetable ; eggs give nourishment, and vegetables give bulk sufficient to satisfy appetite. Bread must be used sparingly, but at all times the appetite must be satisfied. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 113 PUERPERAL Do not give slops; they lack nourishment and upset digestion. The days of water panada and cracker gruel are past. Five or six hours after delivery give a cup of hot milk, or a cream soup, or mutton broth, strained. When hunger comes, and not before, and this may be in ten or in twenty hours, give eggnog, without liquor, milk and lime water, milk and vichy, egg soup, chicken broth, cream of celery soup, mutton and oatmeal broth, mutton and cornmeal broth, matzoon, koumys or leban. On the third day, if all is well, add a milk puree of lentils, a soft-poached egg, milk toast, hot cup custard, Wheatena and cream, Cream of Wheat and cream, toast, plain or slightly but- tered. On the fourth or fifth day, add to the foregoing a scraped meat cake, a bit of broiled chicken or bird, orange juice, well-baked whole wheat bread without shortening or sugar, soft and cup custards, chocolate, alkathrepta, cocoa, broma, strained oatmeal, cornmeal mush, baked potato and boiled rice. Do not urge the patient to overeat, with the idea of increasing the supply of milk. Digestion once upset brings bad results, and while the patient is in bed she requires less food. If complications arise the phy- sician will suggest the change in diet. Puree of lentils, made from lentil flour, and milk and chocolate preparations, are supposed to make rich milk in goodly quantities. Sometimes they do, and sometimes they do not, for the ability to nurse the infant depends largely on the healthful condition of the mother. If hunger comes between the morning and the noon- day meal, give the patient a glass of milk, or egg and milk. If constipation occurs give fruit juice early in the morning, and add a simply-cooked green vegetable and a salad to the noonday meal. Give a glass of water the last thing before retiring and the first thing in the morning. Use whole wheat bread exclusively. 114 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK A FEW GOLDEN RULES FOR MOTHERS OF BOTTLE-FED BABIES Purchase the best quality of cows' milk, in sealed bottles. If this is impossible, and you have to buy milk in bulk, pasteurize it as soon as you receive it. Put the milk in the refrigerator or in a cold place as soon as it is received. Fifteen minutes' standing in a warm kitchen will frequently cause it to sour. Keep it covered or sealed until you are ready to modify it. Modify enough each morning to last for twenty-four hours. Keep modified milk in bottles if possible; if not, in a covered jar in the refrigerator. Ask the physician to write down the quantity that the infant is to have at each feeding, and the number of feedings per day. Commit them to memory that you may make no mistake. Any deviation from this rule is detri- mental to the infant. Do not put the bottle in the baby's mouth every time he cries, for nine out of ten times he is not crying for food. A correct diet will produce a firm, healthy baby, not a fat one. Fat babies usually fall ill on the slightest cause. If the baby vomits after eating, it has either had too much food, or the food does not agree. Consult the physi- cian. Such conditions should not be overlooked. If the baby sleeps well and looks well, nine out of ten times the food agrees. If it fails to gain in weight, consult the physician, that he may change the food. If undigested food is found, in the stools, the milk does not agree. Add ten drops of lime water to each feeding. Do not continue this beyond the requirements of this at- tack of indigestion. The use of lime water continued is unnatural and unhealthful. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 115 The Gordon Walker table is arranged for the fifty-two weeks. After this comes the weaning time, regulated ac- cording to the health and vigor of the infant and mother. Many infants are nursed too long; the mother's milk has deteriorated, and the child does not thrive after weaning. Some argue that when the eight incisor teeth have been cut with ease, and this should be about the end of the twelfth or fourteenth month, the child should be weaned; the saliva now is flowing abundantly and the digestive organs are by Nature fitted for a little solid food. Dr. Joseph E. Winters, Professor of the diseases of children, Cornell University Medical College, says: "Late weaning, or the too prolonged use of milk as the exclusive diet of a child artificially fed, causes ansemia. This is the first pathological condition which we mark as arising from failure to modify the diet of a child at the proper time. The chemistry of milk, the physiological chemistry of the child, and the physiology of the digestive organs denote that such change should be made at a fairly definite time. From the seventh to the tenth month, according to the degree of development of the child and the advancement of dentition, the ferments which digest farinaceous substances are present in sufficient quantity to indicate that a change of food should be made." "Oatmeal is rich in all the constituents which are essential for the growth and development of the child; they are rich in proteid, fat and mineral matter. Oatmeal, the richest in iron, is an excellent food to be added first; strained at first when you add it to the milk in the bottle; later, plain cooked, with milk, no sugar. It is seldom wise to begin the use of farinaceous foods with a child during the warm months, as they are prone to cause fermentation and diarrhoea if the child is teething. Milk and barley water will constitute the child's food during these months." 116 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK FEEDING OF INFANTS If possible, every healthy mother should nurse her babe ; there are, however, a few excellent reasons why she should not. Nervous women, those who are tubercular, or who were born of tubercular mothers, or those who have any form of chronic disease or general debility, should not attempt to nurse a child. It not only endangers the life and health of the child, but it is injurious to the mother. Volumes of directions might be given every mother who wishes to nurse her infant, but each individual case is a law unto itself and should be regulated by the attending physician. For Artificial Feeding secure good, clean cows' milk, from a herd of good cows, and not from a single cow, unless so ordered, and modify it to resemble as nearly as possible, human milk. Use no farinaceous substances of any sort, or cane sugar. An infant is wholly unprovided with the necessary secretions for the digestion of starches or cane sugar. Overfeeding and dirty, diluted cows' milk, and "In- fants' Foods" kill thousands of babies every year; in fact, in crowded sections of large cities these badly-fed babies rajely reach the end of their first year, and it must not be forgotten that most of these deaths occur from preventable causes. Milk is the natural food for an infant. Human milk contains more fat, more sugar of milk, less mineral matter and more friable casein than cows' milk. Cows' milk simply diluted with water is not enough, for cows' milk is in- tended for the rapid growth of the young of the cow, the calf. If we simply add water to cows' milk, we have reduced the fat and milk sugar, two elements very neces- sary to the growth of the infant; we have not changed the casein, nor have we reduced the mineral matter. Children fed on diluted milk are usually underfed and colicky. If their constitutions are strong they thrive and grow for a time, but fall ill on the slightest provoca- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 117 tion. The cutting of teeth is a task. Extreme hot or cold weather influences them to a marked degree. Their childhood is too often a drawn-out invalidism. Such chil- dren are frequently found among the "backward" at school. Their foundations are poor. TO MODIFY MILK This process is simple and can be done easily and efficiently in any kitchen, with the ordinary utensils found there, provided they are used only for this purpose. Clean- liness must be strictly observed. Wash and scald the utensils each time before using; rinse them with boiling water, but do not wipe them. Towels hanging in the kitchen or pantry are apt to hold particles of dust, and will contaminate the milk. Before beginning, read care- fully all the directions, and get out all the necessary uten- sils. See that the nursing bottles are perfectly clean ; they should have round bottoms and be kept in a basket or stand made for the purpose. The bottles should be scalded immediately after each feeding, and filled with boric acid or a solution of baking soda made by adding a level tea- spoonful to a pint of water. When ready to fill the bottles with milk, pour the solution out and rinse with cold-boiled water. The nipples used should be of good quality black rubber. They should be kept scrupulously clean, turned inside out and washed every day, scalded and kept, when not in use, in a solution of boric acid, in a fruit jar used for no other purpose. Do not use the soft nipples, or any form of nipples fastened to a tube or bone shield. Prepare enough milk at one time to last for the entire twenty-four hours. If the weather is warm and there is no ice at hand, the milk must be pasteurized. Purchase good, pure milk in a sealed quart bottle, and allow it to stand for three or four hours in a cold place, unless the cream has already risen to the top of the bottle when it is received. Remove the cap, and 118 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK with a milk dipper that has been scalded, or a siphon, take off the upper half of the quart (16 oz.) ; the lower half will not be needed. In this quantity you have the necessary amount of fat and protein, but you have too much mineral matter and not enough sugar of milk. To , correct this, add two level tablespoonfuls of sugar of milk (4/5 oz.) and a half pint (8 oz.) of cold boiled water; stir the mixture, pour it into the nursing bottles, fasten them with plugs of ordinary non-absorbent cotton, and place them at once in the refrigerator, preferably on the floor of the refrigerator, with no other food. At feeding time take out one bottle and stand it in a saucepan of hot water sufficiently long to warm it to 98 Fahrenheit. Remove the cotton plug, put on the nipple, turn the bottle upside down to see if the milk flows readily, and it is ready for feeding. Do not allow the nurse or caretaker to put the nipple in her own mouth to see if it is warm enough ; many an infant has been made ill by this slovenly method. As the child grows older increase the proportion of the "top milk." At the end of the fourth month it should be necessary to use the "top milk" from a second quart of milk, or use one whole quart of milk containing four per cent fat, and eight ounces of the "top milk" from the second quart, and eight ounces of cold boiled water. If undigested curds appear in the stools, add one tablespoon- ful of lime water to the day's feeding, at the time of prep- aration. For the first two weeks, the infant may not take all the food at a feeding. If there is any left over throw it away; never think of using it the second time. If the infant is not satisfied after the feeding, speak at once to the physician ; let him examine the strength of the milk and order it changed according to the requirements of the child. Food agrees when the child is comfortable and happy, free from colic and sour stomach, and is not con- stipated. After the infant has two or three teeth, if curds are vomited, or milk seems to- be undigested, add barley MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 119 water in the place of plain water. If the child is con- stipated, use strained oatmeal water in the place of barley water, or German flour gruel, lightly cooked. The intervals of feeding will be regulated by the physi- cian. Otherwise the food needed during the twenty-four hours should be divided into nine two-hour feedings. If the baby is robust, perhaps eight feedings will be sufficient. During the second and third months the feedings are increased in size, and the number of feedings decreased. As the child grows older and stronger, four-hour feedings will be correct. Very small and rather delicate infants, who are apt to take a small quantity of food at a time, must be fed at shorter intervals. A healthy child of five months should sleep from eight in the evening until six next morning. The first feeding to be dropped is always the last feeding at night; do this as soon as possible. Through the courtesy of the Gordon Walker Labora- tories, the writer is able to give the following table as a guide to the correct quantity that the infant should get at each feeding. Weeks of life Amount fed in ounces Fat Percentages Sugar Proteins First ij4 2.OO 4.5 0.75 Second \Vi 2.so 5.5 I.OO Third 2 ?.oo 6.0 I OO Fourth &A 3.00 6.0 I OO Fifth zy* 1.25 6.5 I.OO Sixth 3 3 2$ 6s i 2<; Seventh \ 3.50 6.5 1.25 Eighth 3 1 A ? 50 6.5 1.25 Ninth tfA 1.SO 6.5 I 2"? Tenth VA 3 50 6.5 1.25 Eleventh ?A 1.CO 6.5 I.2*! Twelfth 324 3.50 6.5 1.25 Thirteenth 334 "?.5O 6.5 1.25 Fourteenth Fifteenth . 4 4A 3-50 3.W 6.5 6.5 1.25 1.25 120 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Weeks of life Amount fed in ounces Fat Percentages Sugar Proteins Sixteenth 4 y 4 ^.7=; 65 I 2$ Seventeenth .... Eighteenth 4/2 4 l /2 3-75 ^.75 6.5 6.5 1.50 I "iO Nineteenth AM ^.75 65 I TO Twentieth AM -I.7C 6<; I ^O Twenty-first .... Twenty-second . Twenty-third . . . Twenty- fourth .. Twenty-fifth Twenty-sixth . . . Twenty-seventh . Twenty-eighth . . Twenty-ninth . . . Thirtieth 4ti 5 5 5*4 S% sY* 5/2 5/2 534 KM 3-75 3-75 3-75 3-75 3-75 3-75 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 6.5 6.5 6-5 6.5 6.5 6.5 6-5 7-0 . 7-0 7.0 1.50 1.50 1-50 1-75 1-75 1-75 1-75 1-75 1-75 1.75 Thirty-first 6 4.OO 7.O I.7S Thirty-second . . Thirty-third .... Thirty- fourth ... Thirty-fifth 6 6y 4 6y 4 6% 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 7.0 6-5 6.5 6.5 1-75 1-75 2.OO 2.OO Thirty-sixth .... Thirty-seventh .. Thirty-eighth . . . Thirty-ninth Fortieth" 6*/ 4 ey 2 6y 2 6y 2 6^4 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 6.5 6-5 6.5 6.5 6-5 2.OO 2.OO 2.OO 2.OO 2.OO Forty-first 6y 4 4.00 6.5 2.OO Forty-second Forty-third 7 7 4.00 4.00 6-5 6-5 2.OO 2.25 Forty-fourth .... Forty-fifth 7 7 4.00 4.00 6.0 6.0 1 2.50 2.50 Forty-sixth Forty-seventh . . . Forty-eighth .... Forty-ninth Fiftieth ^A 7% 7Y4 7% 7Y* 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 6.0 i 6.0 6.0 6.0 1 6.0 2.50 2.5O 2.50 2-75 2-75 Fifty-first 754 4.00 6.0 2-75 Fifty-second 7 1 A 4.00 5-5 3-00 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 121 PARTIAL MILK FEEDING No harm and a great deal of good may come when an infant is nursed part of the time and the bottle used once or twice a day to help out. Sometimes, although a mother has a good quality of milk, it is insufficient for the full development of the child, yet even a small quantity of breast milk is a great help to the infant. The better way is to reserve the bottle for the night feeding. If it must be used twice a day, better give it at the period nearest noon, and again when the child goes to bed. When it is impossible to give the hand-fed baby modi- fied milk, use good unsweetened condensed milk or Eskay's food. The writer has had excellent results with the latter food. When traveling and in the tropics, Eskay's food is especially to be recommended. If cream cannot be obtained, use ten drops of olive oil at each feeding. Babies fed on artificial foods are apt to have rough and slightly scaly skin. Correct this by giving two table- spoonfuls of orange juice every morning, an hour before feeding or between feedings. Meiggs' food will be found beneficial in cases of intes- tinal troubles. German flour gruel, farina, arrowroot, cornstarch and cornmeal gruel, thoroughly cooked and strained, with milk added, may be used for infants with teeth. Excellent results, especially in warm countries, may be obtained from exclusive diet of plantain pap. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK AFTER THE WEANING After the infant is weaned, during the second year of its life, great care must be taken in the warm months. The basis of the diet of a child until it reaches its fourth year should be well-cooked cereals, fruits, milk and eggs. Milk may be taken alone or mixed with cereals. Fruits must always be given alone, and eggs, lightly cooked, either poached, coddled or shirred may be served with a crust of bread. The bottle may be continued for a while, using barley water and milk, oatmeal gruel, strained, with milk, or any of the milk gruels. Do not add sugar. Three meals a day should be given, with a feeding between the morning and noon, and the noon and night meal. Dispense with the bottle as early as possible; it saves trouble. Carefully-made milk toast, with hard-boiled yolk of egg grated over, is attractive, palatable and wholesome. Cereal jellies, with milk and cream, make an exceedingly nice supper. The first meal in the morning should be milk, one-third barley water. In the middle of the morning give orange juice, a very mellow ripe peach, an apple carefully baked without sugar, or a cereal with milk. At the noonday meal, which should be the heavy meal, the child may have a bowl of mutton broth with rice ; or, far better, give cream of celery soup, or peas, or lentils, or ground nuts, with stale-bread crumbs. Another day give the yolk of egg and bread crumbs. Another day, milk toast and the yolk of egg. The next between-meal feeding should be milk and barley water. The last meal at night before going to bed should be milk, from six to eight ounces, slightly warmed. Induce the child to take this from a glass or cup, rather than the bottle. To give variety change the method of cooking, but do not get very far away from eggs, milk, cereals and fruits. One day for the noonday meal give a baked potato mashed with cream, very slightly salted, or a bowl of junket, or a cup custard, warm, not hot. If the child is to be brought up a meat eater, it may have a little very finely-chopped white meat of chicken, or a scraped beef or mutton cake. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 123 At the end of the second year give a little carefully- cooked spinach, stewed celery, stewed cucumber, stewed summer squash, not mashed; well-boiled rice, rice pud- dings, fruit gelose, soft custard with bread crumbs, and the upper half of a shredded wheat biscuit with warm milk. At the beginning of the third year the diet may be slightly increased in quantity, but do not add too great a variety. Cream may be used on such cereals as Cream of Wheat and farina. Wheatena and Wheatlet should be served with milk. Ice cream, lightly flavored, may be allowed once a week. Oranges, ripe peaches, baked bananas, stewed prunes, carefully-scalded dates, and large grapes, skinned and seeded, may be added. Small fruits should be mashed and strained. When the child has reached its fourth year add delicately- cooked green vegetables in greater variety than heretofore. Very young lima beans, pressed through a sieve, tender hearts of lettuce with a little olive oil and a few drops of lemon juice, very young sweet peas. Whole wheat bread should be used in the place of white bread. Tea, coffee and chocolate should never be given, nor should jelly and jam be used on bread in place of butter. During the warm months use the lighter cereals, as farina, Cream of Wheat, barley flour mush, rice and rice pudding. For the winter breakfasts, oatmeal, rye mush, cornmeal mush and Wheatlet. When the child is learning to eat, devote considerable time to teaching it the art of mastication. In this way the jaws are developed, the teeth strengthened and the stom- ach kept in good condition. Children who live on soft foods and swallow them without mastication, have fre- quently undeveloped jaws, too small to hold the teeth, which are apt to come in crowded and decay almost as soon as they are through the gums. A child should be taught to keep its mouth perfectly clean. Conditions aris- ing from decayed teeth frequently cause serious digestive disturbances. 124 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Whether you feed your children on meat or not must be settled by the habits of the family. If meat is given, it should not be used more than four times a week. Lean scraped beef, broiled, mutton or lamb, white meat of chicken and an occasional piece of white-fleshed fish, only should be used. Pork, veal, goose, fat fowl, the internal organs of animals, as sweetbreads, brains and liver, should be strictly avoided. Meat , substitutes are puree of old peas, beans, lentils, eggs, milk and nut dishes. Balance the meals if possible ; for instance, at one meal give a puree of lentils, followed by a baked potato and a carefully- cooked green vegetable, or an egg with whole wheat bread, followed by a saucer of stewed prunes, or a baked potato, mashed with cream, and carefully-stewed spinach, followed by a cup custard. A cream soup with stale bread crumbs may be followed by a warm cup custard. A puree of lentils may be followed by boiled rice, carefully-cooked fresh peas and a fruit tapioca or a mock charlotte. Do not give eggs and milk and meat at the same meal. Children enjoy pleasant combinations. THE FOLLOWING ARTICLES ARE STRICTLY FORBIDDEN Pork and all dishes made from Dry cakes pork Pies All salt meats and fish Puddings All dried meats Candies Sauces and gravies made from Preserves and sweet jellies heated fats Salads with mayonnaise dressing The internal organs of animals, Tea, coffee and chocolate as liver and kidneys Cherries Stews Plums Rich soups Figs Coarse vegetables, as cabbage, rad- Pears ishes, raw cucumbers, tomatoes, Cranberries green corn, eggplant, peppers, Rhubarb beets, yellow turnips, boiled and Raw bananas mashed potatoes, fried potatoes, All dried fruits raw onions Canned fruits All hot breads and griddle cakes Fruits stewed with sugar MRS. RORERS DIET FOR THE SICK 125 FOODS ADMISSIBLE FOR YOUNG CHILDREN Milk and milk foods Milk gruels Buttermilk Matzoon Leban Clabber Junket and junket preparations Vegetable gelatin with fruit juices Nut preparations made from ground nuts Whole wheat bread An occasional piece of corn bread Now and then stale white bread White meat of chicken Beef Lamb White-fleshed fish A little olive oil Butter Cream Cocoanut cream Custards Occasionally ice cream Baked potatoes Soft-boiled onion now and then Stewed cucumbers Stewed summer squash Spinach Cauliflower Tender celery, stewed Lettuce hearts, with a little French dressing Prunes, stewed without sugar Scalded dates Baked bananas Stewed bananas An occasional mutton chop cooked in a paper bag Cream soups, especially those made from celery, green peas, split peas and ground nuts Rice pudding Boiled rice as a savory, not with sugar Now and then a little carefully- stewed macaroni Oranges Grape fruit Lemonade Ripe peaches Apples baked without sugar Mellow apples, raw Small fruits made into mush and strained Large grapes, seeded and skinned 126 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK DIET FOR OLDER CHILDREN Children old enough to go to school should have special attention paid to their diet, as diet, education and health bear very close relations one to the other. In the kindergartens, or the schools intermediate between the kindergartens and the first primary division, children usually carry their luncheon, and as they must put it out on tables before the teacher, she has supervision and care over what they eat in fact she frequently suggests the luncheons; but where these matters are left to ignorant parents, children suffer and frequently break down before they have finished their school period. During these days the child is growing rapidly, and at the same time exer- cising both mind and body. These conditions call for a liberal and correct diet. Correct diets are not always those that are easily digested. We do not mean by this that indigestible foods should be given, but that it is not neces- sary always to give easily-digested foods. The stomach needs exercise as well as every other part of the body. The diet for school children should contain a goodly quantity of protein in order to repair and build new tissues, and sufficient fats and carbohydrates to yield heat and energy. It must not be forgotten that the bones and teeth must also be nourished ; they have not yet reached their full development. Children underfed are usually nervous, and frequently have to be forced to go to school, they have not the vigor to keep up with the class. Nine out of ten times this is due to underfeeding or incorrect feeding one is as bad as the other. All children are not born alike. Many come from scrofulous, gouty, rheumatic or tubercular parents, and must be fed on different food from those born of perfectly healthy parents. School children should be under the careful observation of their Domestic Science teachers. Children fed on bread, meat, potatoes and sweets are very apt to become constipated. Fruits and fresh green MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 127 vegetables, simply cooked, with well-cooked cereals, milk and eggs, should form the diet of childhood. If the family are meat eaters, mutton, chicken and beef should be de- pended upon, and the meals should be divided and arranged according to the seasons. In the summer a comfortable, warm breakfast is as necessary as in the winter, and should be composed of light, well-cooked cereals and milk, with a piece of whole wheat bread, care- fully buttered, or a soft-boiled egg or two, with whole wheat bread, well buttered, and fruit. In the summer use the lighter cereals, as Cream of Wheat, farina, whole wheat, rolled wheat, rolled barley and shredded wheat. In the winter, oatmeal, Wheatena, Wheatlet, hominy grits, cornmeal mush and rye mush. If lunches are carried to school, they should consist of nut bread, well buttered, plain whole wheat bread and butter sandwiches, plain whole wheat bread with grated yolk of egg between, and fruit apples, oranges and pears, not bananas. Bananas should be given for breakfast, and should always be well cooked. Add to the noonday luncheon a cup custard, or jar of rice pudding, or a jar of good sweet milk or buttermilk. Do not give hard-boiled eggs, because the complete digestion of the whites takes too much time and the child does not get the full benefit; but two or three yolks that have been boiled a half hour may be grated and put between the bread and butter. Avoid all sweets, cakes, pies, pastry and cookies. Do not put lard or sugar in the bread for either children or adults. If it can be carried, there is nothing better than a half pint of milk for the noonday luncheon or a half pint of buttermilk ; when these are added to the luncheon do not use meat. Chopped white meat of chicken, chopped beef or mutton, carefully and lightly seasoned, may be used for sandwiches ; and fruit should be used freely for desserts. A child should not study immediately after eating, but should have sufficient time for digestion to begin. 128 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Among the "backward" at school are found children illy nourished, those who are given incorrect food, and those who are allowed to remain in bed until the last minute and go to school after a hurried, badly-served breakfast. Tea, coffee and chocolate are frequently given to such children because they can drink them quickly, or because it is a cold morning. If the child is healthy he will want a substantial cereal, and will be able to keep warm without a hot drink. Growing children need three good, nutritious meals a day, and must not nibble between meals. Children "with- out appetites" are those who eat at cakes and candies between meals. Constant nibbling, like constant chewing of gum, destroys the appetite, increases the flow of saliva, which interferes with stomach digestion. Of equal importance with diet is careful bathing and plenty of fresh air and pure water. Children should sleep in well-ventilated rooms, should take a glass of water the last thing at night and the first thing in the morning, and should be carefully bathed and rubbed. Hours of eating should be regular. The digestion of a healthy child is active, and food passes from the stomach in much less time than in adults. Parents frequently forget this and keep the children waiting too long between meals. Children who are obliged to carry cold luncheons for the noonday meal must have a warm, comfortable supper not later than six o'clock. If they come home in the middle of the afternoon (two or three o'clock) they should have a glass of milk, or a cup of good, warm cream soup, or a glass of buttermilk, or an egg and milk. Breakfast was early, luncheon light at noon, they have not had sufficient food. In fact, herein lies the danger of broken health in childhood. They frequently come home hungry, and eat .candies, or cakes, which satisfy the appetite without giving sufficient nourishment. Supper should be composed of well-baked potato, or boiled potato mashed and browned, or rice, or stewed macaroni, with beef, mutton or chicken, MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 129 or white-fleshed fish and either a saucer of whipped cream, or fruit tapioca, or fruit gelose, with bread and butter. Puree of beans, lentils and dried peas may take the place of meat. If children are fond of cereals, it is well to start the night meal with cereal instead of soup. Children do not require soup at the beginning of dinner. Milk, hot or cold, not iced, may be given with all non-meat meals. Children should be taught to masticate thoroughly and eat slowly, and after dinner they should have at least one hour of quiet recreation before be- ginning study. The food value of almost every article depends upon the method of cooking. Children should not be given fried foods, or such complicated dishes as pies and pud- dings. Incorrect combinations interfere with digestion. Do not give potatoes and rice, or white and sweet potatoes at the same meal ; give one or the other, and select a green succulent vegetable, suited to the combination. Green string beans are palatable, sightly and valuable as a green vegetable when cooked in salt water; when cooked with meat they are rendered indigestible. Potatoes well baked, or boiled, mashed and browned, are easily digested, an excellent food, but when fried are worse than useless. Rice carefully boiled until each grain is swollen to twice its former size, and no two grains sticking together, requires only one hour for perfect digestion; but when heavy and soggy and cooked with milk it is the worst form of starchy food; it will produce sour stomach and flatulency at once. Every mouthful of starchy food is, during the process of digestion, converted into sugar, and with such natural sugars as we find in fruits, a child will have quite enough sugar without adding sweet foods or putting sugar on cereals, or eating candies. In cold weather a lump of cut sugar may now and then be given in the place of candy, but such things are more or less temptations and the child is quite as well off without them. Mock candy, figs and prunes make nice desserts. Cereals should be cooked 9 130 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK the night before, allowed to stand in a double boiler and reheated in the morning. Bread should be made from whole wheat flour, free from lard and sugar and be well baked. Whole wheat bread does not contain more muscle-making food than white bread, but it does contain mineral matter, and this is ah important element in child nutrition. Teach your children to eat a green vegetable every day. At first select those easy of digestion boiled cucumbers, young carrots, spinach, young green peas, tender lima beans, tips of cauliflower, stewed tender celery, hearts of lettuce, tender endive, and, if allowable, asparagus tips. Children enjoy pleasant combinations. With broiled or boiled fish serve crisp lettuce and little potato balls; with stewed chicken, boiled rice, stewed celery or peas; with steak, cauliflower and baked potato; with mutton chops, creamed potato and peas ; with a chopped broiled meat cake, mashed and browned potatoes and stewed cucumber. Desserts must be arranged according to the meat portion of the dinner. Without meat, serve cup custards, soft custards or bread puddings made from egg and milk ; with meat dinners, fruit tapiocas, vegetable gela- tin with fruit juice, whipped cream, slightly flavored, or fruit carefully stewed without sugar. Water should be the only beverage. Milk takes the place of meat; it is a food containing a considerable amount of solid material. Chocolate is an admirable food and may be taken in the morning with bread and butter for breakfast, but it must not be given with a heavy meal. Tea and coffee have no place in a child's dietary. Fat ranks first as heat-producing material. In winter add cream to the milk and see that the bread is well buttered. Use olive oil, with a little lemon juice or vinegar, over uncooked green vegetables. MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 131 FOODS THAT ARE GENERALLY ADMISSIBLE Well-cooked cereals Fruits, fresh and stewed without sugar Cooked bananas, except fried and fritters Cream soups Vegetable soups without meat Puree of beans, lentils, peas Carefully-cooked beef, mutton, chicken, white-fleshed fish Eggs Fruit tapioca Vegetable gelatin with fruits Whole wheat bread Corn bread An occasional piece of white bread Occasionally rye bread Baked potatoes Boiled potatoes Mashed and browned potatoes Potato timbale Potato souffle Potatoes a la creme Stuffed potatoes Baked sweet potatoes occasionally Boiled rice Stewed macaroni, not baked Hominy and hominy grits Mush bread String beans Stewed cucumbers Summer squash Milk Buttermilk Leban Zoolak Matzoon Schmierkase Junket Blancmange Rice puddings Cup custards Soft custards Spinach Tender cauliflower Very young carrots Young turnips carefully stewed, with cream sauce Young celery Lettuce, imported endive, Romaine Stewed okra A little tender corn Carefully-boiled onions once in awhile Dandelions carefully cooked Such nut foods as almond butter, a very little peanut butter, almond cakes, almond pudding, pinon nut butter, ground pifion nuts for sandwiches, ground Brazilian nuts Cocoanut milk and cocoanut cream desserts GENERAL FOODS TO AVOID Strong meat soups All clear soups made from meat Sea foods, with the exception of white-fleshed fish Pork Veal All fatty meats Sweetbreads, liver, tripe, brains and kidneys Complicated made dishes Rich sauces Dense meat, as rabbit All stimulating foods Foods seasoned with wine or highly spiced Fried foods of every description Tea Coffee 132 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK GENERAL FOODS TO AVOID Continued Potatoes baked with meat Cookies Macaroni baked with cheese Hot' breads Cabbage Preserves Kale Jellies, except occasionally Old carrots, turnips, beets Raw bananas Fried onions Unripe fruits Peppers, raw or cooked Imperfect fruits Pies Unsterilized dry dates and figs Cakes Cantaloupes MARASMUS This disease comes, as a rule, from malnutrition ; it is really slow starvation. Such infants frequently have a sufficient amount of food, but the food is not suited to their natural condition ; they are starving on plenty. Many of the artificial "infant foods" contain starch and other materials absolutely unfitted to the digestion of a newly-born babe. The infant will grow thinner and thinner as the days go by, until it finally presents that wasted, worn, shriveled, old appearance which follows starvation. Milk of poor quality will bring about the same conditions. Do not undertake to treat a marasmus baby unless you have the advice of a physician. Modified milk will frequently bring a child back to normal condition in a few weeks. "Skin Feeding" s'ometimes becomes necessary: when the child is being prepared for bed, give it a warm sponge bath, dry the skin carefully and rub all over with cod liver oil ; do it gently but thoroughly, using at least two teaspoonfuls for the inunction. As the child grows older, if it has teeth and increases in weight, give barley water and top milk, using sugar of milk in the same proportions as in modified milk. If the child is very young and very ill, feed every hour a table- spoonful of cream and water, for two or three days, then give modified milk and keep up the oil inunctions. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 133 MEASLES During the height of the fever give hot water, or hot water and milk. A fast is to be recommended. When the appetite appears give milk, milk and barley water prefer- able, hot or warm milk soups, with hard toast; the top of a shredded wheat biscuit with hot milk, farina and Cream of Wheat, which are quite enough until the fever subsides. Milk foods should be given about three hours apart. Thirst may be allayed by warm tea, clover tea, or just simply a pinch of green tea and a pint of water. When convalescence appears, cereals and milk, with the exception of oatmeal, should form the bulk of the diet. Then add cream soups, cup custards, blancmange, junket, coddled, poached, fluffed and snow eggs, fruit and fruit juices ; vegetable gelatin with fruits ; baked potatoes ; plain boiled rice ; potato souffle ; potato timbale ; ground almonds mixed with the breakfast cereal; rice dumplings; rice cream ; rice pudding, and such milk foods as plum porridge and milk jelly. Avoid All foods difficult of digestion, as coarse vege- tables, highly-seasoned soups and sauces, cakes, pies, pre- serves, ice creams, other cold foods and meats. The return to a solid diet must be made very gradually. CHOREA In this disease diet is of primary importance. When it occurs in children, the diet should consist exclusively of fruits, tender green vegetables, well-cooked cereals and cream, eggs and milk. Fatty matter is called for in an easily-digested form, as whole wheat bread, well buttered, a little olive oil on hearts of lettuce, or on tart apples cut into blocks, or over well-cooked spinach, or cream on boiled rice, or on a well-cooked cereal. 134 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Eggs and egg preparations Milk and milk preparations, ex- cepting koumys Cream Broths Cream soups Whole wheat bread Cup custards Soft custards Fruit juices Vegetable gelatin, flavored with fresh fruit Carefully-made nut foods Now and then a piece of white meat of stewed chicken An occasional lamb chop, but never at the same meal with eggs or milk All carefully-cooked topground vegetables AVOID All sweets Highly-seasoned made-over dishes Coarse vegetables Pickles Red meats Bulk foods Tea Coffee Chocolate Puddings Pies, cakes Such raw vegetables as cucumbers, cabbage, or the outside stalks of celery DIPHTHERIA The rapid loss of vitality and weight in this disease must be met and retarded by correct dietetic treatment. The difficulty in swallowing makes liquid foods a necessity, and the kidney conditions indicate a diet not too rich in the proteids of meat. MAY EAT Modified milk Eskay's food Albuminized milk Cream and whey Arrowroot gruel Meiggs' food German flour gruel Pineapple juice alone and with white of egg Orange juice Mutton tea Vegetable bouillon ' ' Ye perfect food ' ' Cream, eggs and beef Cornmeal gruel Eggs and whey Plum porridge Beef meal Cream of celery soup Cream of potato soup Nut soups MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 135 MUMPS Mumps do not require special feeding, except that the food must be liquid in order to be easily swallowed. Food must also be free from salt, pepper and acid. MAY EAT Milk Egg and milk Milk soups Cream soups, and such milk foods Mutton broth as kefir, buttermilk, almond "Ye perfect food" milk, albuminized milk, plum Semi-solid beef porridge, arrowroot milk and Beef gruel milk gruels As soon as the swelling subsides, the patient may take semi-solid foods of a non-stimulating character. WHOOPING COUGH In cases of either mild or severe whooping cough the stomach and bowels require very close attention. Mucous membranes in general are affected, and incorrect food induces indigestion, and this increases the number and severity of the paroxysms. As there is always a tendency to vomit, a small amount of food given at regular and frequent intervals is best. Three meals a day will hardly answer in this disease. Liquids and semi-solid foods only should be given during the first, severe, part of the dis- ease. Osier says, "Give no solid foods, nor fruits, except orange and lemon juice, and do not give these with other foods." Those who adhere most rigidly to given rules can reduce the number and severity of the paroxysms very quickly. 136 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Milk Milk toast Milk and barley water Milk toast, with hard yolk grated Milk and white of egg over Eggnog Egg flip, plain Cup custards Egg flip, with a little sherry Soft custards Chicken broth, with rice Floating island , Plain chicken broth Well-cooked cereals Cream chicken broth Junket Strained mutton broth Buttermilk Lemon gelose once a day ENURESIS A simple nutritious diet helps greatly in correcting this trouble. Liquid foods and large quantities of water should not be taken after five o'clock in the evening. Breakfasts should be nutritious and composed largely of eggs, simply cooked ; dry or milk toast, stewed prunes, figs or baked bananas, and a glass of milk. The heavy meal should be at nopn and consist of chicken, eggs, white- fleshed fish, baked potatoes or boiled rice ; a little spinach, carefully-cooked peas, sweet corn cut from the cob, care- fully-stewed young turnips or celery, and a simple dessert, fruit gelose, fruit tapioca, or a little whipped cream. Suppers should be much like breakfasts, bread and milk, cornmeal mush and milk, milk toast, stewed figs and cream, with toast. After the child is prepared for bed, see that the bladder is emptied, and that he is in a comfortable position, with his head almost level with the rest of the body. Such children must avoid at all times tea, coffee, spiced foods, red meats, sour foods, candies, cakes, rich puddings, pies, pork, veal, fried foods, beef tea, bouillon, consomme, hot breads, bran breads, coarse vegetables, and they must not eat between meals. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 137 DIET IN RELATION TO AGE When a man has passed his fiftieth year, he certainly has less call for food than during the early and more active part of his life. His structure is complete; he needs only a sufficient quantity of easily-digested foods to repair his tissues and keep up his bodily heat and energy. If the y t oung overeat, they can rectify it now and then by a "bilious" attack, but such dissipation reduces the aged to a condition of invalidism. The character as well as the quantity of food must be changed to suit the age. Violation of nature's laws, false ideas of the amount of nourishment required, have much to do with early feebleness. More than one-half of the diseases that embitter the middle and latter portion of our lives, are due to errors in diet. A perfect old age, how- ever, has its foundations laid in youth. One cannot dissi- pate for a quarter of a century, and expect nature to for- give and forget. If persons have been accustomed to a mixed diet, it is better perhaps to keep on in moderation. More foods are required by the active aged than by those who are simply waiting. Meats should not be eaten more than four times a week and then at the noonday meal; substitute eggs, milk and milk preparations, puree of lentils, old peas, beans and peanuts. Boiled meats are more easily-digested than baked or fried. Breakfasts should be light, composed of fruits, cereals and whole wheat bread, or eggs, toast and cafe au lait. Soups should not precede the noonday meal, too much liquid reduces the strength of the gastric secre- tions. A puree of lentils is really the meat dish and need only be accompanied with a baked potato or boiled rice. A liquid or semi-solid food, as cornmeal mush, cocoa, milk toast, eggs and milk, gruels with toast, form admirable suppers. Buttermilk, cottage cheese, koumys, leban, are 138 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK easily digested, and with a piece of toast contain sufficient nourishment for the night meal. Do not neglect the output, nor the relations between it and the intake ; the motto must be, light easily-digested meals, with not one ounce more than is necessary. The machinery of the aged is easily upset. As sleep bears a close relation to food, take the lightest meal of the day at night. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 139 COMBINATIONS SUITED TO THE AGED BREAKFASTS Stewed Prunes Wheatena Cream Stewed Figs Cream of Wheat Cream Stewed Apples Eggs Toast Orange Juice One Egg Broiled Bacon Toast Grape Fruit Poached Egg Corn Muffin Strawberries Boiled Rice Cream Toast Broiled tomato Whole Wheat Gem DINNERS Cream of Celery Soup Boiled Mutton Boiled Rice Tender Lettuce Salad Puree of Lentils Pilot Bread Baked Potato Spinach Orange Gelose Peas Pudding Tomato Sauce Boiled Rice Apple Snow 140 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK COMBINATIONS SUITED TO THE AGED Continued Cream of Potato Soup Chop Hominy Cold Slaw Fruit Tapioca Vegetable Soup without Meat Salisbury Meat Cake Peas Blancmange Cream SUPPERS Mush Bread and Butter Apple Sauce Milk Toast with Hard-boiled Yolk of Eggs Prune Jelly Cream Junket with Cream and Unleavened Gems Cocoa with Rusks Rice Gems with Coddled Apples Apple Omelet with Pulled Bread Cocoa Buttermilk with Whole Wheat Bread Oyster Soup with Pilot Bread Warm Caramel Custards with Crackers MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 141 FEEDING IN FEVER Graves, in 1848, commenced to feed fevers. Prior to that time most fever patients had been starved, and we might add, most fever patients died, for in addition to starving they were bled. In all fevers the proteins are lost in greater proportion than the fats. The appetite is weak, sometijnes entirely lost, the digestive organs lack the natural activity, and thirst is intensified. To keep up the supply of protein during this rapid loss, give milk in as large quantities as can be readily digested by the patient. Add the white of egg once a day, if it is agreeable to the patient and the physician. Avoid solid foods ; they are slow of digestion, fre- quently decompose in- the intestines and provoke serious new diseases. The nurse must be perfectly familiar with the food requirements, for in fevers, diet is of first importance. Do not be guided by the patient's appetite. The gnawing of a sick stomach does not always mean hunger. Milk is almost universally used as diet in fevers. Two quarts a day, about 1300 calories, will be borne quite easily if modified with barley water in proportion of one- third to two-thirds milk. Do not insist upon milk and barley water at every feeding if the patient objects. Give at one time modified milk, at another, milk shaken with white of egg, orange juice with white of egg, or milk and Vichy, milk and lime water, or koumys, leban, junket, pancreatized milk, zoolak or kefir. If the taste of milk is objectionable, you will find in another portion of the book recipes for changing its flavor. Eggnog, egg and milk, sometimes the yolk of the egg beaten with the milk, at another time the white of egg and sherry, if admissible, plum porridge, rice water and Tnilk, arrowroot milk gruel, are all to be recommended. Personally, I object to beef tea or any form of meat soups in fevers. I have passed through typhoid fever 142 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK twice, and had good recoveries both times from milk and milk preparations. Meat and meat preparations were tried, with unsatisfactory results; they lack nutrition. Without having any personal idiosyncrasies for meat, I feel that milk m'akes a far better fever food. My opinion comes from experience rather than prejudice. Gelatin preparations and gelatin drinks are often val- uable in cases of intestinal hemorrhage. Never overfeed the patient; there is a diminution in the power of the digestive organs and they must never be overtaxed. A little food and often is the motto. TYPHOID FEVER In typhoid fever there is a close relation between right feeding, good nursing and recovery. At no time dur- ing the prevalence of the fever must there be the slightest departure from the food ordered by the physician. As the intestines are involved in this disease, it seems wise to give stomach-digested foods, but in all fevers gastric digestion is weak, hence stomach-digested foods must be carefully selected and easy of digestion. Milk and milk foods are usually most acceptable. If the taste of milk is objectionable, change the flavor as directed in another part of this book. Do not give solid food unless you have the consent of the physician. A tiny bit of orange pulp, or even a portion of soft-boiled white of egg, may escape digestion, pass into the small intestines, form an irritant and in turn endanger life. On the other hand, it must be remembered that full feeding is necessary. The milk you give must be whole milk, containing its full amount of fatty matter, and if barley or rice water be added, the tissues of the body are spared. In some cases the stomach is particularly sensitive to the curd of milk; this will be known quickly by the appearance of tympanites, or indigestion and flatulency. Stop milk feeding at once, and substitute modified milk, MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 143 peptonized milk, koumys, white of egg and water, barley water and cream, beef tea, beef essence, carefully-strained broths in which you have boiled either rice or barley. These foods contain the necessary elements of nutrition, presented in easily-digested form. Where mjilk cannot be borne, feeding becomes more complicated, and where a patient has prejudices in health little can be expected in sickness. If your patient is com- fortable and seems well nourished, is not losing fat too rapidly, has no distressing abdominal symptoms and no undigested food, in the stools, take for granted the feeding is correct, and continue it. On the other hand, if the patient is losing weight rapidly and there are abdominal complica- tions, take for granted the feeding is incorrect, or it may be insufficient in quantity ; then change the diet, or increase slightly the quantity. Many cases under my observation have been able to take eight ounces of milk and barley water at a feeding. Again, I have seen robust people who could not digest four ounces in three hours. One quart and a pint of milk, with one pint of barley water, per diem, is a fair allowance. If diarrhoea is prevalent, use ground rice gruel and milk that has been pasteurized and cooled. If vomiting occurs give orange juice, or other fruit juices in small quantities, and a little lime water, with !milk. Toast water, carefully strained, will sometimes allay thirst more quickly than plain water. Irish moss gruel or gelose water are exceedingly nice swabbing materials for the mouth ; they prevent the mouth from becoming so dry. A typhoid patient, whose mouth and lips become parched, cracked and sore, will frequently refuse nourishment when hungry. In fact the mouth should be rinsed or swabbed with some mucilaginous water each time before feeding. A few drops of Listerine or Glycothymoline in water is frequently very pleasant. After each feeding the mouth should be cleansed. 144 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK CONVALESCING TYPHOID After the patient has had a normal temperature for ten or twelve days, if agreeable to the physician, add a little semi-solid food to the general feeding: a frothed egg, omelet souffle, cup custard, bonnyclabber with cream and nutmeg, banana gruel made from banana meal, served with cream, a scraped beef cake, a very tender broiled chop, a piece of broiled sweetbread, a piece of juicy .steak, the yolk of a hard-boiled egg grated over milk toast, a poached egg, a coddled egg, rice gruel made by boiling rice carefully and pressing it through a sieve, diluted with milk or cream, broiled bird, free from fat and lightly seasoned , carefully- made soups and cream soups. These dishes should at first be used only once a day, and that at noontime. Avoid all vegetable foods for at least six weeks, with the exception of now and then a carefully-baked potato and a little carefully-boiled rice. When desserts are added they must follow the noonday meal. Wine jelly, Irish moss jelly, floating island, cup custards, cocoa, a cup of racahout; now and then farina custard, are admissible. Avoid all flavoring extracts in desserts; use in their place a tea- spoonful of caramel or a tiny bit of the grated rind of orange or lemon, strained out. Do not allow the patient to eat too much. Remember that after typhoid a person is very hungry and inconsistent as to what they want and the amount needed. No matter what the patient wants, give a small quantity of easily- digested foods. If there is a rise in temperature after the first or second meal of solid foods, return again to liquid diet and con- tinue it until the temperature falls to normal. At the end of a month, if the temperature is normal, the bowels regu- lar, and there is no diarrhoea, the patient may select one or two favorite articles, for the noonday meal. This does not include such indigestible foods as lobsters, crabs or shrimps, or coarse vegetables, dried fruits, pies, puddings, MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 145 or fried foods. Chopped meat cake, broiled sweetbreads, birds, venison, baked potato, young chicken, and light strained soups, are allowable. DENGUE FEVER In this fever use precisely the same diet as in typhoid, and if the person is robust, a fast of three or four days, with plenty of water, is to be recommended. MALARIAL FEVER A fast of one or two days, followed by white of egg and water for one day. Nut milk is excellent in the first stages of malaria. Fruit juices, especially orange juice, is always to be recommended, and may be used from the very first day. If orange juice is out of the question, use apple or grape juice. Then the white of egg in a half pint of water every alternate feeding, with milk and lime water for a week. Then add milk soups, gruels, and such milk preparations as koumys, leban, zoolak, matzoon and butter- milk. As soon as the patient can take solid food, add peas; spinach; dandelions, finely chopped; cauliflower; boiled cucumbers, with a little butter and salt; summer squash; a broiled chop; broiled chopped meat; chickens; white fish ; baked potato ; boiled rice, and macaroni. SCARLET FEVER The writer has had considerable experience in the feeding of scarlet fever, and has found that the best results come from a non-meat diet, and she fully believes that a strict milk and barley water diet is best until the fever sub- sides. During convalescence give alternate feedings of farinaceous gruels, arrowroot, rice flour, farina, Cream of Wheat. Meiggs' food, lentil milk gruel, and "ye perfect food." If the appetite increases and the patient seems to want solid food, give Cream of Wheat and farina, served 10 146 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK with milk. If milk becomes tiresome, give buttermilk, koumys, leban or matzoon, or any of the milk preparations. If it becomes distasteful, change its flavor according to directions given in the Second Part of this book. Orangeade, orange juice and lemonade may be used to allay thirst. In an ordinary case, the patient may be given the juice of four oranges a day. MAY EAT, DURING CONVALESCENCE Milk and milk preparations Orange juice Milk toast White of egg and orange juice Cup custard White of egg and apple juice Farina Fresh-made grape juice Cream of Wheat Lemonade Old-fashioned rice pudding Carbonated waters alone, or with Stale bread and milk milk or orange juice Tapioca pudding Lime squash Blancmange Orange water ice, unsweetened Junket Frozen grape juice, unsweetened LATER, ADD Poached eggs Whole wheat bread Soft-boiled eggs Fruits stewed without sugar Hard toast Soy bean or lentil soup The return to a meat diet must be postponed as long as possible, the writer believes forever, but if the patient belongs to a meat-eating family, meats will be added. Begin with the white meat of chicken, and a small quantity of boiled lamb or mutton. Do not add beef for some time to come, and avoid all sea foods. Avoid during the height of the disease and throughout convalescence : All meats, meat soups and meat Sour foods extracts Vegetables Highly-seasoned foods of all kinds Hot breads Sweets Desserts MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 147 YELLOW FEVER Physicians in the tropics recommend in all cases of yellow fever, an absolute fast, no matter whether the patient is robust, or slender and frail. If vomiting occurs, and continues for any length of time, rectal feeding must be resorted to, but this is fre- quently quite as irritating as food administered by mouth. Solid foods must be forbidden until the patient is far on the road to convalescence. The physician alone knows when and how to arrange suitable convalescing diet. If the patient is in any civilized country, where predigested foods can be obtained, these should be the first to follow the fast. Avoid, however, all meat preparations in hot climates, no matter whether they are predigested or not, and sugar. MAY TRY Albuminized water Whey Lime water and milk Whey and white of egg Bicarbonate of soda and water PURPURA HJEMORRHAGICA Feed the same as in fever, but substitute four ounces of fresh grape juice, for three regular feedings, one in the morning, another at noon, and one at six o'clock. It is most important that the grape juice be freshly made, according to the recipe found in another part of this book. If milk and barley water have been the main diet, a change to almond milk, gelatin water with lemon or orange, limeade, orange juice and white of egg, dry albumin in milk, is frequently beneficial. It is extremely necessary that the diet be nutritious and liquid. 148 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK SMALLPOX During the early stages of the disease there is little or no desire for food. Plain milk, or milk one-third barley water, milk with dry albumin, peptonized milk, or milk and carbonated waters, give quite enough variety. Do not urge the patient to eat until appetite appears. Then add milk soups, nut soups, eggs and milk, eggnog, egg flip, Cream of Wheat and farina. Later, when the fever subsides, add a baked potato, or a South American yam, milk toast, egg and egg dishes, and milk preparations. Lemon and orangeade may be used freely between feedings, to allay thirst. If the fever again appears, go back immediately to the diet recommended at first. The hours of feeding will be about the same as in typhoid fever. Avoid meat and meat dishes, and use as little salt as possible. Mutton broth is now and then ordered by physicians, but as it contains little or no nourishment, milk is to be preferred. Raw egg, with a few drops of lemon juice, if the patient can take it, is far better than meat. During convalescence, or as soon as the fever subsides, increase the diet. Add broiled sweetbreads, broiled chops and a little white meat of chicken, but depend for the bulk of the food upon well-cooked Cream of Wheat, farina, shredded wheat biscuit, with milk and cream, eggs, rice pudding, cup custards, junket, milk toast, tapioca pudding, and carefully-cooked fruits. Whole wheat bread should be used in place of white bread, and all bread given should be made without sugar or lard. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 149 DISEASES OF THE SKIN The skin, being a delicate and sensitive secretory organ, is easily affected by habits, diet and exercise. Nettle rash is perhaps the best example of a 'cutaneous disorder resulting from the toxic influences of food. Persons who eat indigestible compounds, as pie, cake, preserves, fried meats, fried starchy foods, as potatoes, and such made dishes as croquettes, and those who wash down each mouthful of bread and butter with weak tea or coffee containing sugar and cream, are frequently troubled in the cold months with various eruptions of the skin, especially on the hands. The clammy moist hand of the dyspeptic is one of the first symptoms of an unhealthy skin. In cold weather the skin of the face is rather red and coarse ; in warm weather it becomes greasy. To correct these conditions, add to the daily diet tender green vegetables that can be eaten raw with a little French dressing. Give an abundance of ripe fruits, fruit juices, whole wheat bread, rye bread, and now and then brown bread. Orange juice, grape juice, apple juice, early in the morning, or between the morning and noon meal, are to be recommended. If the patient is thin and anaemic, follow diet in leanness; if robust, the diet for the obese. Give plenty of water between meals. 150 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Lean beef, a little Whole wheat bread, well buttered Mutton Pilot bread Chicken Swedish bread Cream soups Toast Fruits Brown bread Fruit juices Graham bread Fruit desserts, with tapioca or Gluten bread, occasionally arrowroot Puree of lentils An occasional baked potato Puree of peas Boiled rice Nut foods Topground green vegetables Vegetable gelatin desserts Green salads, with French dressing Milk toast Orange salad Light egg dishes, especially those Grape fruit salad made from hard-boiled yolks Cantaloupe salad AVOID All coarse vegetables All meat soups Mashed and fried potatoes Fried foods in general Boiled cabbage Pies Kale Puddings Pork Cakes Veal Candies Lobsters Sugar Crabs Tea Fish Coffee Oysters and clams Chocolate Pickles and foods in vinegar Cocoa and cocoa preparations Rich sauces Entrees Mayonnaise ACNE It is said by many dietitians that acne may be entirely overcome by correct and special diet. It is true that acne is worse among people who live largely on hot breads, fried food, rich starchy dishes and sweets. Avoid fat meats and sea foods. Use eggs, milk, and sour milk foods, green vege- tables spinach, lettuce, salads with olive oil and lemon MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 151 juice; peas, sweet corn, lima beans, string beans, stewed cucumbers, squash, stewed celery. A grated raw carrot eaten with a little salt just before retiring, or a saucer of popcorn will keep the bowels in good condition. MAY EAT Broiled lamb Carefully-cooked chicken Beef occasionally Eggs Skimmed milk Buttermilk Leban Koumys Matzoon Whole wheat bread Brown bread Unleavened bread Boiled rice Cream of Wheat Farina, with milk Stewed macaroni A little cheese Eggs, except fried Fruits and fruit juices Gelose with fruits and skimmed milk Lemon, orange and grape gelatin, with very little sugar Game,< carefully cooked Mutton broth Chicken broth Noodle soup Occasionally nut loaf Zweiback Virginia wafers Maryland biscuit All fruits, except strawberries and currants Prune dishes AVOID Sea foods Fried foods Pies, cakes and puddings Hot breakfast breads Syrup Pork Veal Smoked and salted meats Tea, coffee and chocolate Fish, Crustacea, mollusks Fresh American cheese Gravies Rich soups White bread Coarse vegetables, as turnips, beets, sweet potatoes, pumpkin White potatoes, except occasionally Fruits stewed with sugar Jellies and preserves Cream Bacon All alcoholic and malt beverages 152 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ECZEMA In eczema, as in all skin diseases, a correct diet plays the most important part in the cure. The stomach must be kept in good condition, the bowels regular. If the patient is anaemic, give white of egg shaken with milk, between meals, every other day ; buttermilk or koumys the alternate days. Meat should be avoided, but eggs and milk used freely. Thorough mastication is of utmost importance. If the patient is obese, treatment for the obese must be followed. Give plenty of pure soft water between meals, and keep the skin in good active condition by careful bath- ing with soft water and neutral soap. MAY EAT Soups made from milk and green vegetables Ladies' cabbage Spinach Carefully-cooked peas Stewed cucumbers Summer squash Carrots, carefully cooked Whole wheat bread, without lard Unleavened bread Zweiback Crackers Occasionally brown bread Modified milk Cream of Wheat Farina Shredded wheat Chicken, mutton Toasted corn flakes, fruit juices Butter, in moderation Baked apples Stewed apples, with very little sugar Grapes Fruit juices Skimmed milk Buttermilk Koumys Leban Clabber Schmierkase Eggs, occasionally Lettuce, cress, and light green vegetables, with a little olive oil and lemon juice MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 153 AVOID Tea, coffee, chocolate and cocoa All highly-seasoned foods Fats in excess Underground and coarse vegeta- Sweets bles Pastries, cakes and puddings All fish, the Crustacea, oysters and Starchy foods clams Pickles Pork Fried foods Veal Food containing lard Small fruits, with the exception of Salt foods blackberries Liquors, both malt and alcoholic Pears Cambric tea Cantaloupes Eczema in Children A large number of cases of eczema occurring among children of the middle classes is due to de- fective nutrition ; unsuitability of foods, bad cooking and hur- ried breakfast. Children who are allowed to remain in bed to the very last minute, and then rush through breakfast and off to school, ruin their digestion at an early age. Such children frequently have boils ; if not, their skin becomes rough, the face covered with pimples, and the kidneys are more or less involved. Fruits should be used freely in the morning, stewed without sugar, or raw. If the luncheon is carried to school, give nut butters with bread, and a bottle of milk, or give whole wheat or brown bread sandwiches, and fruit, or nut bread sandwiches and fruit. The yolk of hard-boiled egg may now and then be grated over the bread and butter. They should drink plenty of water between meals. Such children should avoid at all times candies, sweets, meats, especially pork and veal, all rich dishes and meat soups, tea, coffee and chocolate. The bulk of their diet should be composed of milk and milk soups, puree of nuts, puree of green peas and spinach, tender green vegetables, fruits, eggs and whole wheat bread, well buttered. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ALCOHOLISM In this disease, whether chronic or acute, the whole system is more or less poisoned, the mucous lining of the stomach is inert and inactive, gastric catarrh is frequently established, and the mucous membranes of the stomach are thickened and hardened. Such lesions as cirrhosis of the liver, kidney complications, thickening of the arterial walls, and a form of bronchitis, may be expected. A bronchial and stomach cough, especially in the early morning, is fre- quently present, and morning vomitings are to be expected. The intestines may be more or less affected, but as a rule do not share the marked conditions of the stomach. Acute alcoholism is more easily remedied by diet than is the disease when it has reached the chronic stage. In mild cases, easily-digested foods are called for, and while it is true highly-seasoned foods increase and keep up the appetite, they are in the end injurious. Of what value is an appetite if the stomach itself has no power to digest the food eaten? Water, water, and plenty of it, is the quickest and safest remedy. Pure water will answer every purpose, but if the patient objects, give him Vichy, Seltzer or Apollinaris at any time during the day or night. Fruit juices, especially orange and apple juice, may be used freely ; they allay thirst and the craving for liquor, and give a foundation on which to build a rational diet. Diet must be non-stimulating. A cup of black coffee in the early morning may be followed in an hour by a soft egg, or a glass of buttermilk, or koumys, and in the middle of the morning, fruit juice. If solid foods are admissible, give for dinner a broiled chop or scraped beef cake with a piece of hard, dry toast, well buttered, all to be eaten slowly and thoroughly masticated. Give no liquids with the meal. In two and a half or three hours give more fruit juice and Vichy, or an effervescing water. If there is un- easiness and a desire for alcohol, give liquid foods every two MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 155 hours ; this will prevent the craving. Oysters, tripe, sweet- bread, carefully-boiled rice, pulled bread, milk and soda, milk and Vichy, are all to be recommended. In the middle of the afternoon, say four o'clock, give a cup of carefully- made tea, without sugar or cream, or a cup of mate ; I find the latter most beneficial in cases of alcoholism ; it is not wise, however, to use it more than once a day, and never with meals. The last meal at night should be varied ; give leban, buttermilk, eggnog without liquor, albumin and milk, koumys, junket, junket whey. Keep up the variety, it will induce the patient to eat and forget alcohol. In severe cases, feed every three hours during the day, starting at seven o'clock in the morning. In place of coffee in the early morning, substitute the juice of two oranges, or a grape fruit, or pomegranate. In the middle of the morning substitute for Vichy now and then a lime or lemonade. As soon as possible get rid of condiments, and never begin with rich sauces, or soups, or overseasoned dishes. As the patient progresses, increase the vegetable diet and cut down the animal foods, giving meat but once a day. Well-cooked cereals, with subacid fruits, as baked bananas, stewed prunes, peaches, served with cream ; baked potatoes, boiled rice, eggs and milk toast, should form the supper dishes. Where stimulants are called for, tea is fre- quently borne in the early morning better than coffee. If vomiting occurs, give a cup of very weak tea, or clam broth, or oyster bouillon ; later give an egg flip ; in two hours a cup of beef tea ; the next two hours a cup of peptonized or predigested milk, or a cup of leban or buttermilk ; the next two hours, beef juice on a piece of toast; next a cup cus- tard or a cup of Meiggs' food. Avoid excessive eating at meals, and do not give solid foods between meals. 156 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK CHRONIC ALCOHOLISM When the disease reaches the chronic stage, the crav- ing and longing for alcohol overpowers the better mental conditions and interferes with the selection of food and the appetite. Highly-seasoned beef teas, strong coffee, with lemonade, may be resorted to now and then, but such foods are a mistake; they increase rather than allay the demand for liquor. The writer has found a never-failing remedy in pure fruit juices, especially strained orange juice. The hours of feeding will be governed by the doctor and nurse. Give at seven o'clock a cup of black coffee, or a grape fruit, or pomegranate, or orange juice, milk and Vichy, milk and lime water, or a glass of lemonade. For the two-hour feed- ings use milk and milk preparations, broth, beef tea and fruit juice until light, easily-digested foods can be borne, As the patient progresses, increase the vegetable diet ; give meats but once a day, and that at noon. Well-cooked cereals, with stewed prunes without skins ; peach puree with cream ; baked potato ; milk soups ; boiled rice ; eggs ; milk toast. Suppers should be exceedingly light, without tea, coffee or chocolate. Where stimulants are constantly on the mind of the patient, tea is frequently borne in the early morn- ing better than coffee, and still better, a cup of mate. If vomiting follows the morning cough, give immediately an egg flip; if this is not retained give a cup of weak tea, or a cup of beef tea, or a cup of peptonized or predigested milk. A good arrangement is to follow the cup of weak tea in two hours with a cup of beef tea ; the next two hours, four ounces of peptonized or predigested milk ; the next two hours, four ounces of leban or buttermilk; the next, beef juice on a piece of toast, about one ounce of beef juice, and one ounce of toast ; the next two hours, egg and milk; the next, two ounces of Meiggs' food. Let the evening meal be six ounces of mutton broth, thickened with rice flour. At ten o'clock, when the patient is getting ready for bed, give him four ounces of warm milk, one-third MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 157 barley water. If feeding is necessary during the night, use peptonized milk. If milk becomes objectionable, substitute malted milk, junket, plain plum porridge, milk gruels, milk and vege- table soups. When solid food can be borne, give two ounces of scraped meat, made into a cake and broiled ; broiled sweetbread or broiled mutton cake. After the meat has been thoroughly masticated and swallowed, give a glass of Vichy. The whites of two eggs shaken with a half pint of milk, with a piece of zweiback, makes a good supper. If the patient is restless during the night give hot milk at intervals of two hours; it will frequently induce comfort and sleep. If there is a constant desire for alcohol, and the loss is severely felt and produces nervousness, give a glass of half ginger ale and half Apollinaris. MAY EAT All predigested foods Beef tea Quick beef tea Nutritive beef tea Restorative beef tea Beef essence Beef juice Beef broth Mutton broth Vegetable broth Dried bean broth Lentil soup Celery broth Milk and milk preparations Broiled oysters Oyster bouillon Oyster broth Clam broth Milk soups Eggnog Egg and milk Albuminized milk Almond milk Lentil milk gruel "Ye perfect food" Cornmeal gruel Rennet and lemon whey Albuminized whey Solid foods : Boiled white fish Almond meat cake Broiled tenderloin Lamb chops Stewed tripe Broiled and stewed sweetbreads Boiled chicken Boiled pigeon Boiled mutton Beauregard eggs Coddled eggs Egg flip Eggs a la Martin Poached eggs Boiled rice Baked potato Creamed potato 158 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Continued Carefully-cooked green top- ground vegetables Arrowroot desserts Fresh fruits, without skin Fruits stewed without sugar Prunes and figs Tender lettuce, cress and im- ported endive, with French dressing Boiled dandelions Lamb's quarters Poke shoots Spinach Whole wheat bread Graham bread Pulled bread Zweiback Passover bread Pilot biscuits Cocoanut milk and cream, made into desserts Baked apples Guava jelly Orange marmalade Beverages : Saline waters Fruit juices Vichy Carbonated waters Lemonade Lemon squash Limeade Lime squash AVOID All rich, highly-seasoned soups Dark or pink-fleshed fish, lobster, crabs and shrimps All highly-seasoned sauces Underground coarse vegetables Boiled cabbage Brussels sprouts Beets All fried foods Pleated butter Puddings Pies Hot breads Tea and coffee, or chocolate, with meals Sweets Cakes Fruits stewed with sugar Pickles Fruits with small seeds Ice creams or sherbets at the end of a meal Rhubarb MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 159 DELIRIUM TREMENS While this comes truly under the head of alcoholism, it requires special dietetic treatment. Make sure that the alimentary canal is thoroughly emptied of all foods before you begin the feeding. Where both the chemical and the mechanical conditions of digestion are slack, food is fre- quently held until abnormal fermentations take place, the mass decomposes in the intestines and the patient is pre- vented from rapid recovery. The physician will probably give a brisk purgative; after this has thoroughly operated, give two tablespoonfuls of good, strong clam broth ; in one hour give two ounces of beef tea, the next two hours two ounces of clam broth, the next two hours two ounces of milk ; these may be alternated every two hours, for at least twenty-four hours. Water, of course, must be given freely. If all goes well, at the end of the first day, the patient will be able to digest the yolk of an egg shaken with milk, a cup of consomme, a cup of double-strength beef tea, Bartho- low's perfect food, a glass of koumys, two ounces of mat- zoon or zoolak, eggnog with or without liquor, according to the physician's orders, egg flip, Meiggs' food, arrowroot milk gruel or plum porridge. If the stomach is irritated and there is a great desire for alcohol, give orange or apple juice. As the patient convalesces, give a scraped beef cake, carefully-broiled chops, soft-boiled eggs, broiled or creamed sweetbreads, or stewed tripe and oysters, with baked potatoes, carefully-boiled rice, well-cooked farina or Cream of Wheat, carefully-made corn souffle, pulled bread, toast, or whole wheat bread. Orange juice early in the morning and in the middle of the afternoon in fact the patient can take the juice of six oranges a day to advantage. Cinnamon or ginger tea, as well as ginger ale, fre- quently allay the desire for stimulants ; this is also true of lemon and tamarind whey, mulled buttermilk, and koumys. 160 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK THE INSANE Insane patients who have been illy-nourished must be liberally fed. The first effort should be to increase the weight of the body. Cream, olive oil, broiled bacon, plenty of butter on the bread, are of primary importance. All foods should be concentrated. Three hard-boiled yolks grated over a dish of milk toast, eggs and milk, puree of beans, peas and lentils, mutton broth and milk soups rather than meat, should be depended upon. If necessary resort to two-hour feedings of milk and barley water, milk and egg, giving two quarts of milk and six eggs a day. Where the patient refuses to eat and muSt be fed by forced feeding, adhere to milk and eggs, or milk and white of eggs, then milk and yolk of egg. When "softening" or "hardening" of the brain occurs accompanied by an increase in weight, give a simple non- stimulating vegetable diet. Weak tea, coffee or chocolate can be given once a day. Avoid red meats. MAY EAT Eggs Cocoanut cream on vegetables Milk Puree of old peas, beans and Broth lentils Vegetable broths Fresh fruits and fruit juices Nut broths Koumys Nut milk, nut cream Buttermilk Cream soups All sour milk preparations Hard-boiled eggs on milk toast Peptonized milks, if necessary Hard dry breads Cup custard, floating island Plenty of butter Fruit tapioca Cream Mock charlotte Olive oil Souffle puddings Broiled bacon Lamb, chicken AVOID All bulk foods Highly-seasoned and stimulating Underground vegetables foods Cooked fruits Heavy puddings Sweets, pies, cake Fried foods, pork, veal Soft white bread Pink-fleshed fish Hot breads Shell fish and crustacea , Mashed potatoes Red meats MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 161 CANCER I feel in writing diet for this disease a fullness of experience, as I have had charge in my own family of sev- eral persons with this malady. One thing is certain all dishes made from cornmeal or from tomatoes are, as a rule, objectionable. A purely vegetable diet, with such foods as eggs and milk, seems to be indicated. Light fatty foods are good cream, butter, olive oil and cocoanut fats are to be preferred. Fruit juices may be used in early morn- ing. Strong tea and coffee, as well as chocolate, must be avoided. Weak tea, with cream and no sugar, is not objec- tionable in the middle of the afternoon. Hard, crisp bread, pulled bread, crackers, Virginia biscuits, and Uneedas are preferable to soft bread made after the ordinary fashion. Breakfasts Four tablespoonfuls of Cream of Wheat or other cereal, with cream. Baked potato, daintily served with a little cream or butter. Bird's nest egg, with a piece of whole wheat bread and butter. Poached egg on toast. Milk toast. Toasted rusk with milk. Do not give eggs more than twice a week. Dinners Puree of potato; puree of lentils; soup a la Reine, or two ounces of finely-chopped white meat of chicken, with a baked potato. Two ounces of finely-minced lamb, with boiled rice. Two ounces 'of finely-minced white meat of chicken, with stewed macaroni. Two ounces of creamed sweetbreads, with rice and a few green peas. Cream of peanut, green pea or celery soup, with bread. Suppers Fruits, carefully cooked, as baked apples, stewed prunes, bread and butter. Tender green salad, with French dressing. Stewed prunes, with rice. Baked peach, with rice. Arrowroot gruel, with toast. Milk toast. Milk toast with hard-boiled yolk of egg grated over it, or cream soups. Between breakfast and luncheon raw fruit or fruit juices may be used freely. Between dinner and supper, weak tea, with bread and butter, or cooked fruits and fruit 11 162 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK juices; or the top of a shredded wheat biscuit, toasted, with fruit juices. This diet must, of course, be continued as long as the patient lives. Keep up a variety of simple dishes. At one time let the potato be mashed plain, at another time made into "puff" and baked, plain or stuffed ; or baked, mashed and made into roses, using a pastry bag and star tube; brown these in a quick oven and serve on a dainty plate. Lentils may be soaked over night, washed and boiled until tender, pressed through a colander, sea- soned with butter and salt, and baked in an individual casserole. Old peas and beans may be served the same way. In arranging the menus for a person with cancer, give white meat of chicken twice a week, lentils or nut foods twice a week, and the remaining days let the patient live strictly on fruits and cereals, or milk and toasts, or whole wheat bread and light green salads. MAY EAT Farina Cream of Wheat An occasional shredded wheat bis- cuit Puffed rice Boiled rice Baked potato Stewed macaroni Spinach Green peas, pressed through a sieve Very young string beans Boiled cucumber, with cream sauce Boiled squash, with sauce Hollan- daise Cauliflower Kohl-rabi, with cream sauce Artichokes Fruits cooked and raw Junket once or twice a week White meat of chicken Eggs Milk and milk preparations Lentils in puree Old or split peas in pudding or puree Very tender celery Hearts of lettuce ; corn salad (Valerianella olitoria, Poll.); imported endive ; native endive ; chicory; all with French dress- ing Desserts : Fruit tapiocas Tapioca with fruit juices Sago Rice pudding Cup custard Soft custard Mock charlotte Blancmange Gelatin desserts: Vegetable- gelatin desserts Any of the various nut prepara- tions in small quantities MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 163 AVOID Pork and veal All underground vegetables, ex- All red meats cept carrots and potatoes Oatmeal All fried foods Cornmeal All made dishes Barley Sweets Baked beans Strong tea, coffee, chocolate All sea foods Tomatoes EXOPHTHALMIC GOITER Milk and milk foods are to be preferred, if they agree with the patient; if they do not, select such easily-digested foods as cream soups, with dry bread ; sweetbreads, broiled, stewed, and creamed; now and then a piece of white meat of chicken, broiled or roasted; eggs, cooked in any light way, or raw with milk; light topground vegetables, care- fully cooked and served without rich sauces ; an occasional baked potato; boiled rice; unleavened bread, whole wheat bread, crisp corn bread; fruits, raw, and stewed without sugar; steamed figs and dates, all thoroughly masticated. AVOID All highly-seasoned foods Beef All rich meats and stimulating Pickles meat soups Dishes containing sugar Tea Onions Coffee Garlic Pork Chives Veal All coarse vegetables Duck Soft foods, as mushes Goose Cooked fats of every kind 164 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK LOCOMOTOR ATAXIA This disease calls for a generous, simple, nutritious diet rich in fatty matter. Patients should drink two and a half quarts of plain cool, not iced, water each day. If ordinary water is objected to, buy some non-effervescing bottled water; a patient will frequently take a water that comes from a drug store, even if it has no special medicinal value, rather than drink water from an ordinary spigot. Digestion must be kept in good condition. Sometimes it becomes necessary to give small quantities of food, divided into four or five meals a day. The diet must be especially non-stimulating. Before breakfast give the patient two or three ounces of orange juice, or an after-dinner cup of black coffee, or an after-dinner cup of grape juice, or half of a grape fruit. MAY EAT Breakfasts Poached eggs on bacon ; boiled eggs, with well-buttered bread; broiled bacon with whole wheat bread; wheat germ cereal, well cooked, with cream; farina and cream ; Cream of Wheat, with cream ; two broiled chops, with one corn gem; broiled young chicken, with pulled bread. Dinners Puree of lentils, baked potato and well-but- tered bread, followed by cup custard ; boiled, baked or broiled mutton or lamb ; stewed chicken ; plain omelets ; omelets garnished with oysters, peas, or with tomato sauce ; nut roll ; beef cakes, broiled ; baked potatoes ; boiled rice ; spaghetti stewed in stock; cucumbers or squash, stuffed with meat ; young green peas ; young tender lima beans ; artichokes ; very young carrots, spinach, cauliflower, cress, lettuce, tender celery ; fresh fruits. Suppers Bread and milk ; toasted rusk and milk ; eggs and milk, with pulled bread ; cream soups and bread ; broth with rice or barley ; cereals ; milk toast ; milk preparations ; buttermilk, brown bread ; leban, a little honey and toast. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 165 EPILEPSY It is generally conceded by all physicians and dietitians that diet plays a most important part in the alleviation and cure of this disease. It has been observed that epileptic attacks in childhood almost invariably follow a heavy meal of indigestible or over-stimulating highly-seasoned foods. A purely vegetable diet will frequently cure epilepsy. Sub- stitute milk, carefully-made nut dishes, old peas, beans and lentils, for meats. All leguminous seeds are rich in nitro- gen, but must be carefully cooked to be digestible. In feeding an epileptic, first consider the digestibility of the food, next the correct amount for the individual. There must be just enough to nourish the body, but not an ounce too much. Overfeeding will nearly always produce an attack. There must be no eating between meals. If light meat, as white meat of chicken or lamb, is served at a meal, that meal must be free from milk; and this diet must be continued or kept up perhaps during the indi- vidual's life. MAY EAT Broiled, baked or roasted lamb Grated carrots, cooked in water, Chicken cream and salt added, as a puree Broiled white-fleshed fish Lettuce Hard-boiled yolk of egg on milk Cress toast Endive Milk and milk preparations Fresh fruits, with the exception of Dishes made from old peas, beans pears and cantaloupes and lentils Prunes, prune dishes Baked and boiled potatoes Well-cooked cereals Boiled rice Tapioca and fruit Macaroni or spaghetti Tapioca custards Boiled chestnuts in season Whole wheat bread New green peas Stale bread New green corn, pressed from cob Crackers Stewed squash Wafers Stewed pumpkin Toast, milk toast Spinach Toasted rusks and milk Cauliflower Mush bread Celery Corn bread occasionally 166 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK These dishes may be arranged after this fashion : oat- meal mush and milk for breakfast; a piece of whole wheat bread, well buttered. Dinner: a little roasted or boiled lamb or mutton, carefully-cooked spinach, a baked potato, followed by fruit tapioca, rice pudding, or some dessert without milk or eggs. Supper: milk toast, fresh fruits, with bread and butter, or mush and milk, or bread and milk, and now and then a broiled or panned tomato with cream sauce and a bit of corn bread. Meat must never be given more than two or three times a week. As fish comes in fresh on Thursday for Friday, a piece of broiled fish on Friday gives variety. ERYSIPELAS The intense inflammation of the skin in this disease indicates a diet free from the proteids of meat. The writer has had success with a simple diet of milk gruels, infants' foods, with eggs, milk, nut milks, milk and vichy water. This diet changes, when the patient is con- valescing, to carefully-cooked farina, Cream of Wheat, well-baked whole wheat bread, milk toast, egg toast, coddled eggs, cup custards, junket, koumys, leban, matzoon ; followed later by a broiled chop, a broiled chicken, baked potato, carefully-boiled rice, whole wheat bread, fruits, spinach, cress or lettuce. Do not allow the patient to return too quickly to a meat diet; he must also avoid all fried foods, coarse vegetables, pies, puddings, rich sauces, liquors, both malt and alcoholic, strong coffee, tea and chocolate, and meat soups, in fact all soups at the beginning of meals ; fruits stewed with sugar, cookies, cakes, candies, and pickles. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 167 INSOMNIA A heavy meal at night, a cup of strong tea or chocolate, are frequently responsible for a sleepless night. If sleeplessness has become a habit, put the patient on a regular, easily-digested diet, and give rest until the conditions are relieved. Give a glass of hot water the first thing in the morning ; breakfast in bed, composed of cereal with cream or milk, and rest for an hour if possible. After the bath, give a glass of buttermilk, or zoolak, or plain milk. For dinner at noon, give boiled, baked or broiled beef, mutton or chicken, a baked potato or rice, one green vege- table, simply cooked, as spinach, cauliflower, asparagus or tender celery ; a lettuce or endive salad with French dress- ing; no dessert. Supper at six; milk toast, Cream of Wheat, gluten mush and milk, well-made cornmeal mush, egg dishes and a little bread only. If the patient is anaemic, or what people call "run down," give two raw eggs between breakfast and dinner, or one egg beaten with a half pint of milk, and another between dinner and supper. If eggs and milk become tiresome, give buttermilk, koumys, zoolak, junket or any of the milk gruels. Give a cup of hot milk at bedtime. 168 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ADDISON'S DISEASE In the early stages of the disease there is always a decided weakness of the entire digestive system. As the disease advances, vomiting frequently becomes rather dangerous, and requires first attention. Clam broth, made from fresh clams, given in teaspoonful doses, will almost always allay the vomiting; it seems to be able to draw the digestive secretions into the stomach more readily than other foods. If the vomiting stops, give the patient a small amount of predigested milk, or milk and barley water. It is wise to use a straw or glass tube for feeding or give it by teaspoonfuls. Well-flavored mutton tea and mutton broth, egg soups, egg flip, are frequently easily borne. The patient should be fed every two hours, but should not be urged to take more than is agreeable. Over- feeding in this disease is always productive of bad results. The following list may be arranged in two-hour feedings Milk and rice water, in proper- Beef broth strained into a table- tions of two-thirds milk and spoonful of mashed baked po- one-third rice water tato Milk and arrowroot water gruel Rennet milk Milk and barley water Junket Almond milk Leban Egg flip Matzoon Milk shake Koumys Yolk of egg and milk Modified milk Milk flavored with cinnamon "Ye perfect food" Oatmeal gruel added to milk Soup a la Royal Tiger's milk Bartholow's restorative soup Wine whey Eggnog Strained mutton broth Peptonized milk Then follow with cream soups, with croutons, or a scraped beef cake, or a tender broiled chop ; and go gradually on to an easily-digested, normal diet, free from sweets, sours, or grease. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 169 DIET AFTER AN ANESTHETIC If vomiting occurs after administration of ether or chloroform, do not give food for several hours. A table- spoonful of clam broth, given in teaspoonful doses, will probably be retained and give a foundation for a little food later on. A few tablespoonfuls of coffee, in teaspoonful doses, is frequently beneficial. Then give a cup of chicken broth; almond milk; milk and barley water; alternating with Meiggs' food or modified milk, for the next two or three days. Then, under ordinary circumstances, the patient may have milk toast, a poached egg, a beef cake, or broiled chop. If vomiting continues, however, stop all foods except small quantities of albumin water, modified milk and clam broth. The patient usually has enough irregularities to contend with without added indigestion. PART II RECIPES MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 173 PROPRIETARY FOODS Under this heading the writer has placed prepared foods that are manufactured, the secret of which is sup- posed to be patented. Some of them contain a large amount of nourishment in small bulk. Some are prepara- tions of beef, others the casein of milk, gluten, and easily- digested forms of starch. Whether or not these foods are beneficial will be decided by your physician or nurse. All the foods mentioned under this heading, or in the book, have been used by the writer, and can be depended upon as correct. The Kellogg Food Company, of Battle Creek, Mich- igan, make an eighty percent gluten biscuit and gluten flour, both of which have but a trace of starch and are perfectly safe to use in diabetic feeding. Their sterilized wheat bran is clean and ready to use for the diabetic bran loaf, or to add to ordinary whole wheat or white flour for laxative bread. This same company also makes Granola, Granose Flakes, Whole Wheat, Toasted Corn and Rye Flakes, Gelose, a vegetable gelatin, Nut Mixtures, Almond Meal, Cocoanut Sticks and some pure starch preparations. The writer has used these prepara- tions for a number of years, and found them satisfactory, well prepared and clean. Maltose, a predigested food, represents thoroughly- digested starch of cereals. It may be used in the place of cornstarch or rice flour. The flavor is agreeable, and it is considered a fat-forming food par excellence, and in gastric or other stomach trouble, with milk, it gives a well-pre- pared and palatable diet. Gluten Flour Gluten flour and similar products sold Bunder the name of "diabetic foods," are frequently rich in starch, the very substance we are trying to get rid of in diabetic feeding. Some gluten flours sold in the markets 174 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK of the United States, advertised as "pure gluten," contain as much as forty percent, starch, and not more than thirty- five percent, protein. They are really poor ordinary bread flours. Quoting from an article in the Journal of the American Medical Association, March 22, 1913, will show how the medical profession feel towards these preparations: "Gluten flours are, as a rule, prescribed only for diabetics to whom the starch content is of the utmost im- portance. A physician tells his patient to use a gluten flour not because that product is rich in protein but because it is (supposedly) poor in carbohydrates. The great majority of so-called gluten flours and gluten foods sold in this country contain dangerously high percentages of carbo- hydrates, and the manufacturers do their best to keep both physician and patient in ignorance of this fact. In the case of gluten flours of legal standard, the protein content is emphasized and made the main selling point. The subject of starch content is studiously avoided, and it becomes necessary to write letters to the manufacturers specifically asking for the carbohydrate content of their products, which may then be grudgingly, and not always truthfully, given." Again, Doctor Janeway writes : "From my experience, I say without hesitation, that 'gluten bread' is the diabetic's worst enemy. Taught by the dealer, or worse yet, by the physician, not only that it is safe for him to eat, but some- times even that it is actually a cure for the disease, he eats it in large quantities * * *." Henry Heide, New York, makes an almond paste, 12.7 percent, protein, 47.7 percent, nitrogen free extract and fibre, 20.0 fat, ether extract, and only a trace of starch. It can be purchased in one and five pound tins at any first- class grocery. Recipes for the use of almond paste will be found in Part Second of this book. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 175 Aleuronat Aleuronat is the gluten flour made from the aleuron layer of the wheat kernel. According to recent analysis, it is starch free, and contains eighty percent, of digestible proteids. It is made in Germany, sold by Lehn & Fink, wholesale druggists, New York. Recipes for the use of aleuronat will be found in Part Second. Aleuronat zweiback, R. Hundhausen and Hamm, contains sixty-six percent, protein matter, and not a trace of starch. Even their "low gluten zweiback" does not con- tain starch. , The American Dehydrating Company, Waukesha, Wisconsin, dehydrates certain fruits and vegetables, which makes them entirely different from ordinary dried fruits. In out-of-town places, and the far West, these are most valuable in diet for the sick. The fruits and vegetables are dried so rapidly that the* cell structures are not destroyed. When soaked in water and carefully cooked, they have the flavor of fresh fruits and vegetables, which makes them far more appetizing than the ordinary dried fruits purchased in the market. An excellent point is that these goods are put into small tin cans in the room in which they are dehydrated. Dirt and air cannot penetrate, and they are absolutely clean. Akoll Biscuits, Huntley & Palmer, London, contain, according to recent analysis, fifty-four percent, protein and not a trace of starch. It seems to me, with these various preparations that are easily obtained in our market, the question of bread for the diabetic patient is settled. Roman Meal Made by the Roman Meal Company, Duluth, Minnesota, is an excellent cure for chronic consti- pation. Use ordinary recipes for muffins, gems, bannocks, substituting Roman meal for one-half the quantity of flour. Saccharin I mention saccharin simply to condemn it. If diabetic patients cannot give up sugar and starch, they alone are responsible for the consequences. . The nurse and physician should fix in the mind of the patient that his 176 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK life depends on a restricted diet, and that a cure needs his cooperation. Saccharin, even in small quantities, has in my hands, sooner or later, provoked digestive troubles, and these troubles have caused as much anxiety as the first disease. Sugar has a high food value ; saccharin has no food value. It in no way takes the place of sugar, nor is it condensed sugar. Roborat A vegetable protein manufactured from hard corn, hard wheat and unpolished rice. It makes a fine tasteless flour that is easily soluble in cold water. This is used in cases of rheumatism, gout and Bright's disease. It does not, in the proces's of digestion, increase the excre- tion of uric acids. Somatose is a predigested meat ; it is highly nutritious and is usually well borne in gastric disturbances. Beef Meal is meat partly digested by a ferment ob- tained from the pineapple (bromelin}. According to the analysis of Chittenden, it contains seventy-seven percent, of protein, thirteen of fat. The proteins are chiefly in the form of albumoses and peptones. The preparation is usually added to hot milk, or beef tea, or water, or in some cases, to cocoa. I find it acceptable to most patients when added to broth. To milk and cocoa it is frequently objectionable. Dried Nuttrose A prepared casein of milk, sold in the ordinary drug shops. Soy Flour The Health Food Company, of New York, make a soy flour that contains but a trace of starch. It may be made into mush or gems for diabetic patients. Recipes for its use will be found in Part Second of this book. Dried Egg .Albumin may be purchased at any drug store, but it is easily made at home. Put the whites of three or four eggs on a meat plate, in front of an open oven door. Watch carefully, and as soon as the water evap- orates, take the crisp albumin from the plate, make sure it is perfectly dry, and put it into jars or bottles to keep. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 177 This has high food value, and may be added, just as it is, to beef tea, or chicken broth, or to milk or whey, about a level tablespoonful to a pint. Fairchild Brothers and Foster, of New York, make several excellent predigested foods, and material for the peptonizing process. Recipes and directions for their use will be found in Part Second of this book. Eskay's Food, made by the Smith, Kline and French Company, of Philadelphia, is an admirable food for young children and invalids. We have a large number of other proprietary foods intended as substitutes for milk for infants and invalids, which are out of the province of this book. Under Infant Feeding we have given foods with which we have been successful. If other foods are used, the responsibility must be taken by a physician. Many of the so-called infant foods are very unlike mothers' milk ; they contain too little fat and a large percentage of carbohydrates; and I am suffi- ciently old-fashioned to believe that the test tube analysis is not always a perfect and final guide to either a correct diet or the quantity to be given at a feeding. The digestive tract in different individuals varies so greatly that the digestibility and adaptability of food for each infant is an all-important question. 12 178 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MEASUREMENTS A measuring cup holds a half pint, and can be pur- chased at any housefurnishing store for ten cents. It is the standard measure for all recipes in this and other United States cook books. All measurements in this book are level. One cupful=a half pint One gill (half a cupful)=a quarter of a pint One level tablespoonful of flour=a quarter of an ounce One level tablespoonful of sugar=a half ounce One level tablespoonful of butter^a half ounce One tablespoonful of ordinary liquids=a half ounce One saltspoonful=a quarter of a teaspoonful One teaspoonful=a quarter of a tablespoonful Two teaspoonfuls^one dessertspoonful One dessertspoonful=a half tablespoonful One teaspoonful=a fluid dram Sixteen ounces avoirdupois or commercial weight=one pound DIGESTIBILITY OF FOODS Time of Articles of Diet How Cooked Chymification H.M. Pigs' Feet (soused) Boiled i oo Sweetbreads Stewed or Broiled i oo Tripe Boiled i oo Rice Boiled plain i oo Eggs, whole Raw 2 oo Eggs (whipped) Raw I 30 Eggs Coddled i 30 Rice Boiled with milk i 30 Salmon Trout Boiled I 30 Venison Steak Broiled i 30 Brains Boiled i 45 Ox Liver Broiled 2 oo Cod fish (cured dry) Boiled 2 15 Turkey Boiled 2 25 Gelatin Boiled ? 30 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 179 DIGESTIBILITY OF FOODS Continued Time of Articles of Diet How Cooked Chymification H.M. Goose Roasted 2 30 Pig (sucking) Roasted 2 30 Lamb Broiled 2 30 Cabbage Raw 2 30 Chicken Fricasseed 2 45 Beef Boiled 2 45 Beef Roasted 3 oo Bacon Broiled 3 00 Mutton Boiled 3 oo Corn Bread Baked 3 is Mutton Roasted 3 15 Sausage Broiled 3 20 Oysters Stewed 3 20 Irish Potatoes Boiled 3 30 Cheese Raw 3 30 Turnips Boiled 3 30 Eggs Hard Boiled 3 30 Eggs Fried 3 30 Beets Boiled 3 45 Fowls Boiled 3 45 Salmon (salted) .... Broiled 4 00 Beef Fried 4 00 Fowls Roasted 4 oo Ducks Roasted 4 00 Veal Boiled 4 oo Veal Roasted - 4 30 Cabbage Boiled 4 30 Pork Roasted 5 15 Tendon Boiled , 5 30 180 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK METHODS OF COOKERY ROASTING Roasting means to expose one side of an article to an intense heat, and the other to the air. Our grandmothers roasted beef on a spit, which turned con- stantly before a hot fire. In these days we call baking "roasting;" the two, however, are widely different. BROILING Broiling is precisely the same as roast- ing. One side is exposed to the fire, the other to the air. This produces a sweet flavor not attainable in an oven. BAKING This is a common method of cooking in the oven. Meat, potatoes, apples, pies, breads, cakes, are all baked. For meats, the oven must at first be very hot, to coag- ulate the juices on the outside, and to prevent the escape of those within. The first half hour the heat must be ex- treme, then cool and cook at a lower temperature, fifteen minutes to each pound, basting every ten minutes with the fat in the pan. Do not add water. BOILING To boil an article, it must be immersed in boiling water. Green vegetables should be put over the fire in boiling salted water. Underground vegetables and rice should be boiled in unsalted water, and salted after they are cooked. To boil meat, plunge it in a kettle of boiling water, boil twenty minutes, until the juices are coagulated on the out- side, cool the water to 180 Fahr. and continue the cooking, fifteen minutes to each pound of meat; ,ten minutes, if the piece is small. Add salt when the meat is partly done. Boiled meats are more easily digested than meats baked or roasted, but are not so tasty, as they lack the scorched taste created by the intense heat. Meat, if properly boiled, will be rare and juicy. STEWING This name is given to dishes composed of small pieces of meat cooked or steeped in a rich sauce MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 181 until tender. The pieces are usually browned in fat, which makes them less digestible than broiled or boiled meats. Stews really have very little place in diet for the sick. WARMING OVER The second cooking of meats toughens the fibre and hardens the albumin, which makes them rather difficult of digestion. Hash, as usually made and served, is an abomination. Even a healthy person, with good digestion, will carry his breakfast hash, undigested, until nearly noonday. Some meats, however, must be cooked before they are finally dressed. Sweetbreads and tripe must be well cooked and put aside, and dressed at serving time. They are not classed with warmed-over meats. Boudins, cooked over hot water, can be taken, as a rule, by invalids, children or the aged. FRYING Immersing in hot fat has no place in diet for the sick. SAUTEING This, like frying, is one of the most ob- jectionable ways of preparing foofl, and has no place in diet for the sick. PLANKING This is broiling on a plank. Fish, steak, chickens, may be planked to give variety, and if the plank is nicely garnished, they are the most sightly of the meat dishes. STEAMING To steam an article, put it in a steamer, stand it over hot water and keep the water boiling continu- ously until the article is cooked. Potatoes, rice, cabbage, may all be steamed, and are frequently better than when boiled. PAPER BAG COOKERY This is simply baking in a sealed bag; in this way all the juices and flavorings are retained, and the articles cooked are more tasty. Fish, chickens, sweetbreads, steak, are excellent when cooked in a bag. Prunes and fresh fruits cooked in a bag retain their flavor and color. 182 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK BRAIZING This is cooking in a double pan. Tough meats are put in the under pan, hot water added, then cov- ered with the upper pan or lid, and cooked in the oven until tender. A sort of cross between a boil and a bake. CODDLING Coddling means to cook in boiling water until the food is partly done. Coddled eggs are eggs cooked in water below the boiling point ; the white is congealed, but not hard. Coddled apples are soft, but not soft enough to fall apart. / SOUPS The first and most important point in making good soup is to use the best of materials. To give meat soup the slightest food value, we must change the solid meat into liquid form. To do this, the fibre must be softened, the juices and blood drawn out, and the gelatin which exists in the bone, cartilage, membranes and skin, and the mineral matter, dissolved. Cold, soft water should be used. Soft water is best because it softens the fibre, which allows the juice to escape more easily. The albumin coagulates at a low temperature, which makes it necessary to cook the soup far below the boiling point. The second point, the utensils, is also of importance. The juices of meat are acid, and if soup is made in a tin or iron kettle, it will have a peculiar, unpleasant flavor, which is sure to be detected by the sick, as their taste is always acute. Use an ordinary porcelain lined or granite kettle, with a close-fitting lid, and for straining, a granite colander or a French puree sieve. For the last straining, use two thicknesses of cheese cloth. To prevent too great evaporation, and to keep out the odors of other cooking in the kitchen, keep the kettle covered from the beginning to the end of the cooking. As the water reaches 200 Fahr. you will notice a fine, fibrous net throughout the liquid ; in a moment it comes to the surface. This is the albumin, drawn out by the cold MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 183 water now coagulating under the influence of the heat. As it comes to the surface, it brings with it any floating par- ticles that may be in the water, which clarifies or clears! the soup. Skim this off, and reduce the heat of the water to 180 Fahr. Rapid boiling clouds soup. Cooking at too low a temperature spoils the flavor. Meat soups contain a very small amount of nourishment. A perfectly clear soup is not nutritious; it contains only the soluble mineral matter of the meat and the flavor- ing. The albumin you have strained out, and the fibre has not been dissolved. Beef tea, beef essence and beef soups are, however, valuable adjuncts to diet for the sick; they give flavor to other materials, and are stimulating. Soups are divided into three classes : perfectly clear, stimulating soups, with but a trace of nourishment ; clear soups that have farinaceous substances added, moderately nourishing; and nutritious soups, made from milk, meat stock and vegetables, or from milk and vegetable substances alone. For clear beef soup and broth, a portion of the shin is to be preferred ; for beef tea, beef extract, the sticking piece is first choice; the lean round or rump second. Meat for soup or beef tea should be as free from fat as possible ; for broth, beef may be used alone or in combination with mut- ton, veal or chicken. A true consomme, the most expensive of clear soups, should be made from veal and beef, and to give it an especial flavor for the sick, add the carcase of a roasted chicken. Prolonged soaking in cold water will draw out the juices and flavoring quite equal to long cooking. STOCK Purchase a shin of beef, have it sawed into four lengths, remove the meat from the bone, put the bones into the bottom of the kettle, the meat on top, cover with four 184 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK quarts of cold water, bring slowly to boiling point and skim. Push the kettle to the back of the stove, or put it over the simmering burner, to cook for three hours. Add one onion with six cloves stuck in it, one bay leaf, a half teaspoonful of crushed celery seed or a few celery tops, a carrot cut into pieces, a tablespoonful of salt and a dash of Tabasco sauce. Cook slowly one hour longer, and strain through a colander; stand aside in a cold place. In the morning remove every particle of fat from the surface. The stock should now form a perfectly clear, solid jelly; reheat the jelly, add two whites of eggs, slightly beaten, and a tablespoonful of lemon juice. Bring to boiling point, boil rapidly five minutes and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth wrung from cold water. Stand aside in a cold place, and use as wanted. This may be served perfectly clear, as it is, cold or hot ; or nutritious materials may be added. SOUP a la ROYAL One Serving Beat one egg, without separating, until well mixed ; add a tablespoonful of clear stock, pour into a cup, stand the cup in a pan of boiling water and cook until the custard is "set." Turn it out of the cup, cut it into dice, put them in the soup plate or bouillon cup, fill the cup or plate with hot clear soup, and serve at once. CLEAR SOUP WITH BREAD BLOCKS One Serving Cut a slice of bread into dice, put them in the oven to dry, without browning. Beat an egg, without separating, add the bread dice, and stir until each piece is thoroughly covered with egg. Heat one cupful of clear stock, add the bread blocks, boil a half minute and serve. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 185 PORTUGUESE SOUP One Serving Soak six prunes in a half cupful of cold water over night; in the morning add half a pint of stock, salt and pepper; bring to boiling point and push to the back of the stove where the soup will be hot, but not boil, for at least a half hour. Press through a sieve and serve with long fingers of toasted bread. BEEF TEA i pound of chopped lean beef i whole clove I pint of water J4 teaspoonful of salt i bay leaf Put the meat through a meat grinder, add all the other ingredients, and stand in a cold place for at least two hours, stirring now and then. Bring to boiling point, simmer gently thirty minutes, and strain through a fine sieve. Press the beef well. When cold, remove every particle of fat. QUICK BEEF TEA Chop or grind one pound of lean beef, sticking piece preferred ; add one pint of water and stir constantly for fifteen minutes. Stand it over a very quick fire, bring to boiling point and simmer gently a half hour. Strain through a fine sieve, pressing the meat quite dry. Add a half teaspoonful of salt. Draw a piece of blotting paper over the top of the tea, and reheat the quantity to be served. This may be flavored with port wine. SAVORY BEEF TEA Two Servings Yz pound of round steak }/2 teaspoonful of salt A saltspoonful of celery seed i pint of water Broil the meat quickly over a very hot fire, scorching, as it were, the outside; do this quickly so as to have the 186 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK meat very rare. Cut it into tiny pieces, saving all the juice; put it in a saucepan with the cold water, bring to a boil and skim ; add the celery seed and salt, and simmer gently one hour. Strain, remove the fat, and it is ready to use. NUTRITIVE BEEF TEA Grind or chop fine one pound of lean beef, either the round or the sticking piece ; add one pint of water and stir continually for five minutes ; add a saltspoonful of crushed celery seed and one bay leaf; cover and stand it in the refrigerator or in a very cold place, over night if possible ; if not, two or three hours. Stand it on the fire, put in a thermometer and stir the mixture until it reaches 140 Fahr. Strain through a coarse sieve, pressing the meat until it is dry. Return the "tea" to the saucepan, add the white of an egg, slightly beaten with a tablespoonful of water; heat to 130 Fahr. (just an instant), until the white of the egg comes to the surface, and strain through two thicknesses of cheese cloth wrung from cold water. If properly made, this will be a brilliant claret color, and will contain quite a considerable amount of nourish- ment. Great care must be taken after adding the white of egg not to heat the mixture over 130 Fahr. or it will be muddy and unsightly. STIMULATING BEEF TEA Four Servings Cover two pounds of chopped lean meat with a pint of cold water, stirring constantly for five minutes; soak for a half hour; bring to boiling point, boil rapidly five min- utes and strain. Add the beaten white of an egg, boil again and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth, put at once into a glass jar and stand in a cold place. One or two tablespoonfuls of this will frequently allay vomiting; it is quite stimulating, and may be used in place of either coffee or spirits. A little celery seed, a bay leaf, a clove or a MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 187 blade of mace may be added at different times to change the general beef flavor, which is frequently unpleasant to the sick. By alternating these four flavors, you may surprise the patient with a new flavor each day ; for instance, one day, add a clove alone; another, the bay leaf; another, the blade of mace; another, the celery seed; then add two flavorings, at another time three, each time changing the combination. RESTORATIVE BEEF TEA Three Servings Y 2 pound of lean beef, chopped 3 drops of muriatic acid fine A saltspoonful of salt 6 ounces of water Mix all the ingredients and stir them continuously for five minutes; stand in the refrigerator for one hour and strain through a very fine sieve, pressing all the juice from the meat. Put this at once in a cold place. If it is to be given warm, heat over hot water to 130 Fahr. If the raw odor and taste of the "tea" is objection- able add a saltspoonful of crushed celery seed before strain- ing. The odor of celery is usually agreeable. BAKED BEEF TEA Three Servings Put one pound of ground lean beef, a half teaspoonful of salt, one and a half pints of cold water, and one table- spoonful of washed rice, into a covered dish ; stand the dish in a moderately quick oven and bake for an hour. Reduce the heat and continue the baking for three hours; strain and press. There should be one pint of beef tea after it is strained. This is valuable where a restricted diet is long con- tinued, and the flavor of ordinary beef tea or soup grows distasteful. 188 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK BEEF ESSENCE Put a half pound of finely-chopped lean beef in an ordinary, clean fruit jar; add a half teaspoonful of salt, stand the jar in a saucepan of cold water or in a steamer, bring the water to boiling point and boil continuously for one hour. Strain through cheesecloth and add a grain of salt. At feeding time, put a tablespoonful or more, as directed, in a cup, stand the cup in boiling water until it is palatably hot. Serve cold in typhoid fever. HOMEMADE BEEF EXTRACT Cut one pound of lean beef (sticking piece preferred) into very small pieces, throw them into a shallow hot pan and shake over the fire until they are thoroughly seared; then put them through the meat grinder. Put this in a fruit jar, add a half pint of cold water, a saltspoonful of salt, a saltspoonful of crushed celery seed and a dash of black pepper; add two drops of dilute muriatic acid. Cover the jar, stand it in a saucepan of cold water, cover the saucepan, bring to a boil and boil continuously for two hours. Strain, pressing the meat very dry. Put the extract aside in a bottle or jar in a cold place. Use one or two tablespoonfuls in a cup of boiling water. BARTHOLOW'S RESTORATIVE SOUP FOR INVALIDS "Grind one pound of lean beef, add eight fluid ounces of soft or distilled water, five drops of pure hydrochloric acid and thirty grains of common salt; stir constantly for five minutes and stand aside for three hours. Then throw this on a sieve and let it run through with slight pressure ; on the flesh residue in the sieve pour two ounces of distilled water and let it run through, pressing the meat. There should be obtained from this operation ten fluid ounces of MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 189 cold juice of a red color. A wineglassful, or one gill, should be used at a feeding. It must not be warmed, at least not to a greater degree than 120 Fahr. Since this liquid contains a considerable amount of albumin, it is rendered muddy by heat or alcohol. This is valuable in cases of continued fever or dysen- tery, and in all diseases attended with great prostration and weakness of the digestive organs. Do not give it to persons who have too free secretion of gastric juice." BARTHOLOW'S FOOD One Serving "2 ounces of beef tea I level tablespoonful of gran- The yolk of one egg ulated tapioca 2 ounces of milk Soak the tapioca in the milk in a cold place over night, or for several hours ; next morning cook in a double boiler until the tapioca is transparent and add the beef tea. Pour while hot over the yolk of an egg, add a saltspoonful of salt, and if you like, a little celery seed or celery salt. This is exceedingly nutritious and very palatat>le. It should be about the consistency of well-cooked farina." BEEF JUICE Broil a half pound of round steak, searing it quickly on both sides. The steak should be one inch thick, and the broiling about five minutes. Put it on a hot plate, cut it into bits, and with a lemon squeezer, squeeze out all the juice into a cup that has been heated over hot water; add a grain of salt and serve at once. If this is to be kept warm, stand the cup in a pan of warm water; be careful, however, not to coagulate the juice. 190 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK BEEF PANADA Three Servings I pound of lean beef chopped A saltspoonful of celery seed fine i slice of onion 12 ounces of water i bay leaf Y^. teaspoonful of salt Mix the water and beef, and soak for two hours in a cold place; then add all the seasoning, stand the saucepan in another of boiling water and boil continuously for two hours. Strain in coarse sieve, rubbing through as much of the meat as possible. Serve hot with toasted bread. Six ounces of this furnish a full meat meal. BEEF BROTH Four Servings Purchase a half pound of well-cracked bones and a pound of lean beef. Chop the beef, or cut it fine, sear it well in a hot kettle, add the bones and one and a half quarts of cold water ; bring to boiling point and skim ; add two tablespoonfuls of rice, and simmer gently two hours; add one bay leaf and a half teaspoonful of celery salt; simmer gently a half hour longer, and strain. BEEF BROTH WITH BARLEY Four Servings Proceed as directed for beef broth. As soon as the mixture reaches the boiling point and you have thoroughly skimmed it, add two tablespoonfuls of pearled barley; strain this out at serving time. BEEF BROTH WITH SAGO Make the beef broth as directed in the first recipe ; strain it; when it is cold, remove every particle of fat. If the quantity for a single feeding is to be four ounces, allow a level teaspoonful of sago. Soak the sago in the cold soup for a half hour, bring it slowly to boiling point, and cook until the sago is transparent ; add salt and serve. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 191 It must be remembered that all finely-divided starchy foods are not easily masticated and are more or less objec- tionable. Thoroughly cook the sago, and instruct the patient to masticate it. In fever cases, it is wise to strain all the particles of starchy foods from both milk and broth. BOUILLON I pound of lean meat J^ teaspoonful of salt I pint of water I bay leaf The white of one egg I whole clove i teaspoonful of sugar A saltspoonful of celery seed Put the sugar into a saucepan and stand it over a strong fire until it burns, then add the water and the meat; stir until they are well . mixed, add the seasonings, simmer gently for one 'hour, and strain. Beat the white of the egg slightly, add a teaspoonful of lemon juice, add this to the bouillon, boil rapidly five minutes and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. This is appetizing, clear, brilliant and slightly stimu- lating, but is not nutritious. DOUBLE BOUILLON In cases of fever where stimulants of other kinds can- not be given, double bouillon is exceedingly valuable. Cover two pounds of lean meat, finely chopped, with one pint of cold water, stir it constantly for five minutes and stand it aside to soak for two hours. Put it in a double boiler, and allow the water surrounding the boiler to boil continuously for three hours ; then strain, pressing the meat. Use in small quantities, from one to two ounces at a feeding. BOUILLON JELLY Make bouillon according to the preceding recipe. After it has been clarified and is slightly cool, add a tablespoonful of granulated gelatin ; soak for fifteen minutes ; stir over the fire until the gelatin is dissolved and stand it aside for use. Serve cold as beef jelly. 192 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK BOUILLON a la COLBERT Put one poached egg in the bottom of a bouillon cup, pour over nicely-seasoned hot bouillon and serve. SEMI-SOLID BEEF y 2 pound of lean beef ^ teaspoonful of salt 2 ounces of grated fresh pine- A saltspoonful of celery seed apple Put the meat twice through a meat chopper; add the grated pineapple and stir constantly for five or ten min- utes; this should be done in an earthen or china vessel. Stand the bowl in a pan of hot water and stir until the thermometer registers 103 Fahr. Keep it at this tempera- ture for at least two hours, agitating every fifteen minutes. Add the salt and the celery seed, crushed, and press the contents through a fine sieve and heat to 200 Fahr. Chill quickly and keep in a cold place. To serve, put two table- spoonfuls of this mixture in a cup, and fill the cup with hot water. BEEF GRUEL Soak two tablespoonfuls of farina in one pint of beef tea in a cold place over night. Next morning bring to a boil, simmer gently thirty minutes, strain, season with salt, and it is ready to serve. BEEF AND OATS Three Servings Moisten one level tablespoonful of finely-ground oats (groats) with two tablespoonfuls of cold water, add one pint of freshly-made beef tea, stir and boil ten minutes, strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth and stand aside to cool. DOUBLE SOUP Cover one pound of chopped beef with one pint of cold water, stir until the meat is reduced to pulp, add one table- spoonful of granulated tapioca and stand the mixture in MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 193 a cold place for one hour. Then bring slowly to a boil, stirring every now and then ; strain through cheesecloth. Reheat the soup and stir into it a half pound of freshly- ground raw beef; stir constantly until it reaches boiling point, add a few drops of lemon juice and strain through cheesecloth. In low fever cases one ounce of this soup is considered a feeding. CONSOMME Put through a meat chopper one pound of veal and one pound of beef. Sprinkle over the bottom of a soup kettle a teaspoonful of sugar; when this burns and the bottom of the kettle is quite brown, add two tablespoonfuls of chopped onion, shake for a moment, then add the meat and stir over a very hot fire until the meat is slightly browned. Cover the kettle and push it to the back of the fire to steep for a half hour; then add a quart of cold water, bring to a boil and skim. Simmer gently two hours, add a bay leaf, a level teaspoonful of salt, and, if you have it, a little celery ; simmer one hour longer, and strain. Beat the white of an g with two tablespoonfuls of cold water, add it to the consomme, boil five minutes and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth that has been wrung from cold water, and stand the soup aside to cool. When cold, remove every particle of fat. This should be a brilliant amber in color, and of an exceedingly good flavor. ITALIAN CONSOMME Chop fine two ounces of raw beef, two ounces of raw mutton, and the dark meat of one chicken ; take the meat from the chicken bones, cut it with a knife until it is fine, then crack the bones, put all these in a small granite or porcelain saucepan, add a quart of cold water, bring to a boil and skim ; simmer gently one and a half hours ; then add one clove, a bay leaf and a little celery or celery seed ; simmer a half hour longer, and strain ; when cold, remove the fat. 13 194 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK This soup may be served as a clear soup ; or for con- valescing patients add carefully-boiled rice, a few croutons, or a little well-cooked spaghetti. MUTTON BROTH Purchase a neck of mutton, wash it and cut it into small bits, put it in a granite saucepan with a quart and a pint of cold water and two tablespoonfuls of washed rice ; bring to boiling point and skim ; simmer gently for three hours and strain; when cold, remove the fat. MUTTON BROTH WITH ZWEIBACK Procure a neck of mutton, cut it into bits, put it in a kettle with two quarts of cold water ; bring to boiling point and skim ; add a half teaspoonful of salt, a tablespoonful of finely-chopped mint ; simmer carefully for two and a half hours ; then add one slice of zweiback, rolled ; simmer gently thirty minutes longer, strain, and it is ready for use. If one must use the soup as soon as it is made, remove the grease with blotting paper. MUTTON TEA Purchase a pound of lean mutton, from the leg, put it twice through the meat chopper, then put it in a porcelain or granite kettle, add a pint of cold water and a saltspoon- ful of celery seed ; stir rapidly a few minutes and soak in a cool place for two hours. Then heat quickly to 180 Fahr. Strain and press ; add the white of an egg slightly beaten, bring to boiling point and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. When cold, remove every particle of fat. MUTTON AND OATMEAL BROTH Put a half pint of mutton broth in a saucepan and stir in a tablespoonful of rolled oats; cook in a double boiler for thirty minutes ; strain, add two tablespoonfuls of cream, and. a saltspoonful of salt. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 195 MUTTON AND CORNMEAL BROTH Wash two tablespoonfuls of yellow cornmeal through several cold waters; at the last washing allow the corn- meal to settle to the bottom of the bowl and pour off the water. Add the cornmeal to a half pint of mutton broth, cook in a double boiler for thirty minutes, add a saltspoon- ful of salt, four tablespoonfuls of cream, and serve. This is exceedingly good for chronic constipation. VEAL BROTH I One small knuckle of veal, covered with a quart and a pint of cold water ; bring to boiling point and skim, then cover and simmer gently two hours. Strain and stand aside until perfectly cold. Remove the fat. Heat the desired quantity and season with salt. VEAL BROTH II A small knuckle of veal, about 2 tablespoonfuls of thick cream i l /2 pounds Y 2 teaspoonful of salt A quart and a pint of cold water A saltspoonful of celery seed A slice of bread, well toasted Crush the celery seed with the salt. Cover the knuckle with the cold water, bring to a boil and skim ; add the salt mixture and the bread, and simmer gently for two hours. This should now be reduced one half. Strain and stand aside to cool. When cold this will form a perfectly clear jelly. At serving time reheat the required amount, add the cream and serve. This is nutritious and palatable. VEAL BROTH WITH EGG Make the veal broth according to preceding recipe. At serving time reheat the required amount and pour it, while hot, into the beaten yolk of one egg and add a tablespoonful of cream. Where bread is allowed, serve with it pulled bread or toasted bread fingers. 196 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK BRAN BROTH Wash a half cupful of good wheat bran through sev- eral waters, add it to one pint of veal broth, boil for twenty minutes, strain, add two tablespoonfuls of cream and a saltspoonful of salt. This makes two portions. Chicken or mutton broth may be substituted for veal broth. CHICKEN BROTH For this purchase a fowl weighing three and a half pounds, not too fat; singe, draw it carefully, without breaking the intestines. Remember the appetite of a sick person is very capricious, and the slightest disagreeable odor or flavor will not only spoil the appetite for chicken broth, but will spoil the appetite for other dishes. After the chicken is carefully drawn, wash it quickly and wipe it. Be careful the oil bag is removed, as it also gives a dis- agreeable flavor. Remove the legs from the body of the chicken, and with a cleaver or large knife begin at the bot- tom of the leg and chop it quickly all the way up, cracking the bones thoroughly. Slash the meat on both sides, and put it with the back in the bottom of the soup kettle ; add two quarts of cold water, bring to a boil and skim. Put the white meat the two breasts, with the wings on top, cover the kettle and continue simmering until the white meat is tender, then remove it and put it aside for soup a la Reine, chicken souffle, or German chicken puff. Put into the kettle with the dark meat one bay leaf, one clove, a salt- spoonful of crushed celery seed and a half teaspoonful of salt. Cover and simmer one hour longer, then strain and stand away to cool. Remove every particle of fat from the surface, and the broth is ready to use. This should make one quart, enough to last for two days. Keep covered in a cold place. This may be served as chicken broth, plain, or some of the broth may be used with the white meat for soup a la Reine, or for chicken soup with rice. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 197 SOUP a la REINE y 2 pint of chicken broth I gill of milk 2 ounces of the white meat Y 2 teaspoonful of salt I tablespoonful of rice Wash the rice thoroughly in cold water, cover it with boiling water, bring to boiling point, drain, and add the chicken broth. Grind the cooked white meat of chicken. When the rice is perfectly tender add the chicken and all the seasoning; when this has reached the boiling point add the milk, press through a fine sieve, and it is ready for use. This is sufficient for two feedings. COMBINATION BROTH Mix a half pint of beef tea with a half pint of chicken broth, and stand them aside in a cold place. At feeding time reheat sufficient quantity, two or four ounces, add a palatable seasoning of salt and serve. If allowable, put a tablespoonful of whipped cream on top. A SOUP CRECY Grate two young carrots, cook them in a half pint of chicken broth in a double boiler for three quarters of an hour; add a palatable seasoning of salt, two tablespoonfuls of cream, and serve. Excellent in cases of chronic constipation. CHICKEN BROTH WITH GREEN PEAS Press a half pint of cooked fresh green peas through a sieve ; add to them a half pint of boiling chicken broth, a tablespoonful of finely-chopped mint and a palatable sea- soning of salt ; boil five minutes, strain through a sieve and it is ready for serving. This will make two feeding's. 198 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK OKRA SOUP Cut three young okras into thin slices, put them in a pint of chicken broth, cover and cook thirty minutes; strain through a sieve, add a palatable seasoning of salt, and six good, fat oysters. Boil until the gills of the oysters are curled, and serve with toasted crackers. This will make two feedings. The recipe is easily divided for one feeding. CHICKEN EGG SOUP Separate one egg, beat the yolk with a tablespoonful of cream, pour into it two thirds of a cupful of boiling chicken broth, stir in the well-beaten white of the egg, add a pal- atable seasoning of celery salt and serve at once. CHESTNUT SOUP Shell a half dozen small or three large chestnuts, re- move the brown skin, put them into a half pint of chicken broth and simmer gently until they are tender. Press through a sieve, add four tablespoonfuls of milk, bring to a boil, add a palatable seasoning of salt and serve at once. CARDINAL SOUP Grate one small boiled beet into a half pint of chicken broth, bring to a boil, add a saltspoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of cream, and if admissible a dash of pepper. This may be used in mild cases of diabetes. PUREE OF LENTILS 1 teaspoonful of lentil flour 4 ounces of chicken broth 2 ounces of milk A saltspoonful of salt Moisten the lentil flour with a little cold water, add it to the chicken broth, cook slowly in a double boiler until the mixture is thick and smooth in about a half hour; add the milk and the seasoning, and serve. Bean and pea flour may be used in the same way. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 199 PUREE OF RICE 2 tablespoonfuls of rice j^ teaspoonful of salt Yz pint of chicken broth J4 saltspoonful of celery seed Wash the rice thoroughly, scald it, bring to boiling point and drain. Put this into the chicken broth and simmer gently until the rice is tender; press through a fine sieve and add all the other ingredients. RABBIT SOUP I young rabbit i bay leaf i quart of cold water 2 tablespoonfuls of rice 10 drops of onion juice ^2 teaspoonful of salt Singe and cut the rabbit into small pieces, cover with the cold water, bring to boiling point and skim. Simmer one hour, add the seasonings, simmer another hour and strain. 200 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK SOUPS MAIGRE VEGETABLE BROTH Chop sufficient carrot to make a half cupful, add two tablespoonfuls of chopped onion, two tablespoonfuls of chopped turnip and a half cupful of chopped celery. Put a teaspoonful of sugar in the bottom of a soup kettle ; when it browns, add the onion, shake it until the onion is thoroughly browned, then add all the other vegetables and a quart and a pint of cold water; add one tablespoonful of washed rice, one tablespoonful of pearled barley and two tablespoonfuls of peanut butter; cover the saucepan and simmer gently one and a half hours. Strain through a fine sieve, season with salt and stand aside to cool. This makes an exceedingly agreeable soup for persons suffering from uric acid conditions or rheumatism. Almost any vegetables in season may be used in place of those mentioned. TOMATO BROTH Two Servings Cut three solid tomatoes into bits, put them in a sauce- pan with a blade of mace, a pint of cold water, a half tea- spoonful of salt, and if admissible a dash of pepper. Cover the saucepan and stew gently twenty minutes; strain through a sieve, reheat, add two tablespoonfuls of cream to each feeding and serve at once with croutons. The French have a fashion of whipping the cream and putting it on top of the soup, which gives it a dainty appearance. DRIED BEAN SOUP Dried beans, peas and lentils have more than meat value. . These soups may be used for the rheumatic, gouty and uric acid patients in the place of meat at dinner. They are exceedingly good also for persons suffering from nervous breakdown. They give the necessary nitrogen, MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 201 without the stimulating principles of beef. It is wise to cook enough beans one day to last for two or three days. Wash a cupful of dried beans, soak them in cold water over night ; next morning drain, cover with cold water, bring to boiling point, drain again and throw the water away. Return the beans to the saucepan, cover with one quart of cold water, cover the saucepan and cook slowly until the beans are perfectly tender, about one and a half to two hours. Press them through a sieve, using the water as well as the pulp ; reheat this pulp, and add a half tea- spoonful of salt, a teaspoonful of lemon juice and a tea- spoonful of onion juice. Stand it at once in a cold place. At serving time reheat the desired quantity, add boil- ing water or milk to make it the proper consistency, and serve in a bouillon cup with toasted strips of white bread. BEAN FLOUR SOUP One Serving You can purchase from any druggist a bean flour, or rolled beans, which can be quickly made into soup. The best of these preparations are made by the Battle Creek Food Company. Moisten a teaspoonful of the flour in a little cold water, add a cupful of boiling water, and simmer half an hour, season, add a little butter or cream, and serve. Rolled beans may be made into a soup almost as quickly as the bean flour. DRIED PEA SOUP One Serving Proceed precisely the same as you would for dried bean soup, using either the split or green dried peas. The split peas, however, are best. LENTIL SOUP Substitute lentils for beans, and proceed precisely the same as for soup of dried beans. Lentils are more easy of digestion than either beans or peas. 202 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Revalenta Arabica is the name given to red lentil flour sold in the markets of the United States. It contains more than meat value, and is quickly made into a soup the same as bean flour. All these soups are exceedingly good for nursing mothers. CELERY BROTH One Serving Take six or eight outside stalks of celery, pare the root and cut it into slices. Put a teaspoonful of sugar in the bottom of the saucepan, let it brown thoroughly, then add one pint of cold water and a half pint of finely-chopped celery, using a few of the green tops. Cover the saucepan, simmer gently for a half hour, then strain, pressing the celery. Reheat, add a palatable seasoning of salt, turn the broth into a bouillon cup, put a tablespoonful of whipped cream on top and serve. This is exceedingly good for nervous patients, and if well made is appetizing. OATMEAL BROTH One Serving Put a teaspoonful of sugar in the bottom of a saucepan, let it burn, add one tablespoonful of chopped onion, shake until the onion is quite brown, add a tablespoonful of olive oil and a half pint of water. Sprinkle into this as soon as it boils one tablespoonful of rolled oats, cover and simmer gently thirty minutes, add a half teaspoonful of celery salt and a dash of pepper; strain, serve in a cup with a table- spoonful of whipped cream on top. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 203 MILK SOUPS These are known as cream soups in ordinary cooking nomenclature, and are usually made from some appetizing green vegetable and thickened milk. They are to be recom- mended because they are palatable, easily made and nutri- tious. CREAM OF ASPARAGUS One Serving Peel carefully four shoots of asparagus. Cut them into small pieces, put them in a saucepan with a half pint of cold water, cover, bring to boiling point and cook gently thirty minutes. Press the whole through a sieve ; the water will have almost evaporated. Return the pulp to the saucepan, add two-thirds of a cupful of milk with a teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in it. Boil an instant, add a saltspoonful of salt and a teaspoonful of butter, strain again, and serve with tiny croutons. CREAM OF CELERY One Serving Chop sufficient green tops of celery to make a half cupful, and cut two stalks of celery; add to a pint of cold water, cover and simmer gently thirty minutes. Strain and squeeze from the celery all the liquid ; add a half cupful of good milk with a teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in it; stir until boiling, add a saltspoonful of salt and a teaspoonful of butter. The food value may be increased by adding two tablespoonfuls of carefully-boiled rice. CRESCENT SOUP One Serving The heart of one head of celery Y* pint of water Yi teaspoonful of salt 4 tablespoonfuls of cream Yolk of one egg Cut the heart of the celery into thin slices crosswise, add the water and stew carefully for a half hour, then add the salt, take from the fire, add the cream and the yolk of an egg. Reheat over water and serve. 204 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK CREAM OF CARROT One Serving Grate sufficient carrot to make two tablespoonfuls ; add half a cupful of chicken stock; cook thirty minutes, then add half a cupful of milk with a teaspoonful of cornstarch moist- ened in it ; when this reaches boiling point, add a level tea- spoonful of butter and a saltspoonful of salt. Good in cases of chronic constipation. Omit corn- starch for diabetic persons. CREAM OF CORN One Serving Score down the center of each row of grains on two perfect ears of corn; and, with a dull knife, press out all the pulp, leaving the hulls on the cob. Put two-thirds of a cupful of milk in a double boiler, add the corn, cover and cook fifteen minutes; then add a level teaspoonful of corn- starch moistened in four tablespoonfuls of cold milk ; stir until the thickness of cream, add a quarter of a teaspoonful of salt, take from the fire and stir in carefully a teaspoonful of butter or a tablespoonful of cream. A slice of onion may be cooked in the milk and re- moved before serving the soup. This soup is nutritious and palatable, and is an exceedingly good supper dish in cases of chronic constipation. VELVET SOUP One Serving Make a cream of corn soup according to the preced- ing recipe, and at serving time, instead of adding butter, stir in two tablespoonfuls of cream, whipped to a stiff froth. CREAM OF GREEN PEAS One Serving Press a half cupful of cooked green peas through a sieve ; put the pulp in a saucepan with two-thirds of a MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 205 cupful of milk ; add a teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in a little cold milk, and a saltspoonful of salt; bring to boiling point; take from the fire and stir in a teaspoonful of butter. Serve with tiny croutons. CREAM OF SPLIT PEAS Wash a half pint of split yellow peas ; soak them over night. Next morning drain, wash, cover with a quart of fresh cold water, bring to a boil, drain and throw this water away. Cover the peas again with a quart of freshly-boiled water, add a slice of onion, cover the kettle and cook slowly for about one and a half hours ; drain, and throw the water away. Press the peas through a sieve and stand them aside to use as wanted. At serving time, to make a single por- tion, put a cupful of milk in a double boiler, add a level teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in a little cold milk, stir until the milk thickens, add three tablespoonfuls of the pulp of the peas, a saltspoonful of salt and a teaspoonful of butter; when hot, serve. It should be as thick as good cream. Lentils and dried beans may be used in same way. This is exceedingly valuable food for children and is good for nursing mothers. It has meat value. CREAM OF POTATO One Serving Pare a medium-sized potato, cover with boiling water, boil five minutes, drain and cover again with a half pint of boiling water; add a bay leaf, a saltspoonful of celery seed; cover and cook until the potato is thoroughly done. Press the whole through a fine sieve ; the water will have nearly evaporated ; add tw'o-thirds of a cupful of milk, stir for a moment, reheat, add a level teaspoonful of cornstarch or arrowroot, moistened in a little cold milk ; bring to the boiling point; take from the fire, add a saltspoonful of salt and a teaspoonful of butter. Strain again through a very fine sieve, reheat over hot water and serve at once. 206 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK SPINACH SOUP One Serving This soup is exceedingly good in cases of constipation. Wash carefully sufficient spinach leaves to make one pint. Put the spinach in a hot, dry kettle, add quickly a half cupful of water and a half teaspoonful of salt. Cover the kettle, cook over a moderate fire for twenty minutes, drain and chop the spinach very fine. Put a half pint of milk in a double boiler, add a teaspoonful of cornstarch, moist- ened, stir until smooth and creamlike, and add the spinach. When hot, press through a fine sieve, add a teaspoonful of butter; or serve it in a cup with a tablespoonful of whipped cream on top. Tender lettuce or cress may be substituted for spinach. CREAM OF TURNIP One Serving Grate one young turnip, about two tablespoonfuls ; add a half cupful of cold water, cook in a double boiler fifteen minutes, add a saltspoonful of salt, half a cupful of milk, and if admissible, a dash of pepper. When hot, add a level teaspoonful of cornstarch, moistened in a little cold milk; stir and cook for five minutes, add a teaspoonful of butter and serve. Omit cornstarch for diabetic persons. CREAM OF OYSTER One Serving Wash six fat oysters by pouring over them cold water ; throw them into a hot granite saucepan, shake quickly until the gills of the oysters curl, then drain, saving the liquor. Put a half cupful of milk into the saucepan, add the oyster liquor, and then the oysters; when scalding hot take from the fire, add a teaspoonful of butter, a quarter of a tea- spoonful of salt, and if admissible, a crushed whole pepper- corn. This, however, may be added to the milk when it is first put over the fire, and strained out before adding the MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 207 oysters ; the patient then gets the flavor of pepper without the irritating effect. Serve in a dainty bowl, with long crisp oyster crackers. BISQUE OF OYSTER Chop sufficient celery to make a half cupful ; cover it with a pint of cold water, stew for a half hour ; by this time the water will be reduced one-half; strain, pressing all the juice from the celery ; bring again to boiling point, add six oysters that have been drained and washed; stir until the mixture reaches the boiling point, then add six tablespoon- fuls of cream and serve. CREAM EGGS AND BEEF Three Servings Wash two tablespoonfuls of pearled sago until the water is clear; drain, cover it with a pint of cold milk and let it soak over night in a cold place, or for at least two hours. Put it in a double boiler and cook until the sago is clear, about a half hour. Take from the fire and add a pint of clarified beef tea, a half teaspoonful of salt, or celery salt if you have it. Return the mixture to the fire, and when scalding hot stir in the well-beaten yolks of two eggs ; take quickly from the fire and stand it aside to cool. At serving time heat the desired quantity over hot water, stirring constantly. Excellent for nursing mothers and invalids. MILK SOUP Two Servings Put two tablespoonfuls of finely-chopped onion, a half cupful of chopped celery tops, a tablespoonful of chopped parsley and two tablespoonfuls of chopped carrot over the fire in a half pint of water; boil five minutes, watching care- fully. Turn into a double boiler, add a pint of milk, cover the boiler and let the contents cook slowly for thirty min- utes ; add a half teaspoonful of salt and strain. Serve alone or with croutons, as the case requires. 208 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ANIMAL FOODS These are derived from the flesh of animals, and con- sist of meats and the internal organs of animals and fowls used as food sweetbreads, tripe, liver, kidneys, brains, tongues and "frys," and the roe, milts and sounds of fish, gelatin and isinglass ; poultry and game ; sea foods fish, shell fish, as oysters, clams, scallops ; the Crustacea lobsters,, crabs, prawns, shrimps and cray fish ; and reptiles, as green turtles and terrapin ; and eggs and milk. In feeding the sick, the most important of these, per- haps, are eggs and milk. MEATS In this group we include the flesh of animals used as food beef, veal, mutton, lamb, poultry, game and rabbit. All meats are highly nitrogenous, and most of them are easy of digestion and assimilation, because they contain the same chemical elements as our own bodies. The digestibility, however, is largely governed by the method of cooking. For instance, a broiled steak is more easily digested than a fried steak. The outside cut of baked meat is not as easily digested as a center cut. Raw beef and mutton, scraped, are more easily digested than cooked meat, but cooking is necessary to destroy the parasitic, living organisms that may be accidentally present in it. Cooking also develops the flavor and appearance of meat, and makes it more palatable. Mature, well-killed and "hung" lean beef and mutton are more easily digested than the flesh of young animals, as veal and lamb. The flesh of veal and rabbit is especially dense, and quite unfit for food for the sick, although veal and rabbit broth are frequently recommended in certain cases of chronic gas- tritis. Meats for the sick must be perfectly fresh and carefully selected. Lean meat from a fat animal is more tender than lean meat from a lean animal. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 209 Next to the mammals, barnyard poultry is the most important from a dietary standpoint, excepting birds and deer. The flesh of these wild animals is generally quite free from fat, which makes them more easy of digestion and better adapted for diet for the sick. Next in order comes the white-fleshed fish an impor- tant article of nourishment, providing they are perfectly fresh. There is nothing more dangerous, however, than stale sea food. The flesh of salmon and sturgeon approaches the composition of lean beef more nearly than the flesh of white fish. Mackerel, eels, catfish, herring and shad are all characterized by the presence of fatty matter mingled throughout the flesh, which makes them more difficult of digestion. Of the white-fleshed fish, the ordinary white fish of the lakes, cod, rock bass, halibut, haddock, sole and flounder are to be preferred. Shell fish differ widely in digestibility. The oyster has a decided advantage over the clam and scallop. Oysters have a place in diet for the sick ; the clam itself has not, but clam bouillon is highly recommended in many diseases. The oyster is no doubt a nutritious, easily digested food ; opin- ions differ, however, regarding this fact. They are more easily digested raw than cooked, but, like meat, they should be cooked to remove the danger of micro-organisms that may be present. Unless one knows that their oysters have been fattened in perfectly clean water, they had better eat them thoroughly cooked. THE CRUSTACEA The Crustacea are regarded in this country as choice and attractive foods, but the flesh is dense, firm and unfit for diet for the sick; in fact, they frequently cause digestive troubles in persons who are quite well, and if not perfectly fresh are dangerous. 14 210 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK FISH From a dietetic standpoint, fish is classed with the flesh of animals a nitrogenous food. The protein in white fish, as cod, haddock and halibut, is in about the same proportion as in beef and mutton. The ratio of water in fish, flesh and fowl is quite uniform; fish contains, however, more phos- phorus, and the active fish, as trout and pickerel, contain a greater percentage. The amount of fat in fish is much smaller than in the flesh of animals. In the white-fleshed fish it is largely secreted in the liver, which makes the flesh more easy of digestion a better food for the sick than the pink or dark-fleshed fish, in which the fat is distributed or mingled throughout the flesh. The flesh of the male or milt fish is generally considered superior in flavor to that of the roe or female fish. At the period of the ripening of the roe and milt, fish are said to be in season, because the flesh at that time possesses the high- est degree of flavor. All fish should be eaten soon after they are taken from the w'ater. Stale fish is not only unpleasant, but dangerous. In cases of prolonged feeding, where nitrogenous foods are allowable or called for, a piece of white-fleshed fish, broiled or boiled, gives variety. If small fish, like smelts or trout, are to be used as diet for the sick, they must be broiled or boiled, never fried. Planking, which is broiling on a plank, may be used in the place of broiling ; it gives an appetizing and sightly dish. To Purchase Fish Examine the flesh, which should be firm ; the scales should be closely adhering and of brilliant color, the eyes and gills bright, and the flesh free from any unpleasant odor. TO BOIL FISH Cut a thick piece from the center of a fine white-fleshed fish, wash it quickly in cold water, wipe it carefully and dust it with salt. Wrap it in a piece of cheesecloth, put it in a kettle of boiling water, add a slice of onion, a bay MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 211 leaf and a half teaspoonful of salt. Cover and push the saucepan to the back of the stove, to simmer, for fifteen min- utes. Lift the cheesecloth, drain, turn the fish on a small serving platter and garnish it with crisp parsley and a quar- ter of a lemon. Serve with cream sauce, sauce Hollandaise, or just a little melted butter and lemon juice. BROILED FISH Purchase a center steak from any white-fleshed fish, cut off enough for one feeding and give the rest to the fam- ily; fish must not be used the second day. Wash it quickly, wipe it dry, put it in a wire broiler and over a clear fire until slightly browned on one side, turn and brown the other ; then hold it at least six inches above the fire ; turn it once or twice, broiling it in all ten minutes. Transfer it to a heated platter, spread over with a little butter, put over a few drops of lemon juice and serve at once. PLANKED FISH Secure for individual service a small oblong plank, not over four inches in width and six inches long. Boil a good-sized potato; when done mash it thor- oughly, add four tablespoonfuls of milk and a palatable seasoning of salt, and beat it until light and white. Put a small star tube in the end of a pastry bag, and turn in the mashed potato. Select a slice of fish sufficiently large for the patient, wash it in cold water, dry with a soft cloth and dust it with salt. Put the plank in the oven until very hot; if you have a gas stove put it underneath the gas burners, down as near the floor of the stove as possible; when hot, put on the fish, skin side down, dust it with salt, return it to the oven and cook quickly for twenty minutes ; by this time the fish should be brown. Take the plank from the oven, press the potatoes through the star tube around the edge of the plank, put the plank back until the potatoes are a golden brown ; garnish it with parsley and lemon, and serve at once. This makes a very sightly and palatable dish. 212 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK FISH IN A PAPER BAG Select the necessary piece of fish, dust it lightly with salt, put it in an oiled paper bag, fold over the end of the bag, fasten it, lay it on a grate in a baking pan, and bake in a quick oven fifteen minutes. Transfer the fish to a heated plate, garnish with potato roses, or serve with it plain boiled potatoes. This is one of the nicest ways of cooking fish. OYSTER BOUILLON I Purchase twelve salt oysters in the shell ; wash and scrub the shells thoroughly ; put them into a saucepan with a pint of boiling water, cover and bring quickly to a boil. Lift one oyster at a time and puncture the flesh in several places with a silver fork, put it back in the saucepan, cook for ten minutes and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. OYSTER BOUILLON II Drain, and wash, by pouring over them cold water, twelve large oysters; throw them into a dry, hot granite kettle and shake over the fire until the gills are thorougly curled and the liquor boiling. Pick the oysters with a silver fork, strain the bouillon through cheesecloth, press- ing lightly; reheat and serve. Season with salt only. DRY PANNED OYSTERS Wash the desired quantity of oysters by pouring over them, in a sieve, a quart of cold water. Put a granite pan over the fire; when very hot throw in the oysters, shake quickly and cook until the gills are curled, add a palatable seasoning of salt and a teaspoonful of butter or two table- spoonfuls of cream. Transfer to a heated dish and serve at once. PLAIN BROILED OYSTERS Select four large, fat oysters, put them on a board, dry on both sides with a piece of soft cheesecloth, dust lightly MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 313 with salt, dip in fine, dry bread crumbs. Put the oysters in the center of a wire broiler, hold over a clear fire or under- neath the oven burners of a gas stove, until they are browned on one side; turn and brown the other. Transfer them to a small heated platter, put a bit of butter and a few drops of lemon juice on each, and serve at once. GRIDDLED OYSTERS Place an ordinary cake griddle over the fire; when hot rub quickly with a tiny bit of suet. Dry four or six good fat oysters with a piece of cheesecloth, throw them on the hot griddle; when brown on one side turn, with a cake turner, and brown the other. Serve on buttered toast. These are frequently served in the oyster liquor. Boil the liquor and skim it, add a teaspoonful of butter or a tablespoonful of cream, add a half saltspoonful of salt, throw the hot broiled oysters into this, and serve with toast. BOILED OYSTERS Select four or six medium-sixed oysters, drain them, throw them in a kettle of boiling water, boil two minutes, drain again and stand aside to cool. When cold, dish on crisp lettuce leaves, baste with French dressing and serve. CLAM BOUILLON If clam broth is to be used for any length of time, it is wise to buy fifty medium-sized hard shell clams ; put them in a cold place and sprinkle them every day with cold salt water. To Make an Individual Portion Wash and scrub six clams ; put them in a small kettle or saucepan with a half pint of cold water, cover the kettle, bring it quickly to a boil. Lift the lid and you will find that the clams have opened. Take out one at a time, puncture it in several places with a silver fork, drop it back into the kettle, cover and cook for a few minutes longer. Take out the clams and strain the 214 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK broth through two thicknesses of cheesecloth, and it is ready to serve. To Allay Pernicious Vomiting Two tablespoonfuls fed to the patient by teaspoonfuls, will be quite sufficient for one feeding. This may be repeated every thirty minutes if necessary. CLAM BROTH Make precisely the same as clam bouillon, using a table- spoonful of cream to each half cupful (one gill) of broth. CLAM BROTH WITH WHIPPED CREAM Heat four tablespoonfuls of clam bouillon in a tiny saucepan, add a little celery salt, turn into a heated cup, put on top a tablespoonful of whipped cream and serve at once. BELLEVUE BOUILLON Heat four tablespoonfuls of clam bouillon and four tablespoonfuls of chicken broth, mix and pour into a bouillon cup, put a tablespoonful of whipped cream on top and serve. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 215 MEATS BEEF Beef should be fine grained; that portion exposed to the air a light red, showing a shade of purple when the first slice is cut off. For the sick, purchase the best quality of lean beef; be sure the fat is solid and whitish, not yellow. For broiling, the tenderloin or sirloin is best. For beef tea, the sticking piece is first choice; second, the round or rump. For Hamburg steaks or dishes made from chopped meat, purchase the round. The choice methods of cooking beef for the sick are broiling, boiling, roasting or baking. If tender meat is not accessible, purchase the round and put it twice through the meat chopper, form it into cakes and broil them. If there are no conveniences for broiling, cook them in a dry pan, without fat, turning them almost constantly while cooking. TO BROIL A STEAK Cut off just sufficient for the meal ; if tenderloin, a slice from the entire tenderloin; if sirloin, cut near the middle a piece sufficiently large for a serving. Trim off every particle of suet. If you are to broil it over a coal fire, see that the coals are bright and red, and free from gas. Put the steak in a wire broiler, and near the fire, sear quickly on one side, turn and sear the other; turn it each twenty seconds, for three minutes ; then lift the steak about six inches from the fire and broil it slowly on one side for three minutes, then turn it and cook it three minutes longer; this is allowing for a steak an inch and a half in thickness. Transfer it at once to a small heated platter, dust it lightly with salt, spread it with a little butter and serve at once. If the steak is one inch thick, it will require eight min- utes for broiling; if one and a half inches thick, ten min- utes; two inches, fifteen minutes. It should be rare, but 216 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK not raw. Be very careful that it is sufficiently cooked to remove the "purple" coloring from the center of the steak. Charcoal broiling is the same. TO PAN BROIL A STEAK Cut the steak one inch thick. Put an iron shallow frying pan over the fire ; when very hot throw in the steak ; it will fasten itself to the pan immediately. Loosen it with a cake turner and turn it as you would a griddle cake. As soon as it sears on this side, turn it again, and keep turning it every half minute for five minutes. Transfer it to a small heated platter, dust it with salt, spread over a little butter and serve it at once. This is by no means an inferior way of cooking a steak, providing you stand over it during the entire cooking. TO BROIL ON A GAS STOVE Light the oven burners three minutes before placing the steak; have everything else for the meal ready. See that the broiling pan and rack underneath the gas burners are in their proper places. Have the steak cut one inch thick. When the broiler is hot draw it out, place the steak in the middle, put it as near the gas flame as possible without touching it. As soon as the steak is seared on this side, draw out the pan, and with a fork (sticking it as near the edge of the steak as possible) turn, and sear the other side. Turn the steak again, lower the pan about six or seven inches, turn the burners half way down and broil slowly three minutes on one side, turn and broil three minutes on the other. Season and serve. BEEF COOKED IN TOMATO In certain cases of obesity where tomatoes are allow- able, this gives variety and is exceedingly palatable. Chop fine or grind a quarter of a pound of round of beef, season it with a half teaspoonful of salt, and a dash MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 217" of pepper, if admissible. Cut the stem end from a large solid tomato, scoop out the seeds and core, leaving the skin with a comfortably thick wall. Put the meat lightly into the tomato, and bake it in the oven fifteen or twenty minutes. Transfer it to a heated plate, put a little butter in the center and send it at once to the table. The meat should be smoking hot to the very bottom, a little rare, and the tomato soft. BEEFSTEAK IN A PAPER BAG Purchase a slice of tenderloin not over three-quarters of an inch thick. Open a small paper bag and grease it slightly with olive oil. Dust the steak lightly with salt, put it in the bag, fold over the ends and fasten them; put it on a small grate in a pan, and in a quick oven for twenty minutes. Open the bag and put the steak, with all the juice, on a small heated plate, and serve at once. Meat cooked in a paper bag is very much better than when pan broiled. SALISBURY STEAK Put a half pound of the round of beef twice through the meat chopper; add a half teaspoonful of salt and form it into a round cake, making it of equal thickness through- out that is, have the sides as thick as the center. Put this into a perfectly dry, hot iron pan ; turn it with a cake turner several times, cooking it at least ten minutes. Dish it on a heated plate, squeeze over a little lemon juice and serve at once. If, for any reason, the meat is needed very well done, make the half pound into two cakes. The stringy por- tion, about one-half the weight of the meat, should be held in the chopper. A little butter over the cooked steaks is frequently admissible. The salt should be added to the meat, use no pepper. 218 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK THE RORER MEAT CAKE Purchase a half pound of tenderloin of beef; take a blunt silver knife and scrape the pulp of the meat from the fibre; put that which you have scraped on to a porcelain, or ordinary china plate ; it must not touch iron or tin. When you have sufficient scraped, make it into two small cakes, about a half inch thick. Put these in a paper bag or in a piece of oiled paper and cook on a rack in a pan in a very hot oven ten minutes ; when done, place them on a heated dish, dust lightly with salt, put in the center of each a tiny bit of butter and serve immediately. ALMOND MEAT CAKE Add to the Rorer meat cake six almonds that have been blanched and ground ; after the cakes are dished on the heated plate add a few drops of lemon juice with the butter. PANNED CHOPPED MEAT Put a quarter of a pound of tenderloin through a meat chopper. Put it in a hot porcelain saucepan, add four table- spoonfuls of water, cover the pan, bring it quickly to a boil, add a saltspoonful of salt, a level teaspoonful of butter, stir and serve quickly in a tiny, heated vegetable dish. Excellent when well made. HOMEMADE PEMMICAN % pound of lean beef put twice 54 pound of marrow from the leg through a meat chopper or shin bone of an ox Chop the marrow with a silver knife and remove the fibre. Mix the beef and marrow thoroughly, a half salt- spoonful of salt and stand at once in a cold place. In cases of pernicious anaemia, induce the patient, if possible, to eat this whole amount in two or three feedings. Serve with it whole wheat bread or some easily- digested, simply-cooked green vegetable, or a sliced orange, or a few white grapes, or make it into sandwiches. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 219 TO "ROAST" OR BAKE BEEF Select two good standing ribs, the first or second cut, according to the size of the family ; the first cut will make a small compact roast. Have the ribs trimmed and cracked. Put the 1 roast in the pan, rib side down, put a teaspoonful of salt in the pan, and a half cupful of water ; place at once in a very hot oven and bake until the outside of the meat is thoroughly seared, about twenty-five minutes. Cool the oven, and begin to baste the meat with the fat that is now dripping in the pan, and roast a large joint fifteen minutes to each pound. A small two-rib roast w'eighing six pounds will bake in an hour and a quarter. Do not add any more water to the pan ; baste with the fat that is dripping from the meat. This recipe will answer for mutton and lamb. BOILED BEEF Purchase the bolar piece the fleshy part of the shoul- der or a piece from the upper round. Select a kettle that will hold sufficient water to entirely cover the piece of meat to be boiled. When the water is boiling, put in the meat, boil rapidly five minutes, then push the kettle to the back of the stove and keep at a temperature of 170 Fahr., and cook fifteen minutes to each pound of meat. When the meat is partly done, add salt, either plain or celery salt, a bay leaf and a clove to the water. The water in which this meat is boiled may be saved for ordinary soup. If the meat has been carefully cooked the water will contain but very little nourishment. Carefully-boiled meat will be juicy, slightly rare and perfectly tender. Boiled meat is considered more digestible than baked or roasted meats. 220 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK THE SECOND COOKING OF MEATS Even to a healthy person who has good digestion, the ordinary hash is an abomination. There are only a very few ways in which meat can be warmed over for the sick. Boudins or dishes where the meat is heated in the oven in hot water are preferable. Croquettes contain nutritious material, but the combination and frying renders them unfit for the sick. Avoid all warmed-over dishes, like hash, ragouts, or brown stews. BOUDINS Chop a quarter of a pound of tender, rare roasted beef. For the sick, I think it is wise to put this twice through a meat chopper. Put four tablespoonfuls of water and a tablespoonful of dry bread crumbs in a saucepan, cook a moment, and add the meat. Take from the fire, drop in the yolk of an egg, a saltspoonful of salt, and then fold in the well-beaten white of the egg. Turn this into a little boudin mold or custard cup, stand it in a pan of boiling water and cook over the fire or in the oven for fifteen min- utes. Serve at once. This is very nutritious and easily digested. An excel- lent dish for the aged. BEEF PUDDING Line an individual dish or a ramekin with a thin layer of mashed potatoes ; put in the center about four table- spoonfuls of nicely-seasoned cold roasted beef, chopped fine. Cover the top with more mashed potatoes, stand the dish in a pie plate of hot water and bake in the oven until a golden brown, about twenty minutes. TURKISH BEEF Chop a quarter of a pound of roasted beef very fine, season it with a saltspoonful of salt and a saltspoonful of pounded celery seed ; put this into a ramekin or a small individual baking dish, pour over four tablespoonfuls of MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 221 leban ; stand the dish in a pan of hot water and cook in the oven fifteen minutes, and serve. This is excellent in cases of indigestion. The leban renders the beef more digestible and gives a greater food value. Matzoon or zoolak may be used in the place of leban. SALT MEATS Salt meats take no part whatever in diet for the sick; we simply mention them to condemn them. Broiled bacon is the exception. It is more digestible and nutritious than fresh fat pork, and may now and then be used sparingly. In salt lean meats the fibre is rendered hard and difficult of digestion. The meat is deficient in natural mineral matter, and contains an excess of chloride of sodium. Persons who are perfectly well, after a meal of salt meat have an uncontrollable desire for water, which comes from an overheated, irritated condition of the stom- ach ; it is not true thirst, and must be looked on as an unnatural rather than a natural condition. TRIPE Tripe, being a portion of the digestive viscera of the ox, is one of the most easily-digested of animal foods, requiring only one hour for perfect digestion. It is generally cleaned by the butcher. When it comes home, wash it through several cold waters, put it in a kettle of boiling water and simmer gently eight hours or until it is perfectly tender. Take it out, stand it aside to cool, and it is ready to dress in many ways. It may be heated in a little cream sauce, or broiled, or stewed. If carefully prepared, it is a good food for the aged, for children over six years old, for the obese as well as the very thin, and for convalescing patients who are allowed solid foods. STEWED TRIPE Cut sufficient cold boiled tripe into narrow strips. Put a half pint of milk in a double boiler, add the tripe, add a 222 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK half teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in a little cold milk, a saltspoonful of salt and two drops of onion juice. Stir constantly until it thickens, take from the fire, add a teaspoonful of butter and serve on toast. / BROILED TRIPE Cut the necessary sized piece from cold boiled tripe, dust it with salt, put it in a broiler and broil on both sides until slightly brown. Transfer it to a heated dish, put over a little butter and lemon juice, and serve. TRIPE AND OYSTERS Throw six oysters into a heated granite saucepan, shake until the gills are turned, then drain the oysters, saving the liquor. Beard the oysters, put the soft portion back in the liquor, add two tablespoonfuls of finely-chopped, well-cooked tripe, a crushed whole peppercorn and a salt- spoonful of salt ; bring to a boil, add two tablespoonfuls of cream and serve on toast. Or omit the pepper and add a half drop of Tabasco, or strain the pepper out before adding the oysters. MUTTON The flesh of good mutton should be a bright red color, the fat firm and white. The fatter the mutton, the better and more tender the lean parts, but as the fat of mutton is very rich in stearic acid, it is necessary that every particle be trimmed from the lean meat before it is cooked. The lean flesh of mutton is more loosely held together than that of beef, which makes it slightly more digestible. Purchase the shoulder for mutton tea, the neck for mutton broth, Frenched rib chops for broiling, and a leg for boiling. BROILED CHOPS Select one or two nicely-trimmed Frenched chops. Put the serving plate and a plate from which they are to be MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 223 eaten to heat; mutton must be served on hot plates. Arrange the chops on a wire broiler, broil them quickly, searing first one side, then the other, and turning them every half minute for five minutes. Dish the chops, dust them lightly with salt, slip a quill of paper over the bones and serve at once. For convalescing patients, or for the aged or for chil- dren, the plate may be garnished with boUed rice, a table- spoonful of puree of peas, or potato roses. CHOPS IN A PAPER BAG This is the very nicest way of cooking chops. Season the chops with a little salt, rub each with a little butter, slip them into a paper bag, fasten the bag, put it on a wire rack in a pan, and cook them in a hot oven fifteen minutes. Open the bag, slip out the chops, and pour the juices from the bag over them ; put little quills of paper over the bones and serve at once. MUTTON CAKES Cut the lean portion from two Frenched chops, season it with a little salt, put them in a paper bag and cook them as you would ordinary chops. MUTTON PATS Purchase two slices of lean mutton from the leg. With a silver knife scrape first one side, then the other; as fast as meat pulp accumulates on the knife put it on a china or porcelain saucer. When you have scraped both pieces free from pulp, form it into little pats, making three or four, each one holding not more than three tablespoonfuls. Drop them into a hot, dry pan, cook a minute, turn with a cake turner, dish on a heated plate, dust lightly with salt, put over a little butter and serve at once. These may also be cooked in a paper bag. 224 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MUTTON CAKE WITH MUSHROOMS This dish will give variety to a diet in obesity. Take the lean portions from two Frenched chops, season with salt and a little pepper, put them in a paper bag, put on top of each a single mushroom, fasten the bag and cook in a quick oven fifteen minutes. When done, slip the chops and mushrooms on a heated plate, pour over the sauce, and add a few drops of lemon juice. Do not add butter. KLOPPS Chop four ounces of cold boiled mutton rather fine, add to it a saltspoonful of salt, a tablespoonful of dry bread crumbs and the unbeaten white of one egg; mix thoroughly, and add a tablespoonful of finely-chopped mint. Form into balls the size of English walnuts, drop these balls into a saucepan of boiling stock, either beef or mutton ; draw the pan to one side of the fire where it can- not possibly boil again, until the balls come to the surface ; this will take about five minutes. Take them out with a skimmer, dish them neatly on a tiny hot platter. For the aged one may use a tablespoonful of cream sauce or sauce Hollandaise; for the obese, two or three tablespoonfuls of reduced tomato or horseradish sauce. MUTTON CASSEROLE Wash and boil six tablespoonfuls of rice; when this is dry put it into an ordinary custard cup, pressing it to the sides and bottom, leaving a well in the center. Cut suffi- cient cold cooked mutton into dice to fill the well, season with a little salt, put over two tablespoonfuls of cream, cover with a thin layer of rice, stand the cup in a baking pan of water, cover with greased paper and bake in a moderate oven twenty minutes. While this is baking, rub together a teaspoonful of butter and one of flour, add a half cupful of milk, boil, add a half saltspoonful of salt. Turn the casserole out on the serving dish, pour around MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 225 the cream, sauce, add a little chopped parsley, and serve. This is a dainty, easily-digested dish ; nice for tubercu- losis patients, or children, or for the aged. VEAL Veal is an unfit food for the sick, because the flesh is dense and difficult of digestion the juices are rich in albumin, which hardens under the influence of heat. In gastric troubles, however, veal broth is to be recommended. In purchasing veal, see that it is not too young, the flesh is pink and the bones hard. Avoid veal where the flesh has a bluish tinge and is soft and flabby. The knuckle, which is the lower part of the leg after the cutlets are taken off, and the neck are the best pieces for soup and broth. The sweetbreads are a part of the digestive viscera of the calf, hence are easily digested ; when simply cooker and not covered with rich sauces or mixed with mush- rooms, they require only one hour for perfect digestion. They are rich in protein, but not as stimulating as lean flesh. They are sold in the market in pairs ; the short, chubby one is called by the butchers the "heart" sweet- bread; the long one, the thymus gland, is called by the butchers the "throat" sweetbread ; this is not as tender as the "heart" sweetbread. The thymus gland, however, is just as good for creamed sweetbreads, so in purchasing a pair, save the "heart" sweetbread, the pancreas, for broil- ing or baking, and the thymus gland for picking apart. They hold digestive secretions, which naturally causes them to spoil quickly ; in fact, they will digest themselves unless they are cooked or chilled as soon as they are taken from the calf. To prepare, put them first into cold water, wash them, cover them with boiling water, add a half teaspoonful of salt and simmer gently three-quarters of an hour; then put them in a cloth or bag and on the ice. They will keep for one is 226 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK or two days. They are now ready for dressing or reheating according to the following recipes: BROILED SWEETBREADS Split a prepared "heart" sweetbread into three slices, put it on a broiler over a clear fire, browning first one side, then the other. Serye it at once with a little butter and salt. For a convalescing patient, serve with it a spoonful of green peas, or it may be served on a piece of crisp toast. BAKED SWEETBREADS Remove the membrane from the outside of a prepared '"heart" sweetbread, brush it with melted butter, dust it with salt, wrap it in a piece of oiled letter paper or put it in a paper bag, and bake in a moderately quick oven thirty minutes. Transfer it to a small heated dish, and pour over it the sauce from the bag. This may be served to an invalid with very young, tiny, fresh peas, or two or three tablespoonfuls of puree of green peas. TO CREAM SWEETBREADS Pick apart one prepared sweetbread, rejecting all the membrane. One gland will make two meals. Moisten two level teaspoonfuls of flour in a little cold milk, add a half cupful of hot milk, and when boiling add half a sweetbread. Stand the saucepan in another of hot water, cover and cook slowly for twenty minutes. Take from the fire, add a quarter of a teaspoonful of celery salt and a teaspoonful of butter. Serve on toast or in a border of carefully-boiled rice. SWEETBREADS IN JELLY Boil a pair of sweetbreads as directed; put them aside to cool. When cool, pick the sweetbreads apart, rejecting all the membrane. Cover a half box of gelatin with a half MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 227 cupful of cold water, let it soak for a half hour, then add one cupful of boiling stock, a half teaspoonful, of beef ex- tract, a half teaspoonful of celery salt and ten drops of onion juice ; strain, and add a teaspoonful of lemon juice. Put the sweetbreads in a round or square mold, pour over the liquid jelly, just enough to cover, and stand aside in a cold place. This may be served with fresh celery or cress, or tender lettuce salad. A nice dish for the obese. LIVER The liver, heart and kidneys of both veal, mutton, lamb and beef are unfit food for the sick. 228 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK POULTRY AND GAME Poultry for the well and the sick should be in perfectly fresh condition, not cold storage. Chickens and turkeys should be dry picked, not scalded ; this is especially impor- tant for young chickens, as they are so small that dipping them in a bucket of hot water blanches and partly cooks the flesh next to the skin, which causes them to spoil quickly, and destroys the flavor. TO SELECT CHICKENS For Broiling Purchase a young chicken with firm flesh,, yellow skin and legs, and with a soft point to the breastbone. It should not weigh over one and a half pounds. A Squab Chicken is simply a young chicken not weigh- ing over one pound. For Boiling, Baking, Stewing and Soup Making Pur- chase a chicken at least one year old. The breastbone will be a little hard at the end, but easily broken ; if it is pointed and resists pressure, it is a fowl, not a chicken. TO DRAW A CHICKEN Draw the chickens as soon as they come from the mar- ket, and put them at once in a cold place. Cut off the feet and head, split the skin down the back of the neck, detach it from the neck, draw it down over the breast, take out the crop without breaking it, and cut the neck off close to the body. Turn the chicken over, make a vent under the rump large enough to easily draw out the intestines ; put in your finger and loosen the internal organs liver, heart, gizzard, lungs and entrails; grasp the gizzard and pull carefully, bringing them all out together, unbroken. With a sharp knife cut around the vent of the large intestine, and your chicken is clean. Be very careful not to break the gall bag or intestines, as the contents of either would render the fowl uneatable to the sick. The contents of the intestines are offensive, and no amount of soaking or washing will remove the odor and flavor from the meat. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 229 Do not soak chickens in water. I cannot speak too strongly against this abominable practice. As soon as the chicken is carefully drawn, get a pan of cold water and a piece of cheesecloth, wash the skin thoroughly, wring out the cloth and wipe the chicken inside and out; put it on a dry plate and stand in a cold place. The soaking of meats in cold water draws out the nourishment and flavor. Do not use the giblets for the sick. These directions for drawing will answer for turkeys, chickens, ducks and all kinds of birds. TO BROIL A CHICKEN Select a very young chicken, draw it carefully; wash quickly and wipe it dry; put it in a broiler and then over a clear fire, bone side down ; broil slowly for fifteen min- utes, then turn it and broil on the other side for ten minutes. If you use a gas stove, put it under the gas jets bone side up, then turn it and broil on the other side. As soon as it is done, dish it on a heated plate ; spread it lightly with very sweet butter and use at once. The half of a "squab" chicken will be quite enough for a single feeding. TO BROIL BIRDS Split the birds down the back, remove the intestines ; with a damp cloth wash and wipe the birds quickly, sprinkle the bone side with salt, brush the skin with a little melted butter, and broil precisely the same as you would broil a chicken. Serve plain on a heated platter, or serve on a slice of nicely-toasted bread. TO BROIL CHICKEN IN AN OVEN Conveniences for broiling are sometimes lacking even in well-regulated households. One can always broil over coal or wood, but in the summer where oil or gasoline is used it is necessary to "oven broil." Wash the grate in the 230 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK oven. Light the oven burners and see that the oven is very hot before putting- in the chicken or birds. Sprinkle the bone side with salt, brush the skin side with butter and dust it lightly with dry bread crumbs. Put them on the rack, bone side down, put a pan underneath, close the door and cook for a half to three-quarters of an hour; if care- fully done the chicken will be juicy and tender. This is not an inferior way of cooking a chicken, pro- vided the oven is hot at first. TO COOK CHICKEN IN A PAPER BAG This perhaps is one of the best ways of cooking chicken for the sick. There are very good, logical, scientific reasons for using a bag or oiled paper for oven cooking of meats. This method of cooking retains all the nutritious quali- ties, and the meat does not shrink or become dry, and is never greasy. Heat the oven at least ten minutes before putting in the chicken or bird; 300 Fahr. is just about right. Dust the chicken with salt, brush it with a little melted butter, put it in a paper bag, fold over the end of the bag and fasten it ; place the bag on a grate in a pan, and at once in the oven ; cook thirty-five minutes. Slide the chicken from the bag to a serving dish, and pour over the sauce. TO PAN A CHICKEN Draw and split the chicken down the back ; it must not weigh over one and a half pounds. Put half of it in a granite roasting pan, bone side down, put two or three tablespoonfuls of water in the pan, run it in a quick oven and bake for thirty-five minutes. If the water evaporates quickly, add a little more. When the chicken is half done dust it with salt, and if admissible a suspicion of pepper. When it is nicely browned dish it on a dainty platter, put a little quill of paper over the leg bone, spread over a little sweet butter and serve. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 231 Chickens may stand a moment after they are cooked, before serving; they do not become heavy or sodden like beef or mutton. CHICKEN FRICASSEE Select a fowl one year old and not too fat. For the sick, use only the white meat. Draw the chicken, take off the second joints and with a cleaver or heavy knife chop and slash the leg, beginning at the lower bone. Put the back and the dark meat in a saucepan, add a quart of cold water, bring to boiling point and skim. Cut the breast into halves, put these halves on top of the dark meat in the saucepan, cover and simmer it gently for two hours, or until the white meat is perfectly tender. Remove the white meat, put one half aside for other dishes souffle, boudins or a mince. For the fricassee, rub together two level tea- spoonfuls of butter and two of flour, add a half cupful of the liquor in which the chicken was boiled, stir until boil- ing and add a half teaspoonful of salt. Add the breast to the sauce, cover and stand the saucepan over hot water for ten minutes. Have ready boiled, four tablespoonfuls of rice, dish the chicken on a dainty little platter, heap the rice at one end of the platter and serve. Use the water for broth. CHICKEN SOUFFLE Chop sufficient cooked white meat of chicken- to make four tablespoonfuls; add to it two tablespoonfuls of thick cream, a tablespoonful of sifted dry bread crumbs, a salt- spoonful of salt, and then mix in the well-beaten white of one egg. Heap this in a tiny baking or ramekin dish, or on a shell ; dust with bread crumbs, brown quickly in a hot oven and serve at once. It will fall if it stands. GERMAN CHICKEN PUFF Bake one good-sized potato ; when done, cut off the end, scoop out the flesh and put it through a sieve or 232 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK vegetable press ; add a saltspoonful of salt, four tablespoon- fuls of finely-chopped cooked white meat of chicken, mix thoroughly, and fold in the well-beaten white of one egg. Put this back into the potato "shell," brush the top with milk and bake in a quick oven fifteen minutes. CHICKEN IN POTATO CASES Chop sufficient cold cooked chicken to make four table- spoonfuls ; put it in a small saucepan with two tablespoon- fuls of cream, half a saltspoonful of salt, and if admissible a suspicion of pepper ; cover the saucepan and stand it over a teakettle of hot water for ten minutes to heat. Have ready baked a good-sized perfect potato, cut a slice from the side, or the end, whichever seems best ; scoop out the flesh of the potato, leaving a wall a half inch thick. Fill the potato with the hot chicken, dish it on a napkin and serve at once. The portion of the potato scooped out may be used for another dish. MINCED CHICKEN ON TOAST Cut half the white meat of a young chicken into dice. Put a teaspoonful of butter and one of flour in a saucepan, mix, and add a half cupful of milk, stir over the fire until it reaches boiling point, add a saltspoonful of celery salt and the chicken ; cover the saucepan and stand it over hot water for ten or fifteen minutes. Trim the crust from a square of bread and toast it until a golden brown; put it on a tiny platter and heap the chicken on top. If admis- sible, garnish the top with a teaspoonful of nicely-cooked green peas, or a little chopped parsley. GOLDEN CHICKEN Make precisely the same as minced chicken on toast, and when ready to serve, grate over the top the hard-boiled yolk of one egg. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 233 CEYLON CHICKEN In cases of long-continued feeding for invalids, the aged, or tuberculosis patients, variety is the spice of life. Ceylon chicken may be made from any left-over chicken that has been carefully cooked, and gives a palatable, easily- digested, attractive dish. Cut sufficient cooked white meat of chicken to make a half cupful. Grate a cocoanut, pour over it a cupful of boiling water, let it stand a minute, stir until the cocoanut is thoroughly saturated with the water, then put it into a cheesecloth or a bag and squeeze it dry. Put the chicken in a saucepan, add a half cupful of the cocoanut "milk" thus made, bring it slowly to boiling point, add a saltspoonful of salt and a teaspoonful of corn- starch that has been moistened in a little of the cold cocoa- nut "cream." Serve in a border of rice. If the cocoanut milk stands but a few minutes the cream will come to the surface. The remaining cocoanut "milk" and "cream" may be saved for cooking other meats or vegetables. CHICKEN TIMBALE Cut half the white meat, four ounces, from a young, un- cooked chicken; put this raw meat twice through' a meat chopper, put it into a bowl, rub it with the back of a spoon until it forms a paste; add slowly four tablespoonfuls of cream and the unbeaten white of one egg ; when thoroughly mixed add a tablespoonful of soft bread crumbs and a salt- spoonful of salt. Press this through a fine sieve, and fold in the well-beaten white of another egg. Grease two cus- tard cups or timbale molds with a little olive oil or melted butter, line the bottom with a piece of white paper, fill in the mixture, stand them in a baking pan of boiling water, cover the tops with oiled paper, and cook in a moderate oven about twenty minutes. While these are cooking, rub to- gether a teaspoonful of butter and one of flour, add a half cupful of milk, stir until boiling, add a saltspoonful of salt, and pour on a tiny serving platter; turn out one timbale 234 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK into the sauce, garnish the dish with a sprig of parsley and serve. This is one of the most delicate, easily-digested and attractive of the chicken dishes. It is admirable for conva- lescing typhoid patients who are allowed solid or semi-solid food. To Give Variety For another meal heat the mold left over by standing it in boiling water over the fire or in the oven. If admissible cook a cupful of green peas and press them through a sieve; they should be as dry as mashed potato. Season nicely with a little salt and butter, put them on a serving dish, dish the timbale at one side, or in the center, and send to the table. JUGGED CHICKEN In making chicken broth, save the white meat for other dishes. After the chicken has been boiled tender in the broth, remove the breasts and put them aside for any of the preceding recipes. For jugging: Put half the breast while hot in a small baking dish or casserole mold, dust it lightly with celery salt, add sufficient stock to just cover, sprinkle over two tablespoonfuls of rice, cover the dish and bake in a moderate oven one hour. Serve in the dish in 'which it is cooked. LARDED QUAIL Clean and truss the bird, wrap around the thinnest pos- sible slice of bacon, put it in a small baking dish and run it in a quick oven for thirty minutes. Remove the bacon and serve on toast. Any other small birds may be dressed and cooked after this recipe. BROILED CANVASBACK DUCK Remove half the breast from a canvasback duck, put it in a broiler, broil over a hot fire ten minutes, turning once, then dust it lightly with salt, brush it with a little melted butter, broil two minutes longer and serve. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 235 The flavor of the duck is best preserved by cooking it quickly and serving it at once on a hot plate. Serve with the duck a little boiled rice, currant jelly and very tender young celery or lettuce. VENISON WITH ORANGE SAUCE Grate the yellow rind of half an orange into a sauce- pan, add a dash of Tabasco, a half cupful of chicken stock and a saltspoonful of salt ; simmer gently about ten min- utes, then add the juice of the orange and a tablespoonful of port wine ; stand this to keep hot while you quickly broil a portion of venison steak. Dish it quickly on a hot plate, pour over two tablespoonfuls of the hot sauce and serve. Serve venison rare. BONED SQUABS After the squabs have been carefully picked, cut off the legs near the body, and the head and wings. Cut the skin down the back, and then with a small, sharp knife remove the meat from the carcass, keeping the knife pressed flat against the bones. When the leg and wing joints are reached, unjoint them quickly without cutting the breast. When the flesh has been freed from the bones, put it into shape, dust it lightly with salt, and broil quickly as you would a chicken. Dish on a heated plate, put over a little butter and serve. Squabs may be baked whole, without stuffing, and served with green peas, to patients who can take solid foods of this kind. Convalescing patients, who can eat solid food, usually prefer broiled or baked squab on toast, BOILED PIGEON Draw and truss the bird, put it at once in a kettle of boiling water. Boil rapidly five minutes, add a teaspoon- ful of salt, a bay leaf, cover and cook at 170 Fahr. for an hour. Serve hot. 236 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK SAUCES INDIVIDUAL RECIPES All sauces are quite easily made. The points to be remembered are that the fat and flour must be rubbed together and not heated; the liquid material as a rule must be added cold, and the sauce stirred over hot water until it thickens. For the sick, however, it is wise to add the butter last, as in almost all cases heated butter dis- agrees. Sauce made according to the following recipes may be eaten, by persons who have weak digestion, with- out any serious results. Avoid in all cases of sickness heated butter. If butter must be added to vegetables or meats, put it on after they are dished, which will allow it to melt at low temperature. SAUCE a la POULETTE Beat the yolk of one egg until creamy, add slowly one gill (a half cupful) of hot chicken stock or bouillon, and a saltspoonful of salt ; stir it over hot water for a minute until smooth like mayonnaise; be careful not to curdle. BROWN SAUCE Put a half cupful of stock in a saucepan, add a level teaspoonful of flour moistened in a little cold stock, stir and boil five minutes, take from the fire, add half a teaspoon- ful of browning or kitchen bouquet, a level teaspoonful of butter and a saltspoonful of salt. Strain and it is ready for use. CREAM SAUCE I Put a half cupful (one gill) of milk in a saucepan, over a moderate fire, add half a level teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in a tablespoonful of cold milk. When this thickens, take it from the fire, add a teaspoonful of butter and a saltspoonful of salt. A teaspoonful of flour may be substituted for the corn- starch. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 237 CREAM SAUCE II Put four tablespoonfuls of cream in a china cup, stand it in a little pan of hot water and stir it until it is palatably hot, and add a saltspoonful of salt. Use at once. This sauce can be used in diabetic cases. EGG SAUCE Beat the yolk of one egg until creamy, add slowly a half cupful (one gill) of boiling water, stirring all the while. Stand the cup in a saucepan of hot water, and when the sauce is the consistency of mayonnaise take it from the fire, add a teaspoonful of butter, a saltspoonful of salt and a dash of lemon juice. Serve on green vegetables for diabetic, rheumiatic and gouty patients. MAITRE d'HOTEL Beat a tablespoonful of butter to a cream, .adding gradually a tablespoonful of lemon juice. When thoroughly mixed, stir in one tablespoonful of finely-chopped parsley, and a pinch of salt, not more than ten grains. Heap in a tiny dish and stand aside until cold. Serve on broiled, boiled or baked fish. MELTED BUTTER SAUCE Put three tablespoonfuls of butter in a china cup, stand the cup in a little saucepan of boiling water and let the butter quietly melt. Pour off the top, leaving the sediment in the bottom. Stand the butter aside to harden. This may be used over vegetables or meat dishes, as directed. Where a restricted diet must be continued for a long time, and melted butter is admissible, it is wise to melt a half pound at a time in the upper part of a double boiler. Butter melted in this way is called, in cooking terms, "clarified" butter. 238 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK TOMATO SAUCE Peel two solid, good-sized, ripe tomatoes, cut them into halves and squeeze out the seeds. Cut the tomato into bits, put it in a granite or porcelain saucepan, cover and stew fifteen minutes; press through a sieve. Boil this to the proper consistency, take from the fire, add a saltspoonful of salt, five grains of powdered mace, and stir in a level teaspoonful of butter. This may be used in diabetic or other cases where tomatoes are allowable. APPLE SAUCE Wash one large tart apple, cut it into quarters, remove the seeds, slice the apple, put it in a saucepan with suffi- cient water to cover; cover the saucepan, bring quickly to a boil, and press through a sieve. Add a tablespoonful of sugar and turn it at once into a sauce boat. Serve with roasted duck or goose. CRANBERRY SAUCE Wash a half pint of cranberries, put them into a porce- lain or granite saucepan with one gill (a half cupful) of water. Cover the saucepan, bring to boiling point, and press through a sieve. Return the pulp to the saucepan, add two-thirds of a cupful of sugar, stir until the sugar is dissolved, boil five minutes and cool. GOOSEBERRY SAUCE Top and tail a half pint of ripe gooseberries, put them in a saucepan with a half cupful of water. Cover, bring to a boil, and press through a sieve. Add two tablespoon- fuls of sugar and cool. Serve with meats. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 239 CELERY SAUCE Chop fine two of the outside stalks of celery, with the green tops. Put them in a saucepan with a half pint of cold water, cover, boil slowly for thirty minutes, and drain. Thicken with two teaspoonfuls of flour or one of cornstarch moistened with a little water. Add a salt- spoonful of salt, take from the fire and add a level teaspoonful of butter and four tablespoonfuls of milk. For diabetic patients thicken this with the yolk of egg, and omit the cornstarch and flour. 240 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK CONDIMENTS This group, salt, pepper, vinegar, such spices as cinna- mon, allspice, cloves, mustard, cayenne, nutmeg, mace, ginger and curry powder, have not the slightest place in diet for the sick. As astringents, some of them may be used to advantage in chronic diarrhoea, or just a suspicion may be used to liven up some tasteless dish that may be beneficial to the patient. Perhaps white and black pepper, and mustard, are the most dangerous of the group. If pepper is to be used for the sick, and I cannot see why it should be, a half drop of Tabasco is far less injurious and far more palatable than a saltspoonful of black pepper. Black pepper, no matter how finely ground, is indestructible and frequently very irri- tating, and if used should always be strained out. When making cinnamon tea or spice tea, always use the whole spices and strain them out. A dash of nutmeg is "an improvement to an ordinary eggnog. Nutmeg and ginger tea are used in cases of chronic diarrhoea. Avoid mustard except for outward applications. In this group we might also place such flavorings as vanilla, bitter almond and extracts of lemon and orange. I can only say avoid them all. Vanilla is truly medicinal, and when made into extract is frequently adulterated with harmful materials. Use for flavoring the grated yellow rind of an orange or lemon, and fresh fruit juices. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 241 MILK Milk is a typical or perfect food. By this we mean it contains all the necessary elements to sustain life and build and repair the tissues of the young mammalia during the period of rapid growth. It is especially suited to the aged, invalids and diet for the sick. Milk is a food, not a beverage, and must not be taken as a beverage with heavy meals of meat and vegetables. It is not a desirable food for active adults, and when swallowed rapidly like water, produces discomfort and frequently indigestion. All foods, liquid, semi-solid and solid, should be masti- cated sufficiently long to be mingled with the mouth secre- tions. The carbohydrate of milk is lactose or milk sugar, not so sweet as cane sugar, and less liable to fermentation. Milk for the well and for the sick must be perfectly sweet, clean, and should be kept in a cold place, in covered bottles. If left open in the refrigerator, it absorbs odors and flavors of other foods. It may be used warm, hot or cold, according to the physician's orders, but should not in any case be iced. THE DIGESTIBILITY OF MILK Milk is difficult of digestion when swallowed rapidly, because the rennin in the gastric secretions coagulates it the same as it does when added to milk for junket. This curd remains hard and dense in the stomach for some time, causing discomfort and flatulency. Junket is recommended because it can be masticated and the curd broken up, which aids in its digestion. Many people think they cannot take milk, that it makes them "bilious," that it disagrees with them ; in nine cases out of ten it is because they drink it rapidly. If too weak to masticate it, the patient may hold it in the mouth. Water gruels added to the curd, make it more acceptable and more digestible. If the patient is on the back and the head can- not be lifted, give milk and barley water through an adjustable glass tube. The patient in drawing the milk through the tube excites and draws out the secretions of 16 242 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK the mouth, which mingle with the milk and aid in its digestion. The following table gives the comparative composition of different m,ilk: Human Cows' Goats' Mares' Fat 3.3 4.0 4.3 i.i Sugar (lactose) . . 6.8 4.8 4.0 6.7 Proteids 1.8 3.5 4.6 1.9 Ash 0.2 0.7 0.6 0.3 COMPOSITION OF SKIMMED MILK In 100 Parts Water 90.5 Casein and Albumin 3.5 Milk fat 0.4 Milk sugar 4.8 Mineral matter 0.8 TO CHANGE THE TASTE OF MILK In cases where milk feeding must be prolonged, and the flavor of raw milk is objectionable, change it, and speak of it to the patient, for the mind has great influence over the palate. The taste is not natural in fevers ; even the best of foods are unattractive. CARAMEL MILK Put a half cupful of dry sugar into a saucepan and stand it over the fire ; in a moment the sugar will melt and begin to> smoke ; add a half cupful of water, boil a minute, cool and bottle. ' A few drops added to milk will entirely change its flavor and will not only make it agreeable but attractive to the patient. Caramel will keep for months. RAISIN MILK Boil twelve raisins in a cup of water for ten minutes ; drain, pressing the raisins, and stand this liquid aside to cool. When cold add it to a quart of milk. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 243 CINNAMON MILK A stick of cinnamon put into cold milk when it is put away in the morning, or a clove, or a bay leaf, will fre- quently make it agreeable to people who dislike milk. TO STERILIZE MILK Sterilized milk is dead milk. In boiling all the natural micro-organisms are killed. Boiled milk is more difficult of digestion than raw milk, and should never be given to infants except under the responsibility of a physician. When milk is heated to 212 Fahr., the boiling point of water at sea level, it does not necessarily imply that it is sterile after it has been cooled, unless it has been boiled in bottles stopped with cotton plugs or corks before the boiling. Milk boiled in an open x vessel, allowed to cool in it, and kept in it, is frequently far more dangerous than raw milk. To sterilize milk put the milk into perfectly clean bottles or jars; if bottles, stop with cotton plugs or clean corks cotton plugs are preferable ; if jars, put on the tops, give a single turn, stand them in a kettle of cold water, cover, bring to boiling point and boil continuously for thirty minutes. Take the kettle from the fire, lift the lid, allow the milk to cool in the water and put it at once in the refrigerator. TO PASTEURIZE MILK Louis Pasteur, a French chemist of the latter part of the last century, found that milk heated to 165 Fahr. was' practically free from dangerous bacteria and still retained a considerable amount of its own life. As pasteurization kills the enzymes in the milk and the lactic acid ferment, it must be as carefully cared for as fresh sweet milk. Put the milk into scalded bottles, stop the necks with cotton plugs that have been thoroughly baked, stand the bottles in a large kettle, pour around enough water at 155 244 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Fahr. to come to the necks of the bottles or jars; be careful that they do not float. Take the kettle from the fire, or push it to the back part of the stove, where it will remain at this temperature for thirty minutes. Lift the bottles, put them into a pan of lukewarm water, stand under a cold-water spigot and allow a small stream to run in the pan until the water becomes cold. Put them in the refrigerator, and do not remove the cotton plugs until you are ready to use them. Pasteurization may be done in a big soup kettle or a small boiler. If, however, it is necessary to pasteurize for any length of time, better buy a pasteurizing outfit, which can be purchased at any drug store at little cost. Cotton plugs can also be purchased, and are far better than corks. Before using them, put them on a piece of paper in the bottom of a pan, to bake in the oven until slightly colored ; put them at once into a scalded dry fruit jar, screw on the top and they are then ready for use. MODIFIED MILK (Meiggs') Mix two ounces of sugar of milk in one pint of pure water; stand it on the ice ready for use. At each feeding, put one ounce of cream in the feeding bottle, one ounce of fresh cows' milk, half an ounce of lime water and one and a half ounces of solution of milk sugar. ARTIFICIAL MILK In cases where the infant cannot take even the above amount of cows' milk, make two quarts of skimmed milk into junket. Break up the curd with a fork, and strain carefully ; bring the whey to a boil, and while hot add a level tablespoonful of powdered sugar of milk. When cold, add the whites of two eggs to one pint of the whey, shake until the whites are thoroughly blended, add them to the remaining whey and add a half pint of cream. Keep cold. The writer has used these recipes for a number of years with excellent results. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 245 KOUMYS Heat two quarts of milk to 100 Fahr., boil together two tablespoonfuls of sugar and two of water; add this to the milk; dissolve a third of a compressed yeast cake in two tablespoonfuls of milk, add it to the milk and fill at once into bottles. Cork and tie down the corks the same as for champagne ; stand the bottles upright in a tempera- ture of 65 Fahr. over night; next morning place them carefully on their sides in a cold place, and in twenty-four hours it is ready for use. Open the bottles with a cham- pagne tap. LEBAN To make good Leban ( and Matzoon, directions must be carefully followed. Put two quarts of milk in a pan over the fire; bring it to almost the boiling point and keep it there for twenty minutes. When it is covered with a thick crust or skin take it from the fire and cool to blood heat, 98 Fahr. Then lift carefully one side of the skin and stir in two tablespoonfuls of the Matzoon or Zoolak, and replace the skin carefully without tearing it. Cover the pan, keep it in a warm place, about 75 Fahr. for six or seven hours. You should have by this time a perfectly thick milk jelly. Serve as a milk jelly or remove the skin and stir a moment until it is thin enough to bottle. Bottle and keep on the ice. Matzoon or Zoolak can be purchased at any first-class drug shop. This is exceedingly useful in cases of stomach troubles and in fevers where sweet milk disagrees. KEFIR Put one quart of fresh new milk in a perfectly clean two-quart fruit jar, stand the jar in a kettle of cold water, cover the kettle, bring to boiling point and boil ten minutes. Remove the jar and allow the milk to cool to 100 Fahr. Crush two Kefilac tablets, add them to the milk in the jar, screw on the top, shake thoroughly, loosen the top, then 246 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK stand it aside at a temperature of 75 for twenty-four hours; shake four or five times during the day as the fermentation advances and thick curds form. Stand this aside in a cold place for twenty-four hours, and it is ready for use. It will keep from forty-eight to fifty hours. In cases of constipation it should be used at the end of the second day. If kefir is to be used any length of time, two pints should be made every day, so the patient will never be without it. KEFIR WITH EGG Add, to each feeding of kefir, a tablespoonful of thick cream and the white of one egg, beaten. Put the cream and white of egg in a glass and fill the glass with kefir, stir, and it is ready for use. Excellent in cases of anaemia and tuber- culosis. MILK, EGGS AND BRANDY Scald a half pint of new milk in a double boiler and stand it away to cool. Separate one fresh egg, beat the white and yolk separately, then mix them together, add a teaspoonful of powdered sugar and beat again. Stir into this mixture a tablespoonful of brandy, pour the mixture into a tumbler and fill the tumbler with the cold scalded milk. Cold, pasteurized milk or pure raw may be used instead of scalded milk. MILK, RUM AND ISINGLASS Purchase a half ounce of the best isinglass; take one little strip which would make a tablespoonful if it were powdered, and pour over it a half cupful of warm water; let it soak for fifteen or twenty minutes, and stir it over hot water until the isinglass is dissolved. Take from the fire, add a teaspoonful of powdered sugar and a tablespoon- ful of rum. Pour this into a tumbler, and fill the tumbler with cold milk. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 247 ALMOND MILK WITH ISINGLASS Put one teaspoonful of powdered isinglass into a half pint of fresh milk, soak ten minutes, and when the isinglass is dissolved add six almonds that have been blanched and pounded or ground very fine, and two lumps of loaf sugar. Stir over the fire and cool. This is sufficient for one feeding. Almond milk with isinglass is very grateful, if taken warm, in cases of tonsilitis ; it is also an excellent food in certain cases of stomach trouble. Strained, with sugar omitted, it may be given in typhoid once or twice a day in place of plain milk. ASSES' MILK Cover two level tablespoonfuls of powdered gelatin with a half cupful of cold water, soak ten minutes, then add a half pint of boiling rice or barley water, take from the fire and strain. When cold add one pint of cows' milk. This will be given the same as milk and barley water in fever cases. TIGER'S MILK This is a very desirable hot weather food for old per- sons who are inclined to diarrhoea. Add to one quart of milk, a quarter teaspoonful of ground cinnamon, the quarter of a nutmeg, grated, two drops of oil of orange, and just a suspicion of ground cloves. Add the well-beaten whites of two eggs and two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar. Mix, strain and keep in the cold. Add to each 'tumblerful, at serving time, a tablespoonful of blackberry brandy. Give it slowly through a straw. ORGEAT Blanch and pound twenty-four almonds. Put them in a quart of milk, stir well and strain. A very easily-digested and nutritive food. A bland demulcent for an irritated stomach. 248 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MILK AND LIME WATER Put a tablespoonful of lime water into a half pint of milk; shake it in a fruit jar, turn it into a glass and use at once. MILK PUNCH Shake a half pint of cold milk until it has a slight froth on the surface ; then add a tablespoonful of sugar syrup and a tablespoonful of brandy or whisky, dust with a little nutmeg and serve. If admissible, put on top a tablespoonful of whipped cream. ALBUMINIZED MILK Put the white of one egg and a half pint of milk into a quart fruit jar, screw on the top and shake it well for a half minute, strain and serve at once. Make sure the jar and top are perfectly clean. GELATINIZED MILK Wash a quarter of a box of vegetable gelatin in cold water, drain and add one pint of cold milk, soak in a cold place for one hour. Put this in a double boiler, stir care- fully until the gelatin is dissolved, take from the fire, and when cold, add one quart of fresh sweet milk and stand aside in a cold place. This is very beneficial in cases of inflammatory affec- tions of the alimentary canal, is also useful in whooping cough and for any disease where the mucous membranes are inflamed. Plain water may be used if desired, but milk gives a greater amount of nourishment. PLUM PORRIDGE Stone twenty-four large raisins, cover them with a half pint of boiling water, boil ten minutes and strain. Heat a half pint of milk in a double boiler. Moisten a level MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 249 teaspoonful of cornstarch in a little cold milk, add it to the hot milk, stir until it thickens, and add a saltspoonful of salt ; add the raisin water and it is ready for use. This is sufficient for two feedings. ARROWROOT MILK Put a half pint of milk in a double boiler, add one level teaspoonful of arrowroot moistened in a little cold water, stir until the mixture thickens, cover the vessel and cook ten minutes. One teaspoonful of sugar and two table- spoonfuls of sherry may be added if admissible. ARROWROOT JELLY Two Servings Put a half pint of milk in a double boiler, add two teaspoonfuls of arrowroot moistened in two tablespoonfuls of cold milk ; stir until the mixture begins to thicken, cover the boiler and cook fifteen minutes. Turn into a small in- dividual mold and stand aside to cool. This should be shaky and jelly-like, but not too stiff. Serve with powdered sugar and cream. MILK JELLY Two Servings Cover two level teaspoonfuls of granulated gelatin with a half pint of cold milk, soak for thirty minutes, then heat it in a double boiler, or stand the bowl over hot water and stir until the gelatin is dissolved. Strain into two fancy individual molds, and stand at once on the ice. In case of fever, this must be served perfectly plain, without sugar or cream. Convalescing patients may dust it with powdered sugar and serve it with plain or whipped cream. BLANCMANGE Two Servings Put a half pint of milk in a double boiler; moisten a level tablespoonful of cornstarch in three tablespoonfuls 250 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK of cold milk, add it to the hot milk and cook until thick; turn at once into individual molds. At serving time, turn these on a dainty dish, dust it thickly with grated macaroon, or sprinkle over some blanched almonds that have been chopped very, very fine, or serve it with plain cream and sugar. ARROWROOT MILK GRUEL One Serving Heat a half pint of milk in a double boiler; add a half dozen raisins split into halves, and a teaspoonful of arrow- root moistened in two tablespoonfuls of milk; cook until thick, and strain. This may be served hot or cold, or, if preferable, without sugar; but in certain cases, as phthisis, for instance, cream may be added ; at another time, sugar ; never both at the same time, as they are apt to cause flatu- lency. FARINA MILK GRUEL One Serving Put a half pint of milk in a double boiler, or in a sauce- pan and heat it over hot water; sprinkle in a tablespoonful of dry farina, stir and cook for twenty minutes. Add a saltspoonful of salt, strain, and use hot or cold. FARINA BLANCMANGE Two Servings Wash one and a half tablespoonfuls of farina, drain, add a half pint of milk, soak an hour; then cook it in a double boiler, until thick, about fifteen minutes ; turn into individual molds and serve cold with soft custard sauce, plain cream, or with a little sugar. GERMAN FLOUR GRUEL Put one pint of flour into a small strong muslin bag, tie, leaving very little room for swelling. Put this into a saucepan of cold water, bring to boiling point and boil five MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 251 hours. When done, strip off the bag, take off the damp outside "skin" of the ball and let it stand in a dry place over night. To use: Grate enough to make two tablespoonfuls, moisten it with a little cold water, then add a half pint of boiling water and stir until it reaches boiling point; boil about two minutes, take from the fire and when cold add a half pint of fresh milk and a pinch of salt. This makes an exceedingly nice "bottle food" for in- fants when starchy foods are admissible. Soak one level teaspoonful of granulated gelatin in six tablespoonfuls of cold water for a half hour. Moisten a level teaspoonful of arrowroot in two tablespoonfuls of cold water, then add hastily a half pint of boiling water, boil until clear, then add the gelatin, stir until it is dis- solved, add two lumps of cut loaf sugar, and when cool add one gill of good cream. Use warm in cases of diarrhoea. This also makes a very nice change to the diet of a "bottle baby" who is inclined to constipation. Use sugar of milk in place of cut sugar. BARLEY GRUEL One Serving Put a half pint of milk in a double boiler, add one level teaspoonful of barley meal moistened in a little cold milk ; soak an hour, and cook for at least twenty minutes. Take from the fire, add a grain of salt, and cool. With cream, this makes a nice supper soup for children or the aged. BARLEY JELLY Wash two tablespoonfuls of pearled barley through several cold waters, cover with boiling water, boil and drain, throwing the water away. Put it in a granite or 252 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK porcelain kettle with a pint and a half of water, boil slowly for two hours, until the quantity is reduced to one pint; 'strain and stand aside until cold. When cold, this will be a clear, white jelly. Serve it in a small cereal plate, with two or three tablespoonfuls of cream. This is a nice "cereal" for children two or three years of age. One ounce of barley jelly dissolved in six ounces of sweet milk, with two tablespoonfuls of cream added, is rec- ommended for a child, a year old, who is troubled with constipation ; it may be used twice a day, as long as neces- sary. BLACK CURRANT GRUEL Stir two tablespoonfuls of black currant jelly into one quart of boiling water, boil rapidly fifteen minutes, strain and add two teaspoonfuls of arrowroot moistened in a little cold water; bring again to boiling point and stand it near the ice to use as wanted. Useful in cases of diarrhoea. BLACKBERRY GRUEL Wash two tablespoonfuls of ordinary rice through sev- eral cold waters ; add one quart of water, bring to boiling point and keep it just below boiling point, for one hour. Strain, add one whole clove, a bit of cinnamon one inch long, a half teaspoonful of dry Jamaica ginger and a half tumblerful of blackberry jelly or jam, bring to boiling point and cover in a warm place for a half hour. Strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth and stand near the ice. This is very useful in cases of acute or chronic diarrhoea and in dysentery. It is nutritious and astringent. RICE GRUEL Follow the directions given for Barley Gruel, using a tablespoonful of rice flour in the place of a tablespoonful of barley meal. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 253 LENTIL MILK GRUEL This is used considerably in the German hospitals for nursing mothers. 1 pint of milk A saltspoonful of celery seed 2 level tablespoonfuls of lentil A saltspoonful of salt powder Put the milk in a double boiler, add the meal moistened in a little cold water, soak an hour, add the celery seed and salt, cover the saucepan and cook thirty minutes ; and it is ready for use. This will make two meals. Divide it and put one part aside to cool ; reheat at serving time. YE PERFECT FOOD y 2 pint of milk 2, level tablespoonfuls of pearled T/2 pint of chicken broth sago Yolks of two eggs Put the sago into the broth and stand it aside over night; next morning bring it to boiling point and cook until the sago is transparent; add the milk, take from the fire, add a palatable seasoning of salt, and stir in the yolks of the eggs that have been carefully beaten with two table- spoonfuls of milk or cream. This is an exceedingly concentrated, nutritive and pal- atable food. The quantity given will make three feedings. SCORCHED RICE GRUEL Six Servings 2 tablespoonfuls of rice 2. quarts of water A piece of cinnamon two inches I tablespoonful of orange mar- long malade A pint of milk Put the rice in a pan, stir in the oven until well browned, then grind it in the coffee mill. Add to it the water and cinnamon and cook slowly for two hours ; add the orange marmalade and strain. Add the milk and stand aside at once to cool. There should be one and a half quarts of gruel when finished. 254 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Use cold in cases of diarrhoea. It may be served hot or cold. BROWNED RICE FLOUR GRUEL Put a half pound of rice flour into a granite baking pan in the oven ; shake and stir it, now and then, until every little grain of the flour is lightly browned. Take it from the oven and when it is cold put it in a glass jar, and cover it. To Make the Gruel : Moisten two tablespoonfuls of the browned flour in six tablespoonfuls of cold water, add a half pint of freshly-boiled water, stir until boiling and cook over a slow fire for a half hour. Serve plain, or with milk, or add two tablespoonfuls of cream. With an addition of an equal quantity of milk this makes an admirable summer bottle food for infants with teeth, especially where there is an inclination to diarrhoea. It is also an excellent food for the aged and those who have weak digestion. GUM AND MILK GRUEL Put one ounce of finely-powdered white gum Arabic in a half pint of cold water, soak for two hours, add a pint of new milki three lumps of loaf sugar or a large table- spoonful of honey, and stir over the fire until the gum is dissolved. Strain, and when cool add a tablespoonful of port wine, if admissible. This is exceedingly good in cases of throat trouble, and with an additional pint of milk is frequently used in cases of tuberculosis. CORNMEAL GRUEL Wash six tablespoonfuls of yellow or white granu- lated cornmeal through several cold waters; after the last washing let it settle and pour off the water; add four table- spoonfuls of this washed meal to a quart of boiling water, boil carefully two hours, strain and stand aside until wanted. At serving time, heat sufficient for one feeding about two- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 255 thirds of a cupful pour it into a bowl over two table- spoonfuls of whipped cream, stirring all the while, and add a saltspoonful of salt. ARROWROOT GRUEL Moisten a teaspoonful of arrowroot in two tablespoon- fuls of cold water; add slowly a half pint of boiling water, and boil ten minutes. Pour, while hot, into the well-beaten white of one egg, add a saltspoonful of salt and serve. Cream may be substituted for egg if so desired. MEIGGS' GRUEL Put a level tablespoonful of gelose into a bowl, add a pint of milk and stand it in a cold place for one hour. Then add six almonds that have been blanched and chopped very fine ; put it in a double boiler and cook until the gelose is dissolved, strain, add three lumps of loaf sugar and four tablespoonfuls of cream. This may be used in hyperacidity, omitting the sugar; for children, hot or cold in place of milk. In typhoid omit sugar and use it cold. WINE WHEY Put one pint of milk into a saucepan ; heat gently to 160 Fahr., add four tablespoonfuls of sherry, strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth and it is ready for use. A quart of this may be made early in the day and kept in a cold place, and used as needed. The recipe is for a single feeding. RENNET WHEY Heat a quart of milk to blood heat ; add one teaspoon- ful of rennet essence dissolved in two tablespoonfuls of water; allow the milk to stand until it solidifies; then break the curd with a fork or egg beater, turn it into a cheese- cloth and allow it to drain; put at once into a cold place and use as needed. 256 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK LEMON WHEY Heat a pint of milk to 160 Fahr., add hastily the juice of a lemon, strain and use. This may be sweetened if sugar is allowed. TAMARIND WHEY Heat a pint of milk to 160 Fahr. Stir in a tablespoon- ful of tamarind pulp that has been moistened in a little water; as soon as the curd separates, strain and stand aside to cool. This is exceedingly good in cases of fever or chronic constipation. ALBUMINIZED WHEY Heat one quart of milk to 98 Fahr., add two table- spoonfuls of rennin essence or two junket tablets. Stand this aside until the milk solidifies, then break it with a fork, and strain it through cheesecloth, saving the whey. When the whey is perfectly cold, put half of it into a quart jar and add the unbeaten whites of two eggs. Screw on the top of the jar, shake until the eggs and whey are thoroughly blended, strain through a fine sieve into the remaining por- tion of whey, and stand aside in a cold place. Use in cases of acute gastritis. POSSET Put a half pint of milk in a saucepan; heat to 160 Fahr., add four tablespoonfuls of good sherry and three lumps of loaf sugar; stir for a moment, bring to a boil and strain. MULLED PORT WINE Put one clove, a grating of nutmeg, a bit of stick cin- namon, a little piece of mace and a bay leaf in a saucepan, with a half cupful of milk; bring to a boil, add six table- spoonfuls of good port wine and two lumps of loaf sugar a.nd strain. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 257 This is usually served warm with tiny bits of toasted bread. Claret may be used in cases where port does not agree and water may be substituted for milk. CLOTTED CREAM Strain new milk into shallow round granite or new tin pans and stand it in a cold place over night. In the morning lift the pans carefully, place them over a mild fire and heat slowly until the milk reaches 200 Fahr. Watch carefully and you will notice a ring appearing on the top of the cream; if the sides of the pan slant, the ring will be the size of the bot- tom of the pan. Take from the fire and stand away in a cold place for twenty-four hours. The cream will now be a com- pact, thick mass ; lift it carefully with a skimmer, put it into glass tumblers and keep on or near the ice. VELVET CREAM One Serving Cover one teaspoonful of granulated gelatin with two tablespoonfuls of milk, soak thirty minutes, add four table- spoonfuls of milk, stir it carefully over hot water until the gelatin dissolves ; then add a half cupful of cream, mix and turn at once into an individual mold or a glass punch cup ; stand aside until it solidifies. This may be served plain or with extra cream. Where sugar is allowable, add a table- spoonful to the heating gelatin. TO WHIP CREAM Cream, to whip well, must be at least thirty-six hours old and very cold ; put it in a bowl, stand the bowl in another of cracked ice and, with an ordinary egg beater, or a wire spoon, whip quickly, until it is solid to the bot- tom. Stop whipping, or it will be greasy. Serve heaped on a dainty glass dish or in a punch cup. It may be flavored with sherry or a little grated yellow orange rind, or it may be dusted with the powdered sugar. 17 258 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK RENNET PUFFS Heat a quart of milk until lukewarm, add a tablespoon- ful of rennet essence or a junket tablet, mix and stand aside thirty minutes. Stir the mixture, which should now be solid, until the curd is separated from the whey ; drain through a sieve. Put the curd in a bowl, add a tablespoon- ful of melted butter, a half teaspoonful of salt, and if admis- sible a dash of pepper ; beat, with an egg beater, until very light, fill it into little custard cups and stand them on the ice. At serving time turn the "puff" from the cup, pour over plain cream and serve. A few blanched, unroasted almonds are a nice accompaniment. SCHMIERKASE Few persons realize the difference between genuine schmierkase and ordinary cottage cheese. To make the "kase" turn two quarts of milk in a pan and stand it in a warm place until it forms a thick curd. Cut the curd with a knife so it will separate nicely from the whey. Pour over two quarts of boiling water, turn it in a muslin bag, and hang it to drain, over night. In the morning put the portion to be served into a bowl and beat with an egg beater at least two minutes ; season lightly with salt, and add sufficient sweet cream to make it the desired consist- ency, beat again, put it into the serving dish, put a table- spoonful of thick cream over the top and stand aside to cool. MULLED BUTTERMILK Put one quart of buttermilk in a double boiler over the fire until the water in the underneath boiler boils rapidly ; add one tablespoonful of cornstarch moistened in a little cold water, stir this for a minute, add the beaten yolks of three eggs, stir, over the fire, a minute longer. Take from the fire, add a pint of cold buttermilk and stand aside to cool. Serve warm or cold. Good in cases of alcoholism. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 259 RECIPES FOR THE PREPARATION OF PEPTONIZED MILK QUICK PROCESS Put one ounce of pure cold water into a tumbler, dis- solve it in quarter of the contents of a Fairchild's peptonizing tube ; stir this for a minute, add four ounces of milk that has been heated to 98 Fahr., stir and use immediately, sipping slowly. COLD PROCESS When warm peptonized milks are objectionable, use the cold process. Select a clean quart fruit jar, put in the con- tents of a Fairchild's peptonizing tube, add one gill of cold water, stir carefully for at least two minutes, then add one pint of sweet milk; screw the top on the jar and shake thor- oughly. Stand the jar in the top of the refrigerator, next to the ice. Do this about one hour before feeding time. When needed, shake the jar again, pour out the required portion and use the same as ordinary milk. Keep the remaining quantity next to the ice. PARTIALLY PEPTONIZED MILK Put into a glass jar the contents of one of Fairchild's peptonizing tubes, add one gill of cold water, stir a min- ,ute and add a pint of sweet, fresh milk; stand the jar in a saucepan of cold water, stir constantly until the water sur- rounding the jar boils, then stand aside to cool. When cold pour this carefully into a clean receptacle and put it in the ice chamber. Shake the bottle each time before pouring out the required portion. This may be served cold or hot, as the case may re- quire, and according to the physician's orders. If this is carefully prepared it is much more palatable than ordinary peptonized milk. 260 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK PEPTONIZED MILK Put the contents of one of Fairchild's peptonizing tubes in a clean quart jar, add one gill of cold water, stir one minute, add a pint of fresh, sweet milk, screw the top on the jar and shake until thoroughly mixed. Place the bottle in a saucepan of warm water, about 150 Fahr., keep it there for ten minutes, then remove the bottle and place it near the ice. The degree of digestion required may be regulated by the length of time that the jar is kept in the warm water. Sometimes five minutes will answer; where more thoroughly digested milk is required ten or fifteen minutes is sufficient. PEPTONIZED GRUEL Milk gruels may be peptonized according to the pre- ceding recipe. Arrowroot, German flour gruel are perhaps the best of the farinaceous materials to be chosen. PEPTONIZED MILK WITH CARBONATED OR EFFERVESCING WATERS Fill the glass half full of the peptonized milk, add two or three tablespoonfuls of shaved ice (if the ice is pure), and fill the glass from a siphon of the effervescing waters. The following recipes for digested and partly-digested foods are printed by permission of Fairchild Brothers and Foster, and are intended for Fairchild's Peptonizing Tubes, their Essence of Pepsin and other digestive ferments. LAIBOSE This preparation is made from the solids of milk, mixed with entire whole wheat, well cooked. The average approximate composition of laibose is as follows: Total dry solids, 94% ; protein iS% ; fat 17% ; carbohydrate 55% ; ash potassium and lime phosphates, etc.) 4% a nutritive balance of one part of protein to three of carbohydrate ; and MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 261 a heat and energy (caloric) coefficient of five to one of protein. LAIBOSE FORMULAS Fat Protein Carbohy- Ash Total Solids. drate I. Laibose I ounce 1 ^ % ^ % % ^ Water 5 ounces J [ ounce I 2.43% 2.56% 7.86% 0.56% 1341% Water 6 ounces J 3. Laibose i ounce , % % ^ % Q>5 Water 7 ounces J Water 8 ounces J 5. Laibose i ounce < % ^ ^ Water 9 ounces J A heaping tablespoonful of Laibose is approximately i ounce, avoirdupois. Laibose ^ Protein 18% 22.50 calories i Oz. Lpat 17% 46.07 " Calories! Carbohydrates 55% 62.63 131.20 DIRECTIONS FOR THE USE OF LAIBOSE Two level tablespoonfuls or one heaping tablespoon- ful (one ounce by weight) is a convenient and usual pro- portion. Put the Laibose into a dry porcelain bowl, moisten with a little cold water, stirring- until smooth ; then add boiling water to suit. Laibose may, however, be mixed simply with cold water and taken without cooking. SPECIALLY PEPTONIZED MILK For Making Milk Jelly, Milk Punch, Milk Lemonade, and for use with Fruit Juices or Acids Peptonize a pint of milk by the "Warm Process," keeping the bottle in the water bath for one hour; pour the peptonized milk into a saucepan and heat to boiling, 262 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK when it is ready for use if it is required hot; or it may be put on ice, in a bottle or any suitable container, to be used for punches, lemonade, etc. It is necessary to peptonize the milk quite completely for one hour so that it will not curdle when mixed with lemon juice or acid. The bitter taste of this "specially peptonized milk" is not evident in the jellies, punches, etc., and these foods are very agreeable and exceedingly assim- ilable. v PEPTONIZED MILK JELLY 1 pint "specially peptonized milk," hot y* box best gelatin Sugar to taste Rinds and juice of one fresh lemon and orange 2 or 3 tablespoonfuls best St. Croix rum, or brandy, etc. Soak the gelatin in a teacupful of cold water, pour the hot milk over it and add the sugar; stir until dis- solved, then throw in the lemon and orange rinds. Squeeze the juice of the lemon and orange into a glass and strain ; stir in the rum or brandy, etc., then mix with the milk and gelatin; strain. When the mixture has cooled to a syrup so as to be almost ready to set, pour into molds or glasses wet in cold water and put on ice or in cold water or in a cold place to harden ; if it is too warm when poured into the molds, it is apt to separate in setting. PEPTONIZED MILK PUNCH Take a goblet about one-third full of finely-crushed ice, add a tablespoonful of St. Croix rum, a dash of curacao, or any liquor that is agreeable to the taste; fill the glass with "specially peptonized milk," stir well and grate a little nutmeg on top. "Specially peptonized milk" may be used in the same way as fresh milk in making punches with St. Croix rum or Jamaica, or any spirits that may be preferred. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 263 PEPTONIZED MILK LEMONADE Take a goblet one-third full of finely-crushed ice; add the juice of a lemon, and sugar to taste ; fill the glass with "specially peptonized milk" and stir well. If preferred, equal parts of the peptonized milk and mineral water may be used instead of milk alone, the min- eral water being first poured on the ice and then the milk added; this makes a very agreeable effervescing punch. HOT PEPTONIZED MILK AS A BEVERAGE Hot peptonized milk is a grateful and nourishing bev- erage for invalids, dyspeptics, diabetics and consumptives. In many cases, it is most helpful in the morning, taken upon rising, or with breakfast, and it is excellent at any time when one suffers from exhaustion with intolerance of solid food. There is nothing better in the way of nourish- ment to take before retiring than hot peptonized milk, and at the table it is a good substitute for tea or coffee. PEPTONIZED MILK WITH CEREALS Oatmeal, rice, hominy, etc., are more readily digestible when taken with peptonized milk, and its use with the various cereals is especially recommended for young chil- dren and children with defective digestion. PEPTONIZED MILK GRUEL Mix a half pint of well-boiled hot gruel with a half pint of cold fresh milk and strain into a pitcher or jar; add immediately the powder contained in one of the Peptoniz- ing Tubes (Fairchild) and stir until it is dissolved. Put the pitcher or jar in a hot water bath or warm place for five minutes ; then pour the mixture into a clean bottle and place on ice ; serve hot or cold. The gruel may be made from arrowroot, wheat flour, barley, or oatmeal, etc. ; but in each instance the farinaceous 264 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK material should be boiled with water until the starch granules are thoroughly swollen and broken up. PARTIAL DIGESTION OF FARINACEOUS FOODS AT THE TABLE To a dish of well-cooked porridge of oatmeal, wheaten grits, or rice, etc., as warm as agreeable, add one or two teaspoonfuls of Diazyme Essence and stir for a few min- utes, until thoroughly mixed. The food must not be hotter than can be agreeably borne by the mouth, or the digestive principle will be destroyed. Extractum Pancreatis may be used in the same man- ner, a measureful of the dry powder instead of a teaspoon- ful of Diazyme Essence. This powder imparts no taste or odor to the food and is handy to use. It contains also the other digestive principles those capable of digesting milk, fat, etc., and thus aids in the digestion of the foods taken with the cereal. PEPTONIZED BEEF To a quarter pound of finely-minced, raw lean beef add a half-pint of cold water; cook over a slow fire to boiling and boil for a few minutes, stirring constantly from the beginning. Pour off the liquor and set it aside; rub the meat to a paste and put it into a clean glass jar or bottle with the liquor and a half pint of cold water; add Extractum Pancreatis 4 measures* (20 grs.) Soda Bicarbonate I measure (15 grs.) mixed thoroughly into one powder ; shake all well together and stand in a warm place, about no to 115 Fahr., for three hours, stirring or snaking occa- *Extractum Pancreatis can be obtained of any druggist, in I oz. bottles. With each oz. package are two measures one for 5 grs. Ex- tractum Pancreatis and one for 15 grs. Soda Bicarbonate. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 265 sionally, then boil quickly, strain, d"r clarify with white of egg in the usual manner; season to taste. This final boiling is essential ; if omitted, digestion will progress until the food is spoiled. For the great majority of cases, it is not necessary to strain the peptonized beef, for the portions remaining un- dissolved are so softened under the action of the Extractum Pancreatis that they are diffused in an almost impalpable condition in a form readily susceptible to digestion in the body. Chicken meat, alone, or mixed with an equal portion of beef, may be prepared in the same way. A cereal gruel, of wheat, arrowroot, etc., may be in- corporated with the beef, thus giving a food combination that is often highly desirable. The gruel is prepared in the usual manner, the dry cereal mixed perfectly smooth with cold water and cooked slowly in a double boiler until gelatinized. Four ounces of this gruel may be added to the meat paste, liquor, water and peptonizing powder as directed above, and the further details of the process carried out just as with the beef alone. The Extractum Pancreatis will at the same time digest both the meat and starch (of the gruel). The broth with the cereal is more agreeable than when made of meat alone. The peptonized beef or peptonized beef and cereal may also be made into a jelly. PEPTONIZED OYSTERS (Originally Suggested by Dr. M. A. Randolph) To a half dozen large oysters with their juice add a half pint of cold water; heat in a saucepan to boiling and boil briskly for a few m,inutes; pour off the broth and set it aside. 266 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Mince the oysters finely and reduce to a paste with a potato masher, in a wooden bowl; put in a glass jar with the broth and add Extractum Pancreatis 3 measures* (15 grs.) Soda Bicarbonate i measure (15 grs.) mixed thoroughly into one powder. Let the jar stand in hot water or in a warm place, where the temperature is not above 115 Fahr., for an hour and a half. Then pour into a saucepan, stir in a half pint of milk and heat slowly to boiling point. Season to taste and serve hot. The boiling is essential to prevent further digestion and keep the broth from spoiling. If heated gradually, the milk will be sufficiently digested before the mixture boils. The very small bits of oyster that remain undissolved may be strained out, or rejected in eating the soup, but are rarely unacceptable to the stomach. *Extractum Pancreatis can be obtained of any druggist, in I oz. bottles. With each oz. package are two measures one for 5 grs. Ex- tractum Pancreatis and one for 15 grs. Soda Bicarbonate. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 267 FOODS PANOPEPTON FOOD FOR THE SICK The entire soluble digestible substance of beef and wheat is sterile solution, perfectly assimilable; designed especially for patients under conditions where the ordinary foods are unsuitable or intolerable. Analysis on label. LAIBOSE A FOOD The solids of pure whole milk and the entire digestible substance of whole wheat in a dry granular form; highly concentrated, standardized, definitely "balanced" no cel- lulose, no cane sugar. Made ready by dilution with water. Analysis on label. ENEMOSE FOR COLONIC ALIMENTATION Entire substance of beef and wheat in highly diffusible solution, concentrated, non-coagulable, proteins mostly in state of ultimate cleavage, fitted for absorption. To make ready dissolve in warm water. Analysis on label. PANOPEPTON IN VARIOUS WAYS In cases where the prolonged use of Panopepton is necessary, there is, in addition to the usual manner of giv- ing it, quite a variety of ways of making it pleasing and grateful to the invalid ; the following are suggested : ICED PANOPEPTON To a small glass half full of clean crushed ice add one tablespoonful of Panopepton ; let it stand a moment and then sip slowly. 268 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK PANOPEPTON JELLY One ounce fresh Celery (cut in small pieces) One-half (^) of a small box best Gelatin One-quarter teaspoonful Salt Two dashes Pepper Six tablespoonfuls Panopepton Two cupfuls Cold Water Soak the gelatin in one-half cupful of cold water for one hour; put the water and celery in a double boiler on the fire and simmer one-half hour; add the salt, pepper, and soaked gelatin and stir until it is dissolved ; remove from fire, add Panopepton, stir, and strain through linen into a jelly jar, and set near ice. Serve in small quantities. PANOPEPTON JELLY WITH ORANGE One-half (^) of a small box best Gelatin One tablespoonful ................. Sugar Six tablespoonfuls ................ Panopepton The juice and peel of one ......... Orange One pint ....................... Cold Water Put the gelatin, orange peel (cut in small pieces), orange juice, and cold water in a dish and let it stand for one hour, then put in a double boiler on the fire, add the sugar and stir until it is dissolved ; now strain through linen, add the Panopepton and stir well. Pour into a jelly jar and set near ice. Serve in small quantities. PANOPEPTON HOT To a small teacup two-thirds full of boiling water, add one tablespoonful of Panopepton, and one teaspoonful of fresh lemon juice a little sugar, if desired stir. Drink immediately, sipping slowly. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 269 PANOPEPTON BOUILLON HOT Put one tablespoonful of Panopepton into a small tea- cup ; fill the cup nearly full of boiling water, and flavor to taste with celery salt, or plain salt and pepper; stir, and sip slowly. PANOPEPTON CORDIAL Put into a cordial glass or any small glass two teaspoonfuls of clean crushed ice ; add one teaspoonful of Fairchild's Essence of Pepsin and three teaspoonfuls of Panopepton. Sip slowly. PANOPEPTON WITH WHEY Put into a small teacup one or two teaspoonfuls' of clean crushed ice ; add one tablespoonful of Panopepton, stir, then fill the cup with whey. Drink slowly. 270 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK JUNKET AND WHEY The milk foods familiarly known as junket and whey are now included in the modern "diet list" for the sick, convalescent, invalid and dyspeptic. The prestige of these foods is directly due to the certainty and satisfaction with which they have been long prepared by means of Essence of Pepsin. THE JUNKET, SOFT, SEMI-SOLID MILK so prepared presents the entire milk in a semi-solid, jelly- like form, especially agreeable to patients who are obliged to refrain for the most part from solid food, and who do not well tolerate plain milk. The junket gives a sense of substance, yet is extremely diffusible and digestible. It may be made extra nutritious by the addition of an egg (or yolk) ; may be flavored if desired with coffee, cocoa, vanilla, etc. The plain junket is often used to great advantage in the dietary of children after weaning. THE WHEY ITS ANALYSIS Proteins (soluble) 0.79% Lactose 4-73% Ash 0.44% Fat a. trace contains the soluble albuminoids, sugar and saline con- stituents of the milk and (in suspension) the particles of casein and fat which may pass through the strainer. Whey is excellent as a means of varying the diet of the sick, often of special service in fevers allaying thirst, refresh- ing, nourishing; proves a valuable resource as a food for infants in cases of difficult feeding and under conditions where "rest feeding" is indicated. MRS. RORER^S DIET FOR THE SICK 271 TO MAKE JUNKET AND WHEY JUNKET Into a small clean bowl put one teaspoonful of Pep- sencia (Essence of Pepsin, Fairchild) and add one-half pint of fresh cool milk; stir gently to mix thoroughly. Place the bowl containing the milk and Pepsencia in a dish or pan of larger size and pour into the larger dish or pan boiling water sufficient to come to the level of the mixture, Let the bowl stand in the hot water for two minutes, then remove and let it stand until the milk is firmly jellied, when the junket is ready for use, just as it is, or with sugar, grated nutmeg, etc. To keep the junket, put it on ice or in a very cold place. If preferred, the milk and Pepsencia as soon as thor- ougly mixed in the bowl may be divided into small cups, these placed in a dish or pan, boiling water poured around them and the rest of the directions followed as above. The junket in small cups is more attractive to the patient. WHEY Prepare junket by the formula above (using a pint of milk and two teaspoonfuls of Pepsencia if a larger quan- tity of whey is desired). When the milk is firmly jellied, beat with a fork until it is finely divided, then strain, and the whey (liquid part) is ready for use. The whey must be kept cold on ice or in a very cold place. WHEY AND MILK MODIFICATIONS If the whey is to be used with milk, in a milk-and- whey modification, it should be heated to at least 150 Fahr. as soon as strained ; if not thus heated, it will curdle the milk. The whey may be strained quite clear if this seems desirable. 272 MRS. RORER'S DIET FO"R THE SICK WHEY WITH GRAPE JUICE Prepare whey with Pepsencia as directed, using one pint of milk; strain through cheesecloth to remove curds; add the juice of one lemon, one pint of grape juice, and sugar to sweeten ; strain again through cheesecloth and place in ice chest ; serve on finely-cracked ice, or with an equal quantity of carbonic water; or freeze and serve as an ice. The lemon juice may be omitted, in which case the sugar is unnecessary. EGG JUNKET Beat to a froth one strictly fresh egg; sweeten with one or two teaspoonfuls of sugar; stir in thoroughly one-half pint of fresh cool milk; add one teaspoonful of Pepsencia ; stir again to mix thoroughly ; divide into small cups if pre- ferred ; prepare in precisely the same manner as the plain junket. A little nutmeg or cinnamon may be grated over the junket. To keep the egg junket, put it on ice or in a very cold place. COCOA JUNKET Mix an even tablespoonful of any good cocoa with two teaspoonfuls of sugar; scald with two tablespoonfuls of boiling water ; rub this paste smooth ; stir in thoroughly one-half pint of fresh cool milk ; add one teaspoonful of Pepsencia ; stir again to mix thoroughly ; divide into small cups if preferred ; prepare in precisely the same manner as the plain junket. This cocoa junket may be placed on ice and taken cold ; as a dessert, may be served with whipped cream. COFFEE JUNKET Dissolve two teaspoonfuls of sugar in two tablespoon- fuls of clear strong coffee ; stir in thoroughly one-half pint of fresh cool milk; add one teaspoonful of Pepsencia; stir again to mix thoroughly; divide into small cups if pre- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 273 ferred; prepare in precisely the same manner as the plain junket. This coffee junket may be placed on ice and taken cold; as a dessert, may be served with whipped cream. VANILLA, BITTER ALMOND OR STRAWBERRY JUNKET Add the flavoring- a half teaspoonful of vanilla, or bitter almond extract, or a tablespoonful of pure concen- trated strawberry syrup, to a half pint of fresh cool milk; add a teaspoonful of Pepsencia and prepare as usual. FROZEN JUNKET Prepare junket with Pepsencia as directed; add one- half the quantity of pure cream; pour at once into the freezer and freeze the same as ice cream. 18 274 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK . EGGS Eggs are next in importance to milk in diet for the sick, and for invalids, children and the aged. They are nitroge- nous, taking the place of meat, fish or milk. The digestibility of an egg is governed largely by the method of cooking. Coddled, poached or soft boiled, they are easily digested. A raw egg eaten unseasoned is not so quickly digested as one lightly cooked. An ordinary hard- boiled egg is very difficult of digestion, both yolk and white. When properly hard boiled, however, the yolk is quite as easy of digestion as a soft-cooked egg. The yolk of an egg is frequently added to liquid foods to increase their nutritive value. In cases of chronic or acute gastritis and flatulent dyspepsia, the white of an egg is more easily digested than the yolk. It may be beaten with fruit juice, or thoroughly shaken with milk or any of the water gruels. Eggs may be used freely in tuberculosis, asthma, ton- silitis, quinsy and chronic diarrhoea, the white should be avoided by those who are subject to flatulency, gastritis with dilatation, chronic gastritis, intestinal catarrh and Bright's disease. Wash the shells of all eggs thoroughly before cooking them. To ascertain the freshness of an egg without breaking it, drop it in a bucket of cold water; if it topples around in the water or stands on its ends, it is fairly fresh, but should be rejected as food for invalids; if it floats do not use it at all ; but if it sinks quickly to the bottom and falls on its side it is perfectly safe. CODDLED EGGS This is one of the best methods of cooking eggs for the sick. Drop one or two eggs into a quart of boiling water ; the water may be either in a kettle, or a saucepan with a lid; MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 275 cover and stand on a table away from the fire, six minutes, or if the eggs are to be served very soft, five minutes. Serve in a hot cup. If cooked correctly the white will be con- gealed but soft, while the yolks will be quite well cooked. SHIRRED EGGS Select a small individual egg dish or ramekin, cover the bottom with a few fresh bread crumbs, drop in one fresh egg, stand the dish in a pan of hot water and in a moderate oven until the egg is "set" and looks like a poached egg; dust it with salt, put on a bit of butter and serve at once. POACHED EGGS Drop a perfectly fresh egg into a saucepan of boiling water; sprinkle over a little salt, and pull the pan to the side of the stove where the water cannot possibly boil. Have ready a piece of toast the shape of the egg but a little larger; butter it quickly, lift the egg on an egg-slice or skimmer, with a spoon cut off the ragged edges, and slide it carefully on the toast. EGGS, HUNGARY Boil four tablespoonfuls of rice in plenty of water; when very tender, drain, and arrange neatly in the center of an individual platter; put on top a nicely poached egg, and, on top of this, a tablespoonful of cream sauce. EGGS, VIRGINIA Score the center of each row of grains on one ear of corn ; with a dull knife scrape out the pulp, being very careful not to get one particle of the hull. Put the pulp in a saucepan or cup, stand it over hot water for twenty minutes, until thoroughly cooked. When ready to serve, put a round of toast in the middle of the platter, season the corn with a little salt, add a tablespoonful of cream, 276 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK and pour it over the toast. Place in the center one well- poached egg.. Dust with salt and serve. An excellent luncheon for a child or the aged. FRENCH POACHED EGGS Fill a deep saucepan two-thirds full of boiling water, put it over a quick fire where it will boil rapidly. Take a wooden paddle or spoon, stir rapidly around the edge until the water forms a whirlpool, with a hole in the center. Break two fresh eggs into two saucers, drop one in the center of the water, keep up the whirling, drop in the sec- ond, keep the spoon going around the edge until the eggs are coagulated on the outside. Lift them carefully with a skimmer and put at once into an egg cup. The French fry their eggs in the same manner, keeping the fat whirling. Fried eggs cannot be recommended, how- ever, for the sick. EGGS a la MARTIN One Serving Rub a teaspoonful of butter and a teaspoonful of flour together and add four tablespoonfuls of milk ; stir over the fire until the milk reaches boiling point, add a quarter of a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of black pepper. Put half of this sauce in a ramekin dish, break in one whole egg, put the remaining sauce over the top, dust over a few bread crumbs, stand the dish in a pan of water and bake until the white of the egg is "set." Serve at once. FLUFFED EGGS Separate one egg, being very careful not to break the yolk. Stand the yolk in the shell in a dish of salt or flour, anything that will keep it straight; beat the white until it is very light, put it in a saucer or an individual dish, make a little well in the center, drop in the yolk, stand the dish in a pan of hot water, cover and steam for about a minute and MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 277 a half; take from the fire, put a piece of butter, the size of a large pea, on the yolk, dust it with a little salt and serve it at once. This is one of the most easily-digested of all the egg dishes ;' it is not only palatable, but sightly. EGG FLIP Separate an egg; beat the white until it is very, very stiff; add a teaspoonful of powdered sugar, beat again, drop into it the yolk and beat until mixed ; if admissible, add a teaspoonful of brandy; heap this into a glass saucer, dust with powdered sugar, and serve. In incurable troubles, where all food seems to disagree, the stomach will frequently bear an egg flip with ease. Of course the brandy may be omitted ; sherry may be added or it may be served plain; do not add flavoring extracts of any kind. SNOW EGGS , Beat the white of one egg to a stiff froth. Put a half pint of milk in a double boiler, drop the white by spoonfuls on the top of the hot milk, let them stand a moment, lift them with a skimmer and put them on a breakfast plate. Repeat until all the white has been cooked. Moisten a teaspoonful of arrowroot in cold milk, add it to the hot milk, cook until smooth, add two teaspoonfuls of sugar and the yolk of the egg, stir until hot, take from the fire, add a tablespoonful of sherry and stand aside to cool. When cold dish the white of the egg in a pyramid, pour around the custard, and they are ready to serve. EGG CORDIAL Separate an egg, beat the white to a stiff froth, add a teaspoonful of powdered sugar and beat again until fine and dry, stir in one tablespoonful of cream beaten to a stiff froth, and a tablespoonful of brandy. Turn into a glass and serve at once. 278 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK GOLDEN NOG Beat the white of an egg until it is very, very stiff. Half fill a lemonade or punch glass with strained orange juice, float the beaten white on top, heaping it up daintily. Other fruit juices may be used in the same fashion, but orange, grape and apple are the most palatable. Excellent in cases of typhoid. EGGNOG Separate an egg; beat the white until light, add the yolk, beat again, add a tablespoonful of granulated sugar, beat for a moment and add three ounces of milk. Pour the mixture backward and forward from one tumbler to another and finally pour it into a perfectly clean tumbler, dust over a little grated nutmeg and use at once. FRENCH EGGNOG Beat the white of an egg until stiff, add the yolk and beat again. Pour over it hastily three ounces of scalding hot milk, pour from one tumbler to- another for a moment, and, if admissible, add a tablespoonful of whiskey or brandy; turn into a clean tumbler, dust lightly with nut- meg, and serve. EGG AND WHEY Separate an egg, beat the white until it is stiff, add the yolk and beat again ; add to this three ounces of rennet whey and a tablespoonful of good cream. Pour backward and forward from one tumbler to another for a moment, turn it into a clean tumbler, dust with a little nutmeg and serve. EGG PUNCH Separate an egg and beat the white until it is very stiff. Beat the yolk, pour into it two-thirds of a cupful of boiling water, beating all the while, add a tablespoonful of granu- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 279 lated sugar and the white, and pour at once into a clean tum- bler. Serve plain or flavored with brandy, sherry, port or whiskey, according to orders. EGG AND SHERRY Put six tablespoonfuls of sherry into a small tumbler, and drop into it a small fresh egg. The egg must be swal- lowed whole. EGG AND MULLED WINE Put a half cupful of sherry or port into a saucepan; add a small piece of stick cinnamon and a clove, heat over hot water, and pour, while hot, into one well-beaten egg, strain, turn into a tumbler and serve at once. EGG LEMONADE Separate one egg, beat the white, then add the yolk and beat again ; dissolve a tablespoonful of sugar in a little cold water, add a half cupful of water and the juice of one lemon ; add this gradually to the beaten egg, strain into a tumbler and serve. Or put all the ingredients into a "shaker," shake well and strain. CAUDLE Make a cornmeal gruel from water and pour while hot over one egg well beaten ; add four tablespoonfuls of sherry, turn it into a clean tumbler and dust with grated nutmeg. This may be served either hot or cold. With a piece of zweibaek it makes an exceedingly good luncheon for a convalescing patient. HARD-BOILED EGG Put an egg into cold water, bring the water quickly to boiling point, remove the saucepan at once from the fire and allow it to stand covered on the table for thirty minutes. 280 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK This will make the yolk mealy and dry, and will also soften the white; the white, however, is unfit for sick diet. When eggs are expensive, break the egg, reserve the white, raw, for another dish, drop the yolk in the shell down into boiling water, cover the kettle and stand it away from the fire for forty minutes. The yolk will be just as palatable, just as dry and mealy, and you will have the white for an- other dish. GOLDEN TOAST Cut the crust from a half-inch slice of bread, dry the bread in the oven, then toast it quickly until a golden brown, put it in a small vegetable dish or platter, pour over a half cupful of scalded milk to which you have added a saltspoon- ful of salt. Garnish the top of this with the hard-boiled yolk of one egg pressed through a sieve. Serve immediately. If fatty matter is called for, spread the bread with butter before pouring over the milk, or add to the milk after you take it from the fire a tablespoonful of thick cream. Hard boil one egg. Separate the white and the yolk, after it has been boiled, chop the white very fine or press it through a fine sieve, or put it through a vegetable press. Do the yolk the same. Keep them separate. Toast a square of bread. Put two level teaspoonfuls of butter and two of flour into a saucepan, mix, add eight tablespoonfuls of milk, stir over hot water until the sauce thickens, add a saltspoonful of salt and the whites of the eggs. Stir again, until hot ; heap this on toast, cover it all over with the yolk of the egg, dust very lightly with salt, and serve at once. A good supper for children, the aged or consumptives. EGYPTIAN EGGS Beat one egg just enough to mix the white and yolk; add two tablespoonfuls of water and one tablespoonful of plain cream or cocoanut cream, the latter to be preferred; MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 281 stand the bowl in a pan of boiling water, and beat rapidly until the egg is slightly congealed; turn this into a pretty little dish; put at the ends two triangular pieces of well- made toast; dust lightly with salt, and serve. EGGS, JEFFERSON Select a smooth, round tomato; cut a slice from the stem end and carefully cut out the seeds and core ; put the tomato in a small granite or earthen dish, and then in the oven for about ten minutes, until thoroughly heated. Take from the oven, put in a half teaspoonful of butter, a dusting of salt, and then break in one fresh egg. Put this back in the oven until the egg is "set." Dust lightly with salt, dish neatly, and serve. EGGS, CARDOZE Bake a medium-size, shapely potato until thoroughly done. Cut a slice from the side, scoop out the flesh, leaving a wall a half inch thick. Mash the potato; add two table- spoonfuls of cream and beat until light. Break into the potato a fresh egg, and put it back into the oven until the egg is set. Then cover the entire top with the mashed potato, brush with cream, and brown quickly in the oven. Dish on a paper mat, stick a pretty sprig of parsley, at the side, and serve. 282 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK VEGETABLES Vegetables are divided into four classes : those rich in nitrogen muscle and tissue-building foods; those con- taining carbohydrates sugars and starch ; fatty vegetables nuts and olives; and succulent vegetables, containing little but water and mineral matter. In the first class we have old peas, beans and lentils, soy beans and the chick pea of the East. Starch is also found in goodly quantities in these vegetables. Cereals and cereal foods, as bread and Italian pastes, contain both nitrogen and starch. In the second class, carbohydrates, we have rice, pota- toes, yams, taro, cush-cush, cassava, tapioca and sago. In the third class, vegetables containing mineral mat- ter and water, are cabbage, carrots, turnips, spinach, cress, cymlins, cucumbers, lettuce, tomatoes, very young green peas, string beans, onions and christophines. Vegetables as a rule should be cooked in water, in an uncovered vessel. Rapid boiling frequently toughens the fibre of underground vegetables. Cooked at 210 Fahr. they become tender quickly, and retain their flavor and color. Rice and macaroni, however, should be boiled rapidly, not that the water is hotter, but the motion of rapidly-boiling water washes apart and separates the par- ticles. All starchy vegetables must be cooked at the boiling point. All vegetables must go over the fire in boiling water. To green vegetables add a teaspoonful of salt to each half gallon of water in which they are to be boiled. Under- ground vegetables, the roots and tubers of plants, are bet- ter cooked in unsalted water. For instance, turnips are white, sweet, palatable and easily digested if cut into blocks and cooked carefully in unsalted water. If boiled rapidly in salted water, they lose their color, flavor and digestibility, and are coarse and unpalatable. Raw cabbage with French dressing is digested by a person in health in two and a half hours ; boiled it takes five hours. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 283 Dried vegetables, as peas, beans and lentils, must be cooked in soft water, if possible. The salts of lime in hard water coagulate the casein and render it dense and difficult of digestion. For the sick, all vegetables must be freshly gathered, otherwise do not use them. They should be thrown in cold water the moment they come from the market. Do not add salt to the water as it draws out the juices and hardens the fibre. For the convenience of persons who are on restricted diet, the vegetables in this book have been arranged in groups, so that their chemical constitutents may be seen at a glance. BOTANICAL CLASSIFICATION OF OUR COMMON VEGETABLES Dicotyledons CRUCIFER.E, Mustard Family. Water-cress ; Horseradish ; Cabbage tribe ; Turnip ; Rutabaga ; Mustard, black and white; Peppergrass; Radish. CAPPARIDACE^E, Caper Family. Capers. MALVACEAE, Mallow Family. Okra. GERANIACE^E, Geranium Family. Wood Sorrel, Nasturtium. LEGUMINOS;E, Pulse Family. Soy Bean ; Peanut ; Kidney Bean ; String Bean ; Lima Bean ; Black Bean; Pea; Chick Pea; Lentil; St. John's Bread. CUCURBITACE/E, Gourd Family. Pumpkin ; Squash, summer and winter ; Cucumber ; Vegetable Marrow; Christophines. UMBELLIFER.E, Parsley Family. This family contains many of the aromatic seeds. Carrot; Coriander ; Sweet Cicely ; Fennel ; Celery ; Celeriac ; Caraway ; Parsley; Angelica; Parsnip. 284 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK VALERIANACE^E, Valerian Family. Corn Salad. COMPOSITE, Composite Family. Jerusalem Artichoke ; Globe Artichoke ; Cardoon ; Chicory ; En- dive; Salsify; Dandelion; Lettuce; Romaine. CONVOLVULACE^E, Convolvulus Family. Sweet Potato. SOLANACKS, Nightshade Family. Tomato; White Potato; Egg Plant; Chili Peppers, in all its varieties. LABIATE, Mint Family. The leaves of the plants of this family are aromatic. Sweet Basil; Mint; Savory; Marjoram; Thyme; Sage; Stachys. CHENOPODIACE^:, Goosefoot Family. Spinach ; Beet. PHYTOLACCACE^E, Poke-weed Family. Poke or Scoke. POLYGONACE^:, Buckwheat Family. Dock ; Sorrel ; Buckwheat. LAURACE^E, Laurel Family. (This is not the family to which the mountain and sheep laurel belong.) Sassafras; Bay-leaves. Monocotyledons SCITAMINE^E, Banana Family. Ginger; Arrowroot; Tous-les-mois ; Banana, DIOSCOREACEJE, Yam Family. Yam. LILIACE^E, Lily Family. . Asparagus ; Onion ; Leek ; Garlic ; Scullion ; Chives ; Shallots. PALMACE^:, Palm Family. Sago (Dates and Cocoanuts). :, Grass Family. Rice; Oats; Wheat; Rye; Barley; Maize; Sorghum; Durra or Kaffir Corn ; Millet. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 285 Some of the seaweeds have proved valuable in periods of scarcity, while the Irish moss and gelose are used at all times. Many lichens have been used as dyes, but very few as food. Arctic explorers have sometimes been forced to eat various plants of this group. The best known lichen, how- ever, is the Iceland moss. PLANTS USED AS FLAVORINGS TO OTHER PLANTS Under this heading we have Parsley (Carum petroselinum, Bentham^ Chervil (Myrrhis odorata, Linn.,) Tarragon (Artemisia Dracunculus) Angelica ( ' Archangelica officinalis, Linn.,) Capers (Cappaxris spinosa) Nasturtium (Tropaeolum majus, LinnJ Garlic (Allium sativum) Shallots (Allium Ascalonicum, Linn.,) Chives (Allium Schaenoprasum, Linn.,) Bay Leaves (Laurus nobilis, Linn.,) Gumbo File Powder (Sassafras offiicinale, Nees,) Sweet Marjoram (Origanum majorana, Linn.,) Summer Savory (Satureia hortensis, LinnJ Sage (Salvia officinalis, Linn.,) Sweet Basil (Ocimum Basilicum) Thyme (Thymus vulgaris, or Thymus Serpyllum) Mint; Spearmint (Mentha viridis, Linn.) Dill (Peucedanum graveolens) Anise (Pimpinella anisum) Caraway (Carum Carui, Linn.,) Cardamom (Elettaria cardamomum) Coriander (Coriandrum sativum, Linn.,) Cumin-seeds (Cuminum cyminum) Fennel (Faeniculum officinale, Allioni) While these plants are never used alone, and have little or no food value, they contain pungent or volatile oils 286 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK valuable in intensifying the flavor of other vegetables. They must be used in small quantities, and never for the sick without a physician's orders. Tarragon, steeped in a small quantity of vinegar, fil- tered or strained, is used as a flavoring for salad dressings. Capers are used as a flavoring and garnish to chicken salad, and in a sauce for boiled mutton. There is but one of these materials that needs a special mention, and that is the gumbo file powder. This is made from the very young leaves of the sassafras tree (Sassafras officinale, Nees), picked during the middle of the day, dried quickly in the sun, rubbed in the hands until they are rather fine, and sifted through a fine sieve. Use as thick- ening to chicken or vegetable broth, or in gumbo soup. Allow a half teaspoonful to each pint of soup. The Creoles add gumbo file powder to chicken, oyster and crab soup. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 287 A GROUP OF STARCHY VEGETABLES Potatoes Yams Rice Tapico Hominy Sago Hominy grits Cassava Italian pastes in general, as ver- Arrowroot micelli, macaroni, spaghetti Tous-les-mois Chestnuts Taro Sweet potatoes Starchy vegetables belong to the carbohydrates, are fat formers and heat 'and energy producers. The primary digestion of all starchy foods is in the mouth; thorough mastication aids the final digestion in the small intestines. POTATOES (Solatium Tuberosum, Linnaeus) COMPOSITION OF POTATOES (Church) Water 75.0 Albuminoids 1.2 Extractives, as solanin and organic acids 1.5 Starch 18.0 Dextrin and pectose 2.0 Fat '. 0.3 Cellulose i.o Mineral matter i.o The portion of the potato plant used as food consti- tutes an enlarged or gorged underground stem, and is the storehouse for the nourishment of the young plant. Many varieties are grown in this country, which are all cooked more or less alike. For the sick, invalids and children, use only full-grow^! ripe potatoes; those very young or very old are apt to provoke indigestion. The water in which potatoes are boiled must be thrown away ; it is usually unsafe for food. Pare the potatoes very sparingly, as both nourishment and mineral matter are in greater proportion near the skin. 288 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK As the flavor of potatoes is due to the mineral matter, they are more tasty when boiled in their "jackets." Care- fully-cooked potatoes make a good, easily-digested starchy food. The amount of nitrogen is small, but when served with the more nitrogenous foods, old peas, beans, nuts, meats, eggs and milk, help to make a balanced ration. Baked, boiled, mashed and rebaked, they are more easily digested than when cooked with fat. Fried foods are unfit for the well, and should never be used for invalids or chil- dren. TO BOIL POTATOES Take a thin paring from the potatoes, remove the eyes, throw them at once into cold water; when ready to cook, drop them into a kettle of boiling, unsalted water, boil rapidly ten miutes, and cook at the boiling point until the potatoes are very nearly done. Throw in a cup of cold water to cool the surface ; this will allow the center to cook just a moment longer and will make the potato more mealy. As soon as the water again reaches boiling point and the potato is tender to the center, drain it perfectly dry, dust it with a little salt, and shake it over the fire, holding the pot at least six inches from the stove. When dry and white like a snowball, dish it on a folded napkin or small doily and serve it at once. MASHED POTATOES Mash a well-boiled potato either with a silver fork or through a sieve; add two or three tablespoonfuls of hot milk, stand the bowl in a pan of hot water, and with a silver fork beat the potato until it is white and light. Dish it in a small heated dish and serve at once. Do not cover it, nor do not pat it down. RICE POTATO Press a well-beaten mashed potato through a vegetable press on to a heated dish; serve quickly. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 289 POTATO PUFF Heap in rugged fashion a well-mashed potato in a small baking dish or individual casserole, touch it here and there with the beaten yolk of egg, then brush it over with the white of egg and bake in a quick oven until a golden brown. POTATO ROSES Put a mashed potato into an ordinary pastry bag, hold- ing a star tube ; press the potato into a baking pan, making good-sized roses; touch them lightly with beaten white of egg and run them into a hot oven until a golden brown. Arrange neatly on a small doily and serve. A sprig of parsley between the roses adds to the attractiveness of the dish. CREAMED POTATOES Chop a cold boiled potato rather fine. Put a teaspoon- ful of butter and a teaspoonful of flour into a saucepan, mix, add a half cupful of milk, stir until boiling, a.dd a quarter of a teaspoonful of salt and the potato. Turn this into an individual baking dish, dust lightly with fine bread crumbs and bake to a golden brown. POTATO TIMBALE Add a well-beaten yolk of an egg, a half teaspoonful of salt and one drop of Tabasco to a mashed potato. Line the bottom of a small timbale mold with greased paper, fill in the potato mixture, stand in a baking pan of boiling water and cook in the oven twenty minutes. When done, loosen the sides with a limber knife, turn the timbale out on a small heated dish, and garnish with very tender young peas. This is an exceedingly nice accompaniment to a broiled lamb chop, and makes an easily-digested meal for an in- valid or child. 19 290 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK POTATO SOUFFLE Stir the well-beaten white of one egg into a mashed potato; heap it into an individual casserole or ramekin dish and bake in the oven until a golden brown. POTATOES a la CREME Chop one cold boiled potato rather fine; add a grating of nutmeg and a saltspoonful of salt. Add a dash of Tabasco to four tablespoonfuls of cream ; add this to the potato, turn into an individual baking dish and bake in a quick oven fifteen minutes. BAKED POTATOES Select a perfectly sound, medium large potato; brush the potato thoroughly in cold water until the skin is clean, then rinse, and allow it to remain in cold water for at least a half hour. Then place it on the grate in a moderately hot oven and bake slowly until tender; this will take from three-quarters of an hour to an hour. When done, take the potato in a napkin in your hand and press it gently all over, without breaking the skin ; when it has been thor- oughly mashed to the very center, slash it one side in the form of a cross, stand it on a folded napkin and serve at once. A piece of butter may be put in the center of a baked potato, and one may add, if admissible, a drop of Tabasco. The potato is more easily digested, however, if eaten with just a little salt. Never stick a fork into a baking potato to see if it is done; this breaks the skin, allows the steam to escape and makes the potato soggy. Do not have the oven too hot; the skin becomes hard at once and prevents the evaporation of the water, which makes the potato wet and unpalatable. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 291 POTATO PUREE Break a well-baked potato into halves and scoop out all the mealy portion ; add four tablespoonfuls of good cream and a saltspoonful of salt ; beat it quickly with a silver fork and serve on a heated plate. STUFFED POTATOES This is a nice way to serve a baked potato, both to children and invalids. The second baking makes it more easily digested. Cut a baked potato into halves, scoop out the center, mash it with a silver fork, add four or five tablespoonfuls of hot milk, a saltspoonful of salt, and if admissible a dash of Tabasco ; otherwise omit pepper. Beat until light, and fold in carefully the well-beaten white of one egg. Fill the "shells," but do not pat the mixture down to make it heavy. Brush the top lightly with milk, and bake in a moderate oven until a golden brown. Serve on a dainty paper doily or a folded linen napkin. POTATO BALLS Put a well-baked potato through a vegetable press, add the yolk of one egg and a palatable seasoning of salt. When well mixed, add two tablespoonfuls of milk or cream, form into balls the size of an English walnut, roll in milk, then in fine bread crumbs, stand on a baking sheet and bake in a quick oven until a golden brown. Heap like cannon balls on a folded napkin. These make a nice variety to an invalid's diet, and are also nice for children. RICE Rice is exceedingly rich in starch, and when unpolished contains also a considerable amount of protein. It is said that the varieties grown in East India contain more nitrogen than rice grown in the United States. 292 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK In boiling, rice parts with a goodly quantity of both starch and mineral matter. For children, it should be thor- oughly washed and soaked in cold water, and steamed. The water in which rice has been boiled should be saved for soups or used as rice water. Rice containing four times as much nourishment as potatoes and when carefully cooketl in water requires only one hour for perfect digestion. If overcooked and soggy, it is apt to cause fermentation, the same as a badly-cooked potato. Well cooked, it furnishes energy food for nearly three-quarters of the world's inhabitants. The tables following will give the comparative analysis of cooked and uncooked rice COMPOSITION OF DRY RICE (Church) Water 14.6 Albuminoids, etc 7.5 Starch, etc 76.0 Fat 0.5 Cellulose 0.9 Mineral matter 0.5 COMPOSITION OF BOILED RICE (Hutchinson) Water 52.7 Proteid 5.0 Fat o.i Carbo-hydrates 41.9 Mineral matter 0.3 The rice-eating people of the world, those who use rice as a staple food, three times a day, do not add salt, as is the fashion among people of the United States ; they do not have the craving for salt that is found among potato-eating people. Where rice is the only form of starchy food, learn to eat it without salt. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 293 TO BOIL RICE One Serving Wash four tablespoonfuls of rice through several cold waters. Put one quart of water in a saucepan, when boiling rapidly, sprinkle in the rice slowly ; do not stop the boiling, and boil rapidly, uncovered, for fifteen minutes. Drain the rice in a sieve, pour over quickly a half cup of cold water, stand the sieve on a plate at the oven door where it will dry. Turn it at once into a small vegetable dish and serve uncovered. To be well cooked and perfect, each grain must be swollen four times its original size, and no two grains must be sticking together. STEAMED RICE One Serving Wash four tablespoonfuls of rice through cold water, let it soak an hour, put it in a small sieve, stand over boil- ing water, cover and steam for thirty minutes. Turn into a heated dish and serve. RICE PUDDING Two Servings Put one tablespoonful of unwashed rice into one pint of milk, add a half tablespoonful of sugar ; when the sugar is dissolved turn it into a small baking dish and bake one hour, stirring down the crust every ten minutes. To be absolutely correct, this pudding must be like thick cream not stiff enough to require a sauce. Serve warm or cold. RICE a 1'IMPERATRICE One Serving Pare and stone one peach, put it in a baking dish, dust it lightly with sugar and stand it in the oven until perfectly soft. Have ready boiled three tablespoonfuls of rice, put the peach on top, dust it with powdered sugar and serve with plain cream. MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK RICE MERINGUE One Serving Wash one tablespoonful of rice through several cold waters, throw it into boiling water, boil rapidly ten min- utes and drain. Add a half cupful of cold milk, and the yolk of an egg beaten with a half tablespoonful of sugar; pour this into a small baking dish and bake in a moderate oven fifteen minutes. Beat the white of an egg until stiff, add a level tablespoonful of powdered sugar, and beat until fine and dry; heap this over the top of the pudding, dust with powdered sugar, and brown lightly in the oven. RICE DUMPLING One Serving Wash four tablespoonfuls of rice through several cold waters; soak a half hour or longer, drain, throw it into boiling water, boil rapidly ten minutes and drain again ; spread this in the center of a square of cheesecloth. Pare and stone one small mellow peach, put half of the peach in the center of the rice, fill the core space with boiled rice, put on the other half, and gather the cloth up so there will be a thin layer of rice over the peach ; it must be entirely covered. Tie the "dumpling" tightly, throw it into a kettle of boiling water and boil twenty minutes. To serve, cut the string, remove the cloth and turn the dumpling carefully into a dessert plate. Serve with cold milk or cream, or a puree of peaches. EGYPTIAN RICE Two Servings Cover a half tablespoonful of granulated gelatin with a half cup of cold milk, let it soak thirty minutes; add a tablespoonful of powdered sugar and stir it over the fire until the gelatin is dissolved. Add two tablespoonfuls of carefully-boiled rice and two scalded dates, chopped fine ; when this begins to solidify, fold in six tablespoonfuls of MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 295 cream whipped to a stiff froth ; turn into two individual molds and stand aside until perfectly cold. Serve plain or with cream. ( RICE CREAM One Serving Press two tablespoonfuls of boiled rice through a fine sieve, add to it the yolk of one egg beaten with a tablespoon- ful of sugar and a half cup of milk. Stir over the fire just a minute, take from the fire and stir in, while hot, the well- beaten white of the egg. Turn into a pretty dessert glass, dust with powdered sugar and stand aside to cool. HOMINY We have two kinds of hominy in our markets, one made from almost the entire grain of white dry corn, with the hull taken off, sold under the name of hominy and samp ; and the other, hominy grits. Hominy grits, well cooked, makes an excellent breakfast food for children, the aged and invalids ; it should be soaked over night in cold milk or water, and cooked slowly for a long while. The large hominy, when well cooked, gives variety to a diet in chronic rheumatism. It must be thoroughly cooked and well masticated. TO COOK HOMINY GRITS Wash four tablespoonfuls of hominy grits through sev- eral cold waters ; add one cupful of milk and a saltspoonful of salt, and stand it in a cold place over night. Next morn- ing turn it into the upper part of a double boiler, stir until the water reaches the boiling point, cover the boiler and cook thirty minutes, or better one hour. Serve with milk or cream, as ordered. HOMINY JELLY Wash two tablespoonfuls of hominy grits through several cold waters, then stir it into a half pint of boiling 296 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK water, add a saltspoonful of salt, and boil rapidly, stirring all the while, for five minutes. Then cook it in a double boiler until it is thick and rather transparent. Turn this into individual molds and stand aside to cool. This should be transparent and not too stiff. Serve with cream. YAMS (Dioscorea Batatas) Yams are imported into the United States from the Wesf Indies and Central America. They are exceedingly large, frequently weighing from four to ten pounds. They do not grow in the United States. The so-called yam of the southern States is simply a large variety of a sweet potato. The large yam, dioscorea alata, to be thoroughly digestible, must be baked for a long time. When well baked and soft to the center, they are the most delicious of all starchy foods. Scrub the outside with a brush, rinse in cold water, put it in a moderate oven and bake slowly until tender a yam weighing one pound, an hour; two pounds, an hour and a half. TARO (Colocasia antiquorum, Schott, Variety esculenta) Root of the Elephant Ear Taro is made by the Hawaiians into a dish called poi, and in the West Indies and Central America the root is boiled and served much the same as we serve potatoes. It constitutes a good starchy food easy of digestion. Prepara- tions of ground dried taro can be purchased in this country under the name of Taroena. As it contains a ferment that is supposed to aid in the digestion of albuminoids, it forms an important starchy food for the sick. With milk, or even served with broiled meat, it taxes the digestive powers very lightly. In porridge it can be taken by people with acute indigestion without the slightest distress. Taroena is made from the toasted or cooked root, so that it may be stirred into hot milk without further cooking. It may also be used in egg custard in the place of cornstarch or arrowroot. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 297 CASSAVA AND TAPIOCA Both cassava and tapioca are very rich in starch, con- taining from eighty-five to ninety per cent. They are made from the fleshy roots of two species of the tropical genus Manihot; one the "bitter," and the other the "sweet" cassava. The bitter cassava, when robbed by heat of its poisonous qualities, makes cassava flour and tapioca. In sick diet we are only concerned with tapioca in the fine granular form. Larger pieces require long soaking and careful cooking to be digestible. Pearled tapioca (tapioca made into small round grains the size of a pea) may be added to soup for the well, but for the sick fine granulated tapioca alone should be used. Tapioca may be made into custard or fruit desserts, or added to soups. Recipes for the uses of tapioca will be found among the desserts in another part of the book. SAGO First-class sago is almost a pure starch made from the central part of several varieties of palms. East Indian sago meal, made from the Cycas, must not be confounded with our ordinary commercial sago. Recipes for cooking sago will be found among the desserts. ARROWROOT Genuine arrowroot, made from the stalk of the Maranta Arundinacea, is the most easily-digested of all starches. The starch cells of arrowroot are ruptured at a temperature of 180 Fahr. It is the smallest of all starch granules. Under the microscope it resembles closely, with the excep- tion of size, potato starch, which looks like a tiny oyster shell. Much of the arrowroot sold in this market is adul- terated with potato and cassava flour or other inferior starches. Adulteration, however, can be easily detected' by microscopic observations. 298 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK TOUS-LES-MOIS This is a starch made from the tuber of the Canna edulis, and like arrowroot, is very easy of digestiori. These are the largest of the starch grains, are round with con- centric markings and a central hilum. This starch is not used to any extent in the United States except for the making of Turkish Delight, a sort of jelly-like, elastic candy. It is, however, a valuable starch in cases of rheu- matism or chronic constipation. It may be used precisely the same as arrowroot, made into jelly or gruel, with milk or water. I have also used it with good results in gastric troubles. TOUS-LES-MOIS PANADA Put a half pint of milk into a double boiler, add a tablespoonful of granulated sugar and twenty-four almonds that have been blanched and ground; when this is hot add one teaspoonful of Tous-les-Mois moistened in two table- spoonfuls of cold milk. Stir until the mixture begins to thicken, cover the boiler and cook ten minutes. Serve warm, plain, or with a little thin cream. For dyspeptics, where there is too little hydrochloric acid, serve without cream and sugar ; add a little salt. ITALIAN PASTES Macaroni, spaghetti, vermicelli and noodles are gener- ally known as Italian pastes. Most of them are quite un- suited for diet for the sick, although they make an agreeable starchy food for children, invalids and the aged. They must not however, be served baked with cheese ; if cheese is added it must be freshly-grated Parmesan, put on after the macaroni is taken from the fire. No matter what the final preparation is to be, the first cooking is always the same. Partly fill a large kettle with rapidly boiling salted water; throw in the macaroni or spaghetti, allow it to boil rapidly for thirty minutes, then MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 299 drain and throw it into cold water, changing- the water until it is perfectly cold. Allow it to stand for thirty min- utes more, drain and it is ready to dress. TO HEAT IN CREAM SAUCE Make an ordinary cream sauce, add the spaghetti or macaroni, stand it over hot water until thoroughly heated, and serve, passing with it grated Parmesan. BREAKFAST SPAGHETTI Boil the night before the desired quantity of spaghetti, throw it into cold water and let it stand in a cold place over night. Next morning drain, cover it with boiling stock, simmer gently fifteen minutes, add a half saltspoonful of salt, take from the fire, add a teaspoonful of butter cut into bits, and serve on a heated dish. This may be used in the place of a cereal. BAKED MACARONI Boil the macaroni as directed, put it into cream sauce, turn into an individual casserole or ramekin dish and bake in a moderately hot oven until slightly browned. SPAGHETTI, ITALIAN FASHION This can hardly be called a dish for the sick, but in cases of long invalid feeding where tomatoes are admissible, this dish is always palatable and appetizing. Boil spaghetti as directed. Put a quarter of a pound of meat through the meat grinder, then into a saucepan with a half pint of strained tomato, a teaspoonful of onion juice and a quarter of a teaspoonful of salt; cook and stir until boiling hot, push to the back of the stove and cook, covered, for fifteen minutes. Strain, pressing as much of the meat through the sieve as possible. Drain the spaghetti, add it to this sauce, heat carefully over hot water, turn 300 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK into a heated serving dish, dust thickly with grated Par- mesan and send to the table. If onion disagrees, omit it. NOODLES Put a cupful of flour in a large dinner plate or platter, make a well in the center, add a saltspoonful of salt and one egg beaten with two tablespoonfuls of water; work the flour into the egg mixture a little at a time ; the dough must be exceedingly hard. Knead and pound until it is elastic and then roll it in two sheets as thin as tissue paper. Put a clean towel or old tablecloth over a table, put the sheets on this and allow them to dry for an hour and a half or two hours; they must not be brittle. Then roll them up as tightly as possible, and with a sharp knife shave the noodles from the ends. Shake them out and allow them to dry. They may be made one day to use the next, and if perfectly dried will keep for several days. Boil these in chicken stock or in beef stock; or they may be cooked in water and served with butter or cream. NOODLES, WITH COTTAGE CHEESE This dish makes nice variety for chronic rheumatic patients. After the noodles are boiled until tender, about twenty minutes, in stock or water, drain them perfectly dry, dust them lightly with salt, add two tablespoonfuls of butter, mix carefully without breaking, turn them on a hot platter, put over here and there little balls of homemade cottage cheese and send to the table. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 301 A GROUP OF STARCHY VEGETABLES, ALSO CONTAINING SUGAR Sweet Potatoes; Squash; Pumpkin. SWEET POTATO (Ipomsea Batatas, Lamarck) The sweet potato belongs to the morning glory family. In this country we have three or four varieties, containing more or less starch, and more or less sugar. The large so- called "yam" of the South (which, by the way, is no rela- tion to the yam) is rich in sugar, and unless carefully cooked becomes rather pasty and is not a suitable diet for the sick. The smaller red sweet potatoes contain a consid- erable amount of gum and dextrin. According to Church, the composition of an ordinary Central American sweet potato is as follows : Water 75.0 Albuminoids, etc 1.5 Starch 15.0 Sugar 1.7 Dextrin, and gum 2.2 Pectose 0.9 Fat 0.4 Cellulose 1.8 Mineral matter 1.5 BAKED SWEET POTATO If sweet potatoes are to be served to invalids, or even given to children, they should be carefully baked in the skins. Wash them well, put them into a moderate oven and bake until they are soft in the center. Serve at once. TWICE BAKED SWEET POTATOES After the potato has been baked according to preceding recipe, break it into halves, scoop out the flesh, add to it a tablespoonful of cream and a palatable seasoning of salt. 302 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Heap it into a baking dish, brush with milk and bake in a hot oven until a golden brown. WINTER SQUASH (Cucurbita maxima, Duchesne) The following rules for cooking pumpkin may be used for any variety of winter squash, as the Cashaw or Hubbard. While they do not contain as much nourishment as rice or potatoes, they give variety to the daily diet. Saw from the squash a piece, the required size, remove the seeds and bake at least one hour, or until perfectly tender. Serve in the shell, or it may be scooped out and mashed with a little butter. This is exceedingly nice served with stewed or panned chicken. Keep the remaining portion in a cold place to use as wanted. COMMON PUMPKIN (Cucurbita Pepo, Linn.) This makes an exceedingly nice vegetable to take the place of sweet or white potatoes. BOILED PUMPKIN Cut a sufficient amount from the pumpkin, pare it, re- move the seeds and cut it into blocks, put them in a sieve, stand the sieve in a saucepan, the bottom of which is cov- ered with water; cover the saucepan and cook until the pumpkin is tender. Lift the sieve, drain and press the pumpkin through, add a saltspoonful of salt and a teaspoon- ful of butter or a tablespoonful of cream. Heap on a heated dish and serve at once. PUMPKIN TIMBALE One Serving Steam sufficient pumpkin to make half a cupful, add a saltspoonful of salt, a half teaspoonful of butter and one egg, well beaten; put it in a custard cup and stand it in a MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 303 pan of boiling water and bake in a quick oven about twenty minutes, until the timbale is "set." When done, carefully turn it from the cup and serve at once. This is a nice accompaniment to roasted or panned chicken. PUMPKIN CUSTARD One Serving Steam sufficient pumpkin to make a half cupful of mashed pumpkin ; add two teaspoonfuls of sugar, a tea- spoonful of butter and just a pinch of salt; mix. Moisten a level tablespoonful of flour gradually with a half cupful of milk ; when perfectly smooth add it to the pumpkin ; add a teaspoonful of brandy and a grating of nutmeg. Turn into a custard cup and bake as you would a cup custard. Serve in the cup in which it is baked. 304 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK A GROUP OF SUCCULENT VEGETABLES CONTAINING A LITTLE STARCH AND SUGAR Salsify; Parsnips; String Beans I have placed string beans in this group because at times they do contain a minimum amount of starch ; this amount, however, depends on the maturity of the bean and the hour of the day in which they are picked. Just before sundown they contain but little starch ; early in the morning, how- ever, they would of course contain more. Salsify and parsnips contain about an equal amount of starch and sugar, not, enough however to take the place of either rice or potato, but quite enough to make them objectionable to diabetic persons. SALSIFY (Tragopogon porrifolius, Linn.) This is sold in the market under the name of oyster plant, and makes one of the nicest of cream soups for chil- dren's luncheon or supper. There is no objection to adding oyster plant to the diet for the aged or invalids. A recipe for the soup will be found among the cream soups. SALSIFY WITH CREAM SAUCE Scrape one dozen salsify roots and throw them at once into cold water to prevent discoloration. At cooking time cut them into very thin slices, cover with boiling water and cook until tender, about forty minutes ; drain, dish and cover with cream sauce. PARSNIPS Parsnip is the root of the Pastinaca sativa, Linn. It is very rich in woody fibre, which prohibits its use in diet for the sick. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 305 STRING BEANS (Haricots Verts') String beans are not rich in nourishment, but furnish an exceedingly good bulky food in cases of chronic consti- pation. Boiled and served cold as a salad they are palat- able, attractive, and wholesome. TO BOIL STRING BEANS String the beans and cut them in three pieces length- wise ; soak them in cold water for one hour, put them in a quantity of boiling water, boil fifteen minutes and drain. Cover with fresh boiling water, add salt and cook slowly until tender, three-quarters of an hour, drain, and if they are to be served hot add a little salt and butter or cream ; if to be used for salad, put at once to cool. 306 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK A GROUP OF VEGETABLES CONTAINING SUGAR AND NO STARCH OR NITROGEN Young Green Peas ; Young Green Corn ; Beets YOUNG GREEN PEAS These are very rich in water, and- contain sugar and a little mineral matter. They take no part whatever in body building. They are palatable and easy of digestion, and for this reason make a nice addition to the food of an invalid or child; even young children may eat fresh green peas if they are carefully boiled and pressed through a sieve. TO COOK GREEN PEAS The sweetness and flavor of green vegetables depend entirely on careful cooking. Shell the peas, throw them into cold water for twenty minutes, and drain. Put a leaf of lettuce, if you have it, in the bottom of a saucepan, and add just enough water to keep the peas from scorching. Add to the water a half tea- spoonful of salt, put in the peas, cover the kettle and cook about twenty minutes, or until the peas are tender. Very young peas will cook in ten minutes. When done, drain ; if properly cooked, the kettle will be almost dry. To each half pint of peas add a teaspoonful of butter and a half teaspoonful of sugar, or you may add cream in the place of butter. Serve at once. For people who are inclined to indigestion the peas should be pressed through a sieve, reheated over hot water and served quickly. TO COOK CANNED PEAS Turn the peas from the can into a sieve, wash them under the cold water spigot ; reheat, season and serve- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 307 BOILED PEAS IN TURNIP CUPS To give variety peas may be served in bread patties o'r turnip cups. Select a small white turnip, pare it carefully, cut off the stem end, scoop out the center, throw it into unsalted water and cook slowly until white and transparent. Drain, stand it on a paper doily in a dish and fill it with nicely cooked peas ; put a sprig of parsley at the bottom and it is ready to serve. YOUNG SWEET CORN i Young sweet corn should be freshly picked, husked and thrown into boiling water. It should not boil over two minutes, and should be served at once. To eat, score down the center of each row of grains and press out the pulp. Corn does not, however, play a large part in diet for the sick. CORN BOILED IN THE HUSKS In cases of continued feeding where one's brain is con- stantly racked for variety, this makes a pretty vegetable. Open carefully at the top, remove every particle of silk, strip off the heavy husks from the outside, leaving the cob covered with about two layers of the young light husks ; cut the end of the husks even. Have ready a kettle of boiling water, put in the corn, and after the water begins to boil, boil five minutes ; lift with a skimmer and place it on a folded napkin ; do not remove the husks. To eat, pull down the husks, score each row of grains through the center, spread the corn lightly with butter, dust with salt, and with the teeth press out the center of the grains, leaving the hulls on the cob. Fresh, carefully- cooked corn, eaten in this way will rarely ever produce indigestion. 308 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK TO STEW CORN Score down the center of the grains and press out the pulp ; put this in a small bowl, stand the bowl in a sauce- pan of boiling water, cover and cook ten minutes. Add a little salt and butter, and serve. BEETS (Beta vulgaris, Linn.) The ordinary beet root contains a considerable amount of sugar. When young and tender it is palatable, but rather indigestible, hence it plays no part in diet for the sick. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 309 THE LEGUMINOS^S A Group of Vegetables Containing a Goodly Quantity of Nitrogen and Starch Full-grown Dried Peas. Full-grown Dried Beans of all Varieties. Lentils. Chicle Peas. Soy Beans. Peanuts As flesh formers, muscle and tissue-building foods, these seeds far excel meats and cereals. The amount of nitrogen in dried beans is almost double that of mature wheat. The protein in these foods is digested and absorbed at a slower rate than the protein of meats, eggs and milk. Flour made from these vegetables, when thoroughly cooked and served in puree, is a most valuable food for nursing mothers, and with eggs and milk these purees should take the place of meat to a large extent in the diet for children. The vegetables themselves, to be easy of digestion, must be thoroughly cooked. They are rich in fatty matter and pro- tein as compared to other vegetables, which makes the addi- tion of fat pork to beans quite necessary. PUREE OF DRIED PEAS Wash thoroughly a half pint of dried peas, and soak them over night in cold water. Next morning drain, cover with cold water, bring to boiling point, throw this water away, cover with a quart of fresh boiling water, add ten grains of bicarbonate of soda and cook gently until the peas are tender, about one and a half hours. Press through a colander, this time using the water in which they were cooked. Return the puree to the kettle, add sufficient milk to make it the proper consistency, and stir in one level tablespoonful of flour mixed with a little cold milk; boil gently thirty minutes, add a palatable seasoning of salt, 310 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK take from the fire and add four tablespoonfuls of cream or one tafolespoonful of butter. . Enough beans may be prepared and cooked one day to last for three or four days in cold weather, or the same length of time in summer if kept in a refrigerator. IN PLACE OF MEAT FOR CHILDREN Boil the peas as directed in preceding recipe. Press them through a colander, add a half teaspoonful of salt and two tablespoonfuls of cream or one of butter; heap into a baking dish and bake slowly in a moderate oven for about one hour. PUREE OF DRIED BEANS Recipes given for peas may always be used for beans, simply substituting navy beans for dried peas. These recipes will also answer for split peas. PUREE OF LENTILS Wash a half pint of lentils through several cold waters, cover with cold water and soak over night. In the morning drain, cover with fresh cold water, bring to a boil and drain again ; now add a pint and a half of water, stock or chicken broth. Cook the lentils until they are perfectly tender, press through a sieve, return the puree to the saucepan and add sufficient stock or milk to make the consistency of thin cream. Moisten two teaspoonfuls of cornstarch in a little cold milk, add it to the puree, boil five minutes, add a half teaspoonful of celery salt or a little crushed celery seed; take from the fire and add four tablespoonfuls of cream or one tablespoonful of butter. This is a most concentrated nitrogenous food; a good meat substitute for children and the aged ; and is especially good for nursing mothers. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 311 QUICK LENTIL SOUP Stir one teaspoonful of lentil powder into a half pint of boiling water, cook slowly thirty minutes, add a little celery salt, taken from the fire and add a tablespoonful or two of cream or a little butter. This, like the preceding soup, makes an excellent noon- day meal for a child. BEAN SOUFFLE Wash and soak a half pint of beans over night. Next morning bring to a boil, drain, throw the water away, cover with fresh boiling water, add a level saltspoonful of bicarbonate of soda and cook slowly until the beans are very tender. Drain, throw the water away, and press the beans through a colander; add a half teaspoonful of celery salt, a tablespoonful of butter and four tablespoonfuls of hot milk; beat until light. Divide this, and put one-half away to use for another meal. Fold the well-beaten white of one egg into the remaining half, put it in an individual casserole or ramekin dish and bake in a moderate oven twenty minutes. This dish has meat value. YOUNG LIMA BEANS Cover the beans with boiling water, boil ten minutes and drain. Throw them out on a meat platter and skin them as you would slip an almond out of its skin after it has been scalded; throw the skins away. Put the beans into a saucepan, add sufficient boiling water to cover, and cook slowly until tender, about twenty minutes; drain, add two tablespoonfuls of milk, a teaspoonful of butter and a pal- atable seasoning of salt. These may be served to invalids, children and the aged. 312 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK LIMA BEAN SOUFFLE Cook according to the preceding recipe and press through a fine sieve. Add the well-beaten white of one egg to each half cupful of beans, and bake in a small dish, in a moderate oven, twenty minutes. THE SOY BEAN (Glycine hispida, Maxine) The soy bean has for years formed the staple nitroge- nous diet of the people of the Orient ; in fact, a handful of rice and a few soy beans constitute the daily food of two- thirds of the East Indians, Chinese and Japanese. As these beans contain less starch than ordinary beans, they can be used in mild diabetic cases. To cook: Soak the given quantity over night, throw away the water, cover them with fresh cold water, bring to a boil, throw this water away, cook in fresh boiling water until tender, and press through a sieve. This is soy pulp. A preparation of soy flour may be purchased in cartons, but as I know nothing whatever about the quality of the flour, I prefer to use the pulp from beans boiled and pressed through a sieve. The flour saves time and trouble, but in feeding the sick this is of secondary consideration. SOY BEAN ROLLS After the beans have been drained and pressed through a colander, season them with butter and salt, form into rolls about three inches long, twice the size of your finger; stand them on oiled paper, brush with milk and brown in a quick oven. Serve with Cream Sauce Number Two. One roll is sufficient for the "meat" portion of a meal. SOY GEMS Separate two eggs, beat the yolks until light, add a half cupful of milk, a saltspoonful of salt, a half cupful of the soy pulp. Beat, add a teaspoonful of baking powder and MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 313 fold in the well-beaten whites of the eggs ; turn at once into greased gem pans and bake in a quick oven. They should be eaten like spoon bread, with a fork. If gems are left over, pull them into halves and toast carefully to a golden brown. I find these muffins or gems one of the most valuable bread substitutes for diabetic patients. Two gems, with a lettuce salad with French dressing made from lemon juice, make a nice luncheon or supper. Do not add shortening in the form of butter or oil to the gems, as it makes them more difficult of digestion. SOY BEAN WAFERS Put a half cupful of the soy bean pulp into a bowl, add a half teaspoonful of salt, twenty-four blanched almonds ground fine, and one egg well beaten. Drop by tablespoon- fuls on greased paper and bake until crisp and brown. Masticate thoroughly. SOY BREAKFAST CAKES Put a half cupful of soy pulp into a bowl, add a half teaspoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of milk, and fold in the well-beaten yolks of two eggs. Drop by tablespoon- fuls in greased pans and bake in a quick oven fifteen minutes. To eat, split with 'a fork and put on a little butter. Soy breads of various kinds may be given to diabetic patients once a day, unless they produce undesirable results. 314 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK A GROUP OF VEGETABLES CONTAINING NITROGENOUS MATTER WITHOUT STARCH OR SUGAR Under this heading we place all the edible fungi, mush- rooms and truffles. While they are rich in nitrogenous matter and are free from starch and sugar, they contain a large proportion of vegetable fibre, which makes them dense and difficult of digestion. They are food adjuncts or flavoring, rather than true foods. They will not, in any way, take the place of meat. The nitrogen they contain is not available for tissue building. They take no part whatever in diet for the sick. Now and then one may be chopped fine and added to a meat dish for the sake of variety in cases of long-continued restricted diet, and even then I should prefer not to use them. The coprinus micaceus, the early spring mushroom, is said to be very easy of digestion. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 315 A GROUP OF GREEN OR SUCCULENT VEGETABLES This large group of vegetables contains principally water and mineral salts. Artichokes / * l * m Gherkin ( Globe Horseradish Asparagus Kale Broccoli Kohl-rabi Brussels sprouts Martynia /-i v ( White Okra Cabbage ) . [Red Onions Cardoon Peppers Carrots Radishes Cauliflower Ruta-baga Celeriac Savoy Celery Scullions Collards Spinach Cucumbers and Christophines Summer squash Dandelions Swiss chard Dock shoots Tomatoes Egg plant Vegetable marrow They include many parts of plants, as shoots, leaves, stalks, stems and roots. They are valuable articles of food, not because they contain nourishment, but for the mineral salts and waste material they give to the daily bill of fare, They are the most important foods in cases of chronic constipation; if well cooked and used daily, they will cure even obstinate cases. They are far more valuable than fruits, unless fruits are eaten alone. The object of cooking non-starchy vegetables, is to soften the fibre and make them more easy of digestion. Green vegetables unless carefully cooked, easily part with their salts in cooking, and become unsightly, unpalatable and useless as food. All green vegetables should be soaked before cooking in cold water without salt; salt wilts them. The common 316 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK turnip, an admirable succulent vegetable, sightly, palatable and appetizing if daintily cooked, is nine out of ten times ruined in the cooking. Raw cabbage, finely shaved and soaked in cold water, is digested in two and a half hours; after it passes through the hands of the average cook it requires five hours for digestion. When stewed carefully requires but three hours. The water in Which vegetables are cooked is rich in salts and mineral matter; if thrown away the best part of the vegetable is lost. Green vegetables lend themselves most easily to the combination of milk for making cream soups ; the milk contains the needed nourishment, and is made palatable by the flavoring of the vegetables. These soups form an admirable luncheon or supper dish for children. Among the best cream soups are potato, pea, celery and cream of corn. In cases of chronic constipation, onions, carrots, stewed cucumbers, spinach and kale are best. GLOBE OR FRENCH ARTICHOKES (Cynara Scolymus, Linn.) The fleshy part of the scales and the part known as the "choke," to which the scales are attached, constitute the edible portion. TO BOIL ARTICHOKES Strip off the outside leaves and trim the base. With a sharp knife cut the tops of the leaves within two inches of the base. With the handle of a spoon scoop out the flowery portion in the center. Tie the artichokes into compact form with a strong string, throw them into a kettle of boiling water, add a teaspoonful of salt to each quart, and if you have it, a bit of charcoal, or powdered charcoal tied in a piece of cheesecloth. Boil five minutes, reduce the heat of the water and cook slowly just below the boiling point MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 317 for one hour, or until the leaves are tender. Lift the arti- chokes carefully with a skimmer and turn them upside down to drain. To serve, put a small doily in a round plate, stand the artichoke on the doily, and pass with it a tiny boat of sauce Hollandaise. To eat, strip off the outside leaves, dip them in the sauce, and with the teeth strip off the fleshy part. There is little to eat on an artichoke, but they are appetiz- ing and attractive. JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES (Helianthus tuberosus, Linn.) These are the tubers of the so-called Italian sunflower, which grows wild and abundantly in many parts of the United States and Canada. They do not contain starch, and only a trace of sugar; are fairly rich in gum and inulin. Simply cooked, they may be eaten by diabetics. JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES WITH CREAM Scrape the artichokes and throw them into cold water to prevent discoloration. When ready to cook, cut them into slices a half inch thick, cover with boiling water and cook gently twenty minutes, or until they can be easily pierced with a fork. Drain, turn into a heated dish and cover with hot cream, or add butter and salt; do not salt them while cooking. If properly cooked they will be sightly and crisp, not heavy or soggy. ASPARAGUS (Asparagus officinalis, Linn.) Asparagus belongs to the lily family. The plant is cultivated for its early shoots, which are in great favor in the United States, both as a vegetable, and hot and cold in salads. Asparagus contains an alkaloid known as asparagin. Its true merits or demerits are little known, hence it has very 318 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK little place in diet for the sick. It may however, be used for the obese and the diabetic. The green asparagus is said to contain a greater amount of this active principle, asparagin, than the white, and should not be used in diet for the sick. In early spring the fresh young fronds of the fern and the shoots of the poke make good imitations of aspar- agus, and are frequently less injurious. Stale asparagus is as dangerous as stale meat. TO BOIL ASPARAGUS Peel the butt ends of each stalk of asparagus ; tie the stalks into small bundles, put them in a kettle sufficiently large to keep them straight, add a teaspoonful of salt and boil thirty minutes. Lift the asparagus, drain it on a soft cheesecloth and it is ready to serve. To serve hot put it on toast, with cream sauce or serve without toast with sauce Hollandaise. Cold, serve with French dressing, The tips of the stalks may be cut off and served in an individual dish with sauce Hollandaise. Or put them in a little bread patty and add two or three tablespoonfuls of carefully-made cream sauce. Under cabbage we will consider all varieties of the single species (Brassica oleracea, Linn.), a plant belonging to the mustard family. All these plants contain a volatile oil, rich in hydrogen and sulphur. It is thought by many that these elements help in the digestion of cabbage, which makes raw cabbage more easily digested than cooked cab- bage. Careless cooking drives off the gases, makes an un- pleasant and peculiar odor over the house and robs the cab- bage of its palatibility. Carefully-stewed cabbage is deli- cate, easily digested, palatable and sightly. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 319 TO SERVE CABBAGE RAW Select a perfectly hard white head of cabbage, cut it into halves and shave off a sufficient quantity ; the cabbage must be as fine as thread. This can be done with a sharp knife or an ordinary "slaw cutter." Throw the cabbage into cold water, let it stand fifteen or twenty minutes, then press it dry; cover with fresh cold water, and if possible add a piece of ice; let this soak at least two hours, drain and put it in a towel to dry. Serve with French dressing. This is exceedingly good in cases of chronic constipa- tion, and can also be eaten by diabetic patients. LADIES' CABBAGE Cut the cabbage and treat it as directed in preceding recipe. Drain it, throw it into a kettle of boiling salted water, bring to boiling point and cook rapidly, uncovered, for twenty minutes. Drain again, and add salt, butter or cream. GERMAN CABBAGE Cook according to the preceding recipe, and instead of adding cream add two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice or vinegar and a little butter. CABBAGE ROLLS Take the loose leaves from a head of cabbage, or use a head of savoy. Scald the leaves just enough to make them soft. Have ready sufficient cold cooked chicken to make a half cupful ; season it with salt, a little chopped celery if you have it, and a dash of pepper. Remove the midribs from the leaves, put a tablespoonful of the mixture on the tip of the leaf, fold in the sides and roll up the leaf, making a roll about as thick and long as your forefinger. Put them in a saucepan, placing them in position to prevent unrolling. Squeeze over the top the juice of a lemon, and add sufficient boiling water to cover. Stand over a mod- 320 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK erate fire and cook twenty minutes. Lift the rolls carefully on a skimmer, place them on a small heated platter, add a little butter to the water in which they were cooked, baste the rolls and send at once to the table. These may be gar- nished with crisp broiled bacon. COLD SLAW Shave the cabbage and soak it as directed in first recipe. Beat one egg without separating, add a half cupful of thick sour cream, a quarter of a teaspoonful of salt, and if you have it a half saltspoonful of crushed celery seed. Cook over hot water until it thickens, and stand it aside to cool. At serving time drain and dry the cabbage, sprinkle over it two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice or vinegar, and mix it with the dressing. Garnish with capers or chopped olives. SAVOY (Borecole) This is a variety of cabbage with a loose head composed of very curly or wrinkled leaves. It is rather more delicate than ordinary cabbage, but is essentially a fall and winter vegetable. It is better made into rolls or stuffed than served in any other way. CAULIFLOWER Cauliflower and broccoli have all the nutritious mat- ter concentrated in a short, compact bunch of flowers, which forms a head. Cauliflower is considered more easily digested than cabbage. TO BOIL CAULIFLOWER Trim off the outside leaves, throw the head into cold water and soak for a half hour, then tie it in a square of cheesecloth and drop it, stem side down, in a large kettle of boiling salted water; boil, uncovered, for about thirty minutes. Be careful not to overcook, or it will become MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 321 water soaked and lose its flavor and color. To be well cooked it must be snow white and tender. Serve with cream sauce, sauce Hollandaise or egg sauce. KALE Kale, another vegetable of the cabbage tribe, may be cooked and served according to the directions given for cooking spinach. BRUSSELS SPROUTS These are composed of numerous small heads growing in the axils of the leaves on a long stem below the top leaves, and are considered the most delicate of the cabbage tribe, excepting cauliflower. To be perfect they should not be larger than an English walnut. TO BOIL BRUSSELS SPROUTS Trim off the outside leaves, keeping just the hearts of the sprouts ; throw these into cold water, soak for one hour, then put them into a kettle of boiling salted water and cook rapidly, uncovered, until tender, about thirty minutes ; drain. Serve with salt and a little melted butter, or with cream sauce. COLLARDS Collards are cabbage in which the fleshy leaves do not form a head; they are held loosely on the root and stem. A well-grown collard looks a little like an overgrown head of Romaine. They may be cooked and served according to the rules given for spinach. KOHL-RABI This is frequently called turnip cabbage. The plant stores its nourishment just above the ground in a turnip- like swelling, and from this spring ordinary cabbage leaves. 21 322 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK TO BOIL KOHL-RABI Take off a thick paring, cut the rabi in slices, cook in boiling salted water until tender, about thirty minutes. Drain and serve slightly salted, or with melted butter, or a little cream, or with Maitre d'Hotel sauce. CARDOON (Cynara Cardunculus, Linn.) This plant resembles a long shaggy bunch of celery. The edible portion consists of thick fleshy leaf stalks, well bleached. Boil it in salt water, and serve with sauce Hol- landaise or egg sauce. CARROTS (Daucus Carota, Linn.) Young tender carrots, when fresh, are very palatable and wholesome. They may be boiled in plain water with- out salt, or in stock. Full grown and mature carrots contain a little sugar, and some starch, and are unfit for diabetic patients ; but the young succulent roots contain but little more than water and mineral matter; they have a trace of iron, and are considered anti-scorbutic. CARROTS a la POULETTE Scrape a bunch of very young carrots, soak them a half hour in cold water, then cook in boiling unsalted water until perfectly tender, about thirty minutes. Beat the yolk of an egg slightly, stir into it carefully two teaspoonfuls of melted butter, add four tablespoonfuls of boiling stock and a dash of salt ; pour this over the carrots and serve. CARROTS IN TURNIP CUPS Tiny carrots cut into dice and boiled may be seasoned with salt and melted butter, and served in "turnip cups." See Turnips. I MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 323 OLD CARROTS Scrape and wash two good-sized carrots, grate them into a pint of boiling stock, add one good-sized onion, grated, simmer thirty minutes and add a half teaspoonful of salt, a tablespoonful of chopped parsley and the juice of half a lemon. Serve in a soup dish and garnish the top with the powdered yolk of a hard-boiled egg. Good in cases of chronic constipation. STEWED OLD CARROTS Scrape the carrots, cut them into thin slices and soak them in cold water an hour. Boil in unsalted water three- quarters of an hour, or until tender; drain and serve with cream sauce. PICKLED CARROTS Wash and scrape six good-sized full-grown carrots; cut them into slices crosswise a quarter of an inch thick, and soak in cold water for an hour. Boil in unsalted water until tender, about three-quarters of an hour; drain, put the slices into a jar with alternating layers of sliced onions; add two bay leaves, a half teaspoonful of crushed celery seed, and if you have it, a sprig of tarragon. Fill the jars with vinegar and stand aside for twenty-four hours. Pickled carrots make an exceedingly nice garnish for lettuce or potato salad, and may be used as a garnish for cold meat. Young pickled carrots may be used now and then in mild cases of diabetes and for the obese. CELERY (Apium graveolens, Linn.) For eating raw, use the tender bleached celery from the center of the root ; it makes a nice accompaniment to a broiled steak or Salisbury steaks for diabetics and the obese. 324 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK TO PREPARE CELERY Trim off the root and throw the head of celery into cold water the moment it comes from the market. Separate it to the center, and with a small scrubbing- brush scrub each piece carefully, rinse it, put it in a bag and on the ice until wanted. Save the outside portion for stewing or for cream of celery soup, and the green tops for soup flavor- ing. TO FRINGE CELERY To give variety in service where there is long-continued feeding, fringe the celery instead of serving it plain. Cut nice crisp pieces of celery into two-inch lengths, then with a sharp knife make six or eight cuts about a half inch in length at both ends of these pieces ; then make about five parallel cuts. Throw them at once in cold water; in about one hour the cut portions will curl back, giving the celery the appearance of being fringed. STEWED CELERY Cut the outside pieces of celery into one-inch lengths, cover them with boiling salted water, and cook slowly for thirty minutes, or until the pieces are perfectly tender. There should now be just water enough to cover the celery ; add a palatable seasoning of butter, and a little pepper if allowable. CREAMED CELERY Cook according to the above recipe, drain off the water, saving it for soup. Cover the celery with cream sauce and send to the table. CELERY a la POULETTE Boil the celery as directed in first recipe ; drain, saving the water. Beat the yolk of one egg until light, add slowly a quarter cupful of the water in which the celery was boiled ; cook a minute to the thickness of mayonnaise MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 325 dressing; stir in a teaspoonful of butter and a dash of salt. Dish the celery, pour over the sauce and serve. This makes a nice change for diabetic patients. CELERIAC (Apium graveolens, Variety Rapaceurri) Celeriac, which may be the father of celery, is a sort of turnip-rooted celery, which is usually peeled, boiled, cooled and sliced, to serve with mayonnaise dressing under the name of celery root salad. It also makes a good cream soup. Where restricted feeding is long continued and variety necessary it may be boiled and served with egg sauce. CUCUMBERS (Cucumis sativus, Linn.) Cucumbers contain but very little nourishment; they are rich in water and contain some mineral matter. They are chiefly prized for their odor and flavor. If eaten raw, they must be taken very young, and used the same day in which they are picked. They must always be soaked in cold water, without salt. If salt is added they lose their crispness, become leathery and are dangerous to persons of weak digestion. When carefully cooked, they are very easy of digestion. TO SERVE RAW Peel very young cucumbers, soak them in cold or ice water one hour; grate, drain, and add a little French dressing and use at once. This makes a nice accompaniment to broiled, boiled or baked fish. CUCUMBERS a la POULETTE Pare large cucumbers, cut them into halves, and with a spoon scoop out the seeds ; cut each half into three pieces crosswise. Put them in a piece of cheesecloth, tie loosely, then in a kettle of boiling salted water to cook thirty-five 326 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK minutes. Lift the cheesecloth, put it in a colander until the cucumbers are thoroughly drained. Beat the yolk of an egg until light, add a half cupful of water in which the cucumbers were boiled; when thick and smooth add a half teaspoonful of salt, a dash of lemon juice and a teaspoonful of butter. Put the cucumbers in a dish, pour over the sauce and use at once. VEGETABLE MARROW (Cucurbita Ovifera, Linn.) These resemble long narrow cucumbers. When well cooked, like cucumbers, they form an excellent succulent vegetable. CHRISTOPHINES Christophines may be pared and cooked according to the recipe given for cucumber. Serve with a little salt and butter or egg sauce. SUMMER SQUASH (Cymlin) This belongs to the pumpkin tribe; in chemical com- position, how'ever, it closely resembles the cucumber and vegetable marrow. It may be carefully boiled in very little water, mashed through a colander and seasoned with salt and butter. Or it may be boiled carefully like cucum- bers, in pieces, and served with cream or egg sauce. EGGPLANT (AUBERGINES) (Solanum melongena, Linn., Variety esculentum) Eggplant may be a food for persons in health, but they take no part whatever in diet for the sick. HORSERADISH (Nasturtium Amoracia, Fries) The edible portion of this plant is the long tap root. It may be used in cases of prolonged feeding for the obese, and where continued meat diet is ordered. The aromatic MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 327 principles which give flavor to horseradish help to make the meat more appetizing. It is usually grated and covered with vinegar. Grated and mixed with cream, however, it makes a much better condiment. Use it sparingly ; beware of the condiments that "bite." OKRA (Hibiscus esculentus, Linn.) The young pods of this plant constitute the edible portion ; they are rich in mucilage, and are used principally, in this country, for thickening soups. Among the Creoles and in the British West Indies okras are boiled in plain salt water and served as a vegetable. As they do not con- tain either starch or sugar, they make one more summer vegetable for the diabetic and the rheumatic. In our northern markets okra is frequently incorrectly called "gumbo." BOILED OKRA Wash six young, tender pods, soak them in cold water for a half hour. Drain, put them in a granite kettle, sprinkle with a saltspoonful of salt, cover with boiling water, and cook slowly thirty minutes, or until the pods are perfectly tender. Drain, arrange them in a small heated dish, put over a little butter and a dash of lemon juice. OKRA AND TOMATOES Put six small okra into a saucepan with two large tomatoes that have been peeled, cut into halves and the seeds pressed out; cover the saucepan and stew for thirty minutes, then add a palatable seasoning of salt and a level tablespoonful of butter. Serve at once in a heated dish. ONIONS (Allium Cepa, Linn.) The common onion, a large bulb, contains a very pun- gent flavoring due to a volatile oil, rich in sulphur. This 328 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK odor, like the odor of cabbage, is dissipated and thrown off by careless cooking. Onions must be soaked in cold water an hour before cooking; cook in boiling salted water, in an uncovered vessel. Serve plain or with cream, or with butter. They are wholesome, rather easy of digestion when carefully cooked, and are stimulating to the intestines. They are valuable in cases of chronic constipation. Made into cream soup, they may be given to invalids who have no cardiac trouble, the aged and children. TO BOIL ONIONS Peel off the skins, and then remove another layer even if it seems to be tender. Soak them in cold water for a half hour, then boil in salted water until perfectly tender, about three quarters of an hour; drain, saving the water in which they were boiled as a flavoring for beef or other soup. Add a little salt, butter, or salt and cream. BAKED ONIONS I Peel a good-sized Bermuda onion, throw it into cold water for a half hour, then boil it in salted water for twenty minutes; drain, wipe it dry with a towel, brush it with butter, dust lightly with salt, wrap it in a piece of oiled paper, put it in an individual baking dish or a ramekin, and bake in a slow oven three quarters of an hour. To eat, untwist the top of the paper and scoop out the center of the onion with a spoon, much as you would eat an egg from the shell. BAKED ONIONS II Peel off the outside of the onion until you have reached the very tender layer. Put them into a baking dish ; cover with water. Cover the baking dish, and cook in a moderate oven one hour. Dish, and serve with a little salt and butter. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 329 BOILED ONIONS FOR ASTHMATICS Peel the onions; throw them into boiling water; add a teaspoonful of salt, and boil carefully for three quarters of an hour. Drain, and press through a sieve. Reheat ; add a tablespoonful of cream, and serve in a heated dish. STUFFED SPANISH ONION Procure a medium-sized Spanish onion, throw it, with- out peeling, into a kettle of boiling salted water; keep it near the boiling point, but do not let it boil, for three-quarters of an hour. Take it out with a skimmer, remove the out- side skin, open it lightly and scoop out the center. Fill this space with nicely-seasoned chopped meat beef or chicken ; wrap the onion in waxed paper, stand it in an individual baking dish and bake in a moderate oven one hour. To serve, remove the paper, lift the onion carefully to a small dish, put over a little melted butter or cream sauce, and serve. In cases of rheumatism, where meat is forbidden, stuff it with chopped almonds mixed with bread crumbs and the soft portion of the onion that was scooped out. LEEK (A Ilium P or rum, Linn.) The bulb of the leek is greatly elongated, and the leaves broad and linear. Leeks are used to give flavoring to soups and sauces. SCULLIONS OR SPRING ONIONS Those who can digest them, may eat these raw with salt, or sliced over lettuce salad. The center soft part may be boiled in salt water and served the same as asparagus. PEPPERS There are many varieties and forms of pepper; they all belong, however, to the genus Capsicum. Tabasco 330 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK sauce, a liquid pepper sauce made from small Tabasco pep- pers, is perhaps one of the best of the pepper seasonings. Liquid pepper is less irritating than ground pepper. The large sweet variety of the common peppers is used as a garnish to salad, or stuffed with meat and baked, or is made into sauce for chopped meat dishes. All these, how- ever, are indigestible, and to many persons quite poisonous. The large red "bell" pepper is used for such highly- seasoned dishes as tamales, chile-con-carne and curries. STUFFED PEPPER I Select one large sweet pepper, cut off the stem end, and remove the seeds. Wash the pepper, soak it in cold water for thirty minutes. Fill it with chopped, nicely- seasoned, beef or chicken, or mutton ; stand it in a baking pan, cover the bottom of the pan with water and bake slowly about three quarters of an hour. Just before it is done put a bit of butter on top and baste with a tablespoon- ful of the water. Do not allow the patient to eat the skin, but the meat cooked in the pepper will have a very agreeable flavor. STUFFED PEPPER II In cases where meat is forbidden, peppers may be stuffed with carefully-boiled rice, or chopped nuts and bread crumbs. RADISHES (Raphanus sativus, Linn.) Radishes contain neither starch nor sugar. When young and very tender they may be eaten raw, with a little salt; old, they are dense and difficult of digestion, quite unfit for persons in health. Carefully boiled in unsalted water, dressed with a little butter, they form an exceedingly nice winter vege- table, and are quite easy of digestion. The preferable varieties for boiling are the large Japanese and black Spanish. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 331 TURNIPS Of these we use two varieties, Brassica Rapa, Linn, and the riita-baga or Swedish turnip; both are prepared after the same recipes. Turnips do not contain sugars nor starch, but amyloids in the form of gum and inulin, with quite a marked quantity of pectose. When well cooked, they make an agreeable and harmless vegetable for diabetic persons. Turnip tops, or the sprouts from old white turnips, dressed with French dressing, make an exceedingly nice spring salad. BOILED TURNIPS Pare a solid turnip, cut it into dice, and soak in cold water for a half hour; drain, put in a kettle of unsalted boiling water and boil, uncovered, for twenty minutes or until white and transparent. Drain in a colander. Serve with melted butter and a little salt to diabetic, rheu- matic and gouty patients. Turnips are a nice accompani- ment to boiled or roasted mutton. TOMATOES (Lycopersicum esculentum, Miller) Dietitians disagree regarding the advisability and wholesomeness of adding tomatoes to diet for the sick. Of this we are quite certain, persons who have rheumatic or gouty diathesis, or cancer, cannot eat tomatoes without definite and uncomfortable results. When eaten raw with a little sugar, or a sprinkling of salt and a little olive oil, they seem to agree far better than when cooked. TO SERVE RAW Select a large ripe, solid tomato, peel it carefully, with- out scalding, cut a thick slice from the middle of the fruit, dish and dust lightly with sugar or with salt, and pour over a tablespoonful of olive oil. Do not serve tomatoes with mayonnaise dressing or vinegar to the sick. 332 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK SPINACH (Spinacia oleracea, Miller) This includes a number of varieties of the same plant, common spinach, green and blue, the New Zealand and West Indian. They differ very little chemically, and may be cooked and served by the same rules. BOILED SPINACH One Serving Wash a quart of spinach through several cold waters, always shaking it from the water and putting it in another dish of clean water. Cut off the roots. Put the leaves in a colander, plunge the colander down and up in a good- sized pan of cold water. Put a half cupful of water in a saucepan, put in the spinach, sprinkle over a teaspoonful of salt, cover the saucepan and cook slowly for twenty min- utes; drain carefully, and chop the spinach very, very fine. Return it to the saucepan, add a tablespoonful of butter, stir over the fire until smoking hot, arrange it in the form of a mound in a small heated dish, put over the top a hard-boiled egg pressed through a sieve, and if admissible garnish the edge of the dish with triangular pieces of toast. SPINACH a la CREME Cook the spinach as directed in first recipe. When done and drained, chop it very fine, put it back in the sieve to drain again ; when dry turn it into a saucepan, add two tablespoonfuls of thick cream, a dash of salt, and when hot serve on a piece of toasted bread, softened with two table- spoonfuls of hot milk. STACHYS (Stachys tuberosa) This small tuber resembles very much a short, thick corkscrew ; it is grown in many parts of the United States, but is of Japanese origin. It resembles in texture and com- position the Jerusalem artichoke. It contains inulin, but MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 333 no starch. It may be boiled in unsalted water and served with melted butter and a dash of lemon juice, or with a little salt and cream. MOCK ARTICHOKES Pare a solid white turnip, cut it into slices a quarter of an inch thick, and with a round cutter, cut from each slice a "cake" about an inch and a half in diameter. Cook in boiling unsalted water until perfectly transparent. Ar- range them on a small platter, one slice overlapping the other; put at the end of the platter a well-made egg sauce. k MASHED TURNIPS Boil the turnips according _to the first recipe, drain in a colander, press through a colander and add salt and butter. 334 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK EDIBLE WEEDS SOURDOCK (Rumex cripus, Linn.) Sourdock contains a small amount of oxalic acid and cannot be used in ordinary sick diet unless ordered by a physician. It is cooked the same as spinach. SORREL (Rumex Acetosella, Linn.) What is true of sourdock is true also of sorrel. Culti- vated sorrel contains less acid than the wild variety. It is not palatable alone, as a salad, but chopped and sprinkled over lettuce gives variety to the diet in diabetes. POKE SHOOTS The young shoots of the Phytolocca decandra may be boiled and served on toast with cream sauce or melted butter alone, same as asparagus. When well cooked, they are tender and easy of digestion ; good in cases of chronic constipation. LAMBS' QUARTERS (Chenopodium capitatum, Watson) Lambs' quarters grow in almost every garden and make the most delicate of the greens. Cook them the same as you would cook spinach ; they are much better. PURSLANE (Portulacca oleracea, Linn.) Purslane is a hardy annual plant, a common weed in most yards. If it grows in a garden where it is slightly cultivated, it is much better. Boiled in plain salt water makes an exceedingly good green. Is valuable in chronic constipation, chronic rheumatism or gout. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 335 SHEPHERDS' PURSE (Capsella Bursa-Pastoris, Moench) This is also a common weed, which may be washed, boiled and served same as spinach. DANDELION (Taraxacum officinale, Weber) Almost everybody knows that the early shoots from the dandelion roots make a very good "green" as well as a salad. From a medicinal standpoint, the tender shoots served raw are best. If boiled, use as little water as pos- sible; cook them the same as spinach. The tender shoots soaked in cold water, make an admirable salad when dressed with French dressing. Good for rheumatics, liver and certain urinary troubles. MINT The ordinary spearmint (Mentha viridis, Linn.) is used with vinegar in mint sauce. Without sugar it makes an agreeable addition to lamb in diabetic diet. It is also nice chopped and sprinkled over a cabbage salad. A bit of mint cooked with string beans gives them a new and attractive flavor. PARSLEY (Carum petroselinum, Bentham) A little chopped parsley over a dish of creamed pota- toes, lettuce salad or carefully-cooked turnips makes a pretty garnish and gives a nice flavor. Curly parsley is the most popular garnish for meats and fish. 336 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK THE COMMON SALAD PLANTS While many of the plants in this .group are frequently cooked, they are decidedly more palatable and attractive when served raw. They are quite free from starch and sugar, are very succulent, containing about ninety-five per cent, water and a small amount of mineral matter. They are valuable waste food. Many contain pungent volatile oils, to which they owe their flavor. CHICORY (Cichorium Intybus, Linn.) Young and tender chicory makes one of the nicest of salads. It conies in the winter when lettuce is not good. It should be washed in cold water, put into a dry napkin or small bag and hung up in a cold place or put on the ice until serving time. The outside leaves of chicory may be cooked the same as spinach. CORN SALAD OR LAMB'S LETTUCE (Valerianella olitoria, Poll) While this plant grows abundant and wild in Southern Europe, it is cultivated in the United States for an early spring salad green. It has little or no place in diet for the sick, it wilts quickly and unless carefully treated becomes indigestible. ENDIVE (Cichorium Endivia, Linn.) The ordinary American endive makes a good fall and winter salad. Like chicory, the very tender middle shoots must be used. The outside bitter leaves may be cooked and served the same as spinach. It is said to be good in cases of chronic rheumatism or gout, or for people who have inactive or sluggish livers. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 337 IMPORTED ENDIVE The imported endive or Batavia, which is also grown in this country, belongs to the same family as our ordinary variety, but is treated in a different manner. The first leaves are cut from the roots, leaving a crown; the roots are buried in sand, and it is the second crop of leaves that are used for salads. It makes a most appetizing salad. If allowable, it may be served with mayonnaise, but as a rule French dressing is to be preferred. GARDEN CRESS OR PEPPER GRASS (Lepidium sativum) This resembles in flavor and slightly in appearance the ordinary water cress ; it must, however, be used when very tender and young or it becomes pungent and bitter. It makes a better salad flavoring than a salad. A few leaves sprinkled over lettuce or over a well-made cabbage salad give variety to dinner salads. LETTUCE (Lactuca sativa, Linn.) We have many, many varieties of lettuce in the mar- ket ; all of them, when young, tender and crisp, are whole- some, cooling, palatable, and if thoroughly masticated, digestible. The cos or upright lettuce, known in the market as Romaine, served with French dressing, makes one of the most attractive of salads. STEWED LETTUCE Wash thoroughly a fine head of lettuce; with a sharp knife shred it across the head, put it in a kettle, with a half pint of boiling water, and a half teaspoonful of salt; cover the kettle and cook slowly for at least three quarters 22 338 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK of an hour, until the lettuce is perfectly tender. Drain, chop it very fine, add a little butter and it is ready to serve. Good for diabetic patients. Lettuce may also be stuffed with meat and served the same as savoy. MUSTARD The leaves of the young Brassica alba are sweet and bland, and may be served alone with French dressing as a salad, but are much better sprinkled over lettuce or cab- bage or young chicory. WATER CRESS (Nasturtium officinale, R. Brown) This plant grows wild over a number of our running streamlets. It must be well washed, the leaves broken from the stems, or very young shoots used. It is anti- scorbutic and makes an- excellent salad in chronic consti- pation. Many German physicians give it in cases of in- active livers. All uncooked vegetables must be thoroughly masti- cated. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 339 SALADS Nearly all cold cooked green vegetables, as well as the tender uncooked leaves of such vegetables as lettuce and cress, with French dressing, make palatable and sightly salads; they cannot, however, be considered sick diet. Where feeding is long continued, as in chronic rheumatism, gout, tuberculosis, chronic constipation and in certain cases of diabetes, salads are to be recommended. Do not use mayonnaise dressing, unless now and then with a peeled tomato or on very tender celery. Use pure olive oil, with a little salt and lemon juice or pure apple vinegar. Thick dressings, made from butter and cream or thick- ened milk, are not acceptable to a weak stomach. Fruit salads are, as a rule, unpalatable and frequently nauseating to the sick. The only fruits that make an attractive and wholesome salad are grape fruit and apples, served with French dressing, not mayonnaise. Where waste food is necessary as well as bulk, green vegetable salads are excellent. They contain the salts necessary to the well-being of the blood, the oil is an im- portant food, and the vinegar or lemon juice gives appetite, which aids in the digestion and assimilation. In winter, hard white cabbage, shaved as fine as hair, soaked in cold water for one or two hours, drained and served with French dressing, makes the best salad in cases of rheumatism, chronic constipation or gout. It is an ex- ceedingly nice accompaniment to plain broiled oysters. Also good as bulk food in cases of obesity. As soon as green vegetables come home from the mar- ket put them in cold water, soak for a half hour, wash thoroughly and put in a bag or salad shaker and on ice, or in any cold place, until dry and crisp. The better way is, put them in a cheesecloth bag, on the ice; then, each time a salad is needed take out the desired quantity, which will be cold and crisp, and most important, dry.'' 340 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK The dressing should be made at the last minute, poured over the salad, the salad thoroughly mixed and served at once. If the dish is handsomely garnished, take it to the patient without dressing, keeping the dressing in a tiny pitcher or bowl. Pour over the dressing, mix, and allow the patient to eat it from the dish on which you have mixed it. FRENCH DRESSING Put a saltspoonful of salt and a half drop of Tabasco (if admissible) into a bowl or soup plate, put in a piece of ice the size of an egg, rub the salt with the ice until the salt is dissolved, pour over two tablespoonfuls of olive oil, stir a moment, remove the ice, add a teaspoonful of lemon juice or vinegar and beat a moment until the dress- ing is rather thick and opaque. Use -at once. This will be sufficient for one person. The flavoring of the dressing may be changed by rub- bing the spoon with a clove of garlic, adding tarragon in- stead of plain vinegar, or sprinkle various chopped herbs over the lettuce. MAYONNAISE DRESSING Put the uncooked yolk of one egg into a clean, cold soup dish, add a half drop of Tabasco and a pinch of salt; stir with a fork until well mixed, and add, drop by drop, four tablespoonfuls of olive oil ; add a few drops of lemon juice or vinegar, and put it into the serving receptacle. Stand aside in a cold place until wanted. Where a large quantity of mayonnaise is needed, of course the proportions must be larger; start with the yolks of two eggs instead of one. WHITE MAYONNAISE Make a plain mayonnaise dressing and stand it aside until wanted. At serving time put six tablespoonfuls of thick cream into a small bowl, stand it in another of cracked ice, and with an ordinary wire egg beater or a Dover beater MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 341 beat the cream to a stiff froth ; fold it into the mayonnaise and use it at once. This is nice for very tender celery or cold boiled fish. A GROUP OF SUCCULENT VEGETABLES FOR SALADS Hard white cabbage Cress Tender asparagus Very young cucumbers Very young peas Young dandelions Young string beans Romaine Carrots Endive Cauliflower Imported endive Chicory Spinach Tart apple on lettuce Tender celery in peeled tomatoes Tender celery and apple Chopped mint on cabbage Cold left-over peas in peeled tomatoes Molded spinach on a slice of boiled turnip Grated raw carrot with ground pecans Macedoine of vegetables on lettuce Macedoine in turnip cups Grape fruit and lettuce Orange and lettuce Grated raw pineapple and lettuce All to be served with French dressing. SUITABLE COMBINATIONS FOR MAYONNAISE Sweetbreads White meat of boiled chicken Tender breastmeat of tame duck Breasts of birds Boiled white-fleshed fish Carefully-cooked lamb The tender meat of the chicken and lamb may be mixed with finely-shaved celery. Fish is usually served with lettuce or cucumbers. 342 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK BREAD MAKING Bread for persons in health, as well as those in disease, should be made from good strong flour and the best com- pressed yeast or sweet homemade yeast. It should not contain either sugar, lard or butter. According to my way of thinking, bread is much better made in daylight than in the dark. It should be sponged early in the morning, and baked at noon, or a little before. It should be made into small square loaves, each loaf put into a separate pan and baked. When taken from the oven, turn it out on a wire rest, or stand the loaf leaning against the pan so that the air may circulate freely around it. Do not cover it with either paper or cloth. If covered, the moisture is retained, the bread spoils quickly and the crust becomes soft. Fresh bread should not be eaten by the well or sick. In every well-regulated household enough bread should be made one day to last an entire week. Small breads, bis- cuit, bread sticks and Vienna rolls may be placed in a hot oven five minutes before serving time to renew their crisp- ness. No matter how stale the bread or rolls, a few min- utes in a hot oven will make them crisp and palatable. Reheat or rebake only the quantity required. The evaporation of water under the influence of heat makes them hard and unpalatable when reheated a second time. To Keep Bread: When the bread is cool put it away, without wrappings, in a perfectly clean tin box. The fibre of either linen or cotton takes up the moisture thrown off from the bread, and will in a short time sour, become moldy and contaminate the bread. Sour, moldy bread is un- wholesome, if not dangerous. TWENTIETH CENTURY BREAD Pour one pint of boiling water into one pint of milk. When lukewarm add a teaspoonful of salt, half an ounce of compressed yeast moistened in two tablespoonfuls of warm water, then sufficient whole wheat flour to make a MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 343 batter that will drop from the spoon. Beat thoroughly for about five minutes, scrape down the side of the bowl, remove the spoon, stand the bowl in a pan of warm water, cover the whole, keep in a warm place (75 Fahr.) for three hours. Then stir in gradually sufficient whole wheat flour to make a dough. Turn the mixture on the baking board and knead thoroughly until soft and elastic. It must not be dry and need not necessarily lose all its stickiness. Cut the mixture into four loaves, roll them out, under the hand, about twelve inches in length and three inches in diameter. Place them in long French bread pans, cover and stand in a warm place for one hour and bake in a quick oven thirty-five to forty minutes. This bread, well buttered, is a perfect food. It contains the mineral matter of the wheat, and should be the only bread given to children. WHITE BREAD Pour one pint of boiling water into one pint of milk. When lukewarm add a teaspoonful of salt, half an ounce of compressed yeast moistened in two tablespoonfuls of warm water. Then add, gradually beating all the while, sufficient flour to make a dough. Take the mixture on the board and knead it until it loses its stickiness and is soft and elastic. Put it back into the bowl, stand it in a pan of warm water, cover the whole for three hours. Then turn the dough on the board, form into two loaves, stand aside for one hour, and bake in a quick oven thirty minutes. This bread may be used as a dinner bread 'or with any meal where concentrated nitrogenous foods are served. HOMEMADE YEAST Use Fleischmann's compressed yeast cakes if you can get them, especially in making bread for the sick. If this is out of the question, use as next choice good homemade yeast. 344 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Grate four good-sized potatoes into one quart of boil- ing water, cook and stir over the fire for five minutes ; when cool add two tablespoonfuls of salt, a half cupful of sugar, a half cupful of homemade yeast or one compressed yeast cake dissolved in a half cupful of cool water. Put this in a good-sized stone or glass jar, cover with a saucer and stand in a warm place (68 Fahr.) for several hours. Each time the mixture comes to the top of the jar stir it down, and keep stirring it down until fermentation stops. Bottle, cork with a cotton plug and keep in a cold place. One cupful of this yeast will make three one-pound loaves of bread. Scald one pint of milk, add one pint of water, and when lukewarm add a half teaspoonful of salt, a table- spoonful of sugar, one cupful of homemade yeast and suffi- cient flour to make a batter that will drop rather than pour from a spoon. Beat thoroughly for ten minutes, by time; add another.cupful of flour, mix thoroughly, cover and stand in a warm place over night. Next morning add sufficient flour to make a dough ; knead this until it is soft and elastic, put it back in the bowl, cover, and when it has doubled its bulk in two and a half or three hours, mold it into loaves, put each loaf in a greased square pan, cover, and when it has doubled its bulk and is very light, bake in a moderately quick oven three-quarters of an hour. GRAHAM BREAD To make one loaf of Graham bread, take one pint of white sponge ; add a tablespoonful of molasses and stir in sufficient Graham flour to make a batter, that is difficult to stir but not sufficiently stiff to knead. Pour into a greased square pan ; let it stand one hour, and bake in a moderate oven three-quarters of an hour. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 345 PULLED BREAD Pulled bread is simply the crumb of a one-day old loaf, pulled or cut apart into strips and carefully rebaked. Trim the crusts from the outside of the, entire loaf; begin at one end of the loaf, pull it into halves, using two forks, then pull each half into quarters and eighths. Put these in a baking pan lined with brown paper, stand the pan in the warm oven, with the door open, until the bread is dry, then close the door and toast it to a golden brown. To be exactly right it must be crisp to the very center. It may be kept in a tin box, and reheated. The ordinary long French loaf, that can be purchased in any city, makes the best pulled bread. BREAD STICKS Use either of the preceding rules for bread. When the bread is light at molding time, take off a tiny portion the size of a marble, roll it out under your hand until it is four or five inches long and the size of a lead pencil. Put it in a greased baking pan or into a bread stick pan ; cover and stand aside a half hour in a warm place. Bake in a quick oven fifteen minutes. RUSKS Scald one quart of milk, add to it two tablespoonfuls of sugar, a teaspoonful of salt, and when lukewafm, half an ounce of compressed yeast, moistened in two tablespoon- fuls of warm water. Now add sufficient flour, about one pint and a half to make a batter. Beat thoroughly and stand in a pan of warm water, cover the whole and keep warm for four hours. When light add sufficient flour to make a dough, knead lightly until soft and elastic. Put it back in the bowl and when it has doubled its bulk and is very light, pinch off bits of the dough, form them into round biscuits, stand in greased pans, cover and stand in a warm place (75 Fahr.) for one hour or until very light. Brush 346 . MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK i the tops with water and bake in a quick oven twenty min- utes. Stand aside until cold and they are ready for making into zweiback. ZWEIBACK i After the rusks have been baked according to the preceding recipe, and are quite cold, pull them into halves, put them on brown paper in an ordinary shallow baking pan, baked side down, dry them in a moderate oven, with the door open, until they are crisp but not brown, then close the door and toast them gradually, watching care- fully, until they are a light brown. To be quite perfect, they must be crisp to the very center. These will keep, in a tin box, in a dry place, for a week. ZWEIBACK SLICES Make the rusk dough according to the recipe given, but knead it into two round loaves, put these in round, shallow basins, and when light bake as directed; stand them aside over night. Next morning cut the loaves into l slices a half inch thick, put them >n brown paper in a shallow baking pan and toast as directed for rusks. UNLEAVENED BREAD Unleavened bread is bread made without yeast or mate- rials that produce fermentation when moistened. No means are taken to make the bread light except ordinary kneading and beating, which aerates the dough. Put a quart of flour in a bowl, add a half teaspoonful of salt and sufficient water and milk mixed to make a dough that is rather stiff. Take this on a board, and knead and work it with the hands until it becomes soft and elastic. Pound it with an ordinary potato masher, folding the dough over as you pound it out ; or, if you live in the South, use the ordinary Maryland biscuit "brake." When the dough is light and seems filled with air bubbles, make it into small MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 347 biscuits or tiny rolls the length and size of your finger, or it may be rolled into a thin sheet and cut into squares. All unleavened bread must be baked in a moderate oven until thoroughly done and lightly browned. PASSOVER BREAD Make an unleavened dough, pound it and knead it until very light, take off a piece the size of a teacup, roll it in a very thin sheet, cut it into rounds the size of an ordinary breakfast plate, pick them carefully with a fork, and bake in a moderate oven until slightly browned, thoroughly dried and crisp. WHOLE WHEAT FINGERS Make a dough as directed for unleavened bread, using whole wheat flour in the place of white flour. When the dough is soft and elastic, roll it into a very thin sheet, cut into small squares with pastry jagger, and bake thor- oughly in a moderate oven. If these are to be served warm, bake them in a quick oven to make them puff. UNLEAVENED WHOLE WHEAT GEMS Grease iron gem pans, and put them into a very hot oven. Put one pint of ice water in a bowl, and stir in hastily, beating rapidly, a half pint of whole wheat flour. Pour this into the hot gem pans, and bake in a quick oven twenty minutes. Two tablespoonfuls is quite enough for one gem. If well made they resemble popovers. TO MAKE BRAN FLOUR Take three quarts of wheat bran, and boil in two successive waters for ten minutes, each time straining through a sieve. Then wash it well with cold water in the sieve until the water runs off perfectly clear ; squeeze the bran in a cloth until dry, spread it in a granite baking pan and dry it in a 348 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK slow oven. A very good way is to put it in the oven at night, allowing it to remain until the morning. The oven must be sufficiently hot to dry the bran or it will ferment. When perfectly dry and crisp grind it through a coffee mill and sift through a fine hair sieve. If any portion of the bran is retained in the sieve put it back and grind it over. Put the flour thus produced in glass jars and stand aside for use. THE BRAN LOAF AND GEMS To make bran bread or gems, beat three eggs without separating, add to them a half pint of milk, then stir in three ounces of bran flour. Add a half teaspoonful of ground ginger, 35 grains of bicarbonate of soda and three drops of dilute hydrochloric acid. Pour into greased gem pans or into a small square bread pan and bake in a moderate oven about three-quarters of an hour. BISCUITS FROM BRAN FLOUR Beat three eggs without separating. Mix with six ounces of bran flour half teaspoonful of ginger, 35 grains of bicar- bonate of soda ; add one tablespoonful of molasses and the eggs to a half pint of water and stir into the bran. Knead using more bran flour if necessary, roll out in a very thin sheet, cut into squares, bake lightly until thoroughly crisp. These will keep for a long time in a tin box. BRAN STICKS Moisten bran flour, prepared according to the first recipe, with a little cold milk. The dough must be stiff enough to roll, when well worked. Roll it out the length of your finger and a little larger than a lead pencil. Place on greased paper in a baking pan, and bake in a slow oven. BRAN SHEET Beat two tablespoonfuls of butter to a cream. Dis- solve a saltspoonful of soda in a tablespoonful of water, add it to the butter, add two tablespoonfuls of milk and one MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 349 beaten egg; stir in sufficient bran flour to make a very stiff dough. Knead well and roll it out into a sheet as thin as a wafer; cut it into squares of two inches, lift with a broad knife, place on greased paper, in baking pans, and bake in a very slow oven until crisp and slightly brown. BRAN CAKES Take two ounces of the bran flour and rub in one tablespoonful of butter. Beat two eggs, without separating, until light, add a half pint of milk, stir this into the bran, add a level teaspoonful of baking powder and drop quickly into greased gem pans, or spread on oiled paper in the bottom of a baking pan. It must not be over an eighth of an inch thick. Bake until crisp and hard. All these bran breads take the place of ordinary bread for diabetic patients. It must be remembered that bran is quite irritating to the intestinal tract; if diarrhoea is pro- duced, substitute gluten breads. PURGATIVE BISCUITS Put four ounces of whole wheat flour into a bowl, add to it two tablespoonfuls of rolled oats, six ounces of moist browned sugar, thirty grains of brown Jamaica ginger, sixty grains of powdered jalap, and mix thoroughly to- gether. Beat three whole eggs, stir them into the mixture, knead, roll out to a thin sheet, cut into eighteen square biscuits, and bake in a slow oven one hour. These must be thoroughly dry to the very center and a golden brown. One at bedtime, thoroughly masticated and followed by a half glass of cold water, will relieve the most obstinate cases of chronic constipation. SWEDISH SHEETS Add a half teaspoonful of salt to one quart of whole wheat flour, rub into it a tablespoonful of olive oil, then add sufficient cold water to make a very hard dough. 350 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Knead and beat this dough with a potato masher until it becomes soft and elastic. Take off a portion of the dough, roll it into a very thin sheet, not over an eighth of an inch in thickness; cut this into biscuits about the size of a breakfast plate put a plate down and cut around it. Pick them to the very bottom with a steel fork, bake them at first in a quick oven, then allow the oven to cool until the cakes are thoroughly dry to the very center. These should be crisp and brittle. An exceedingly good bread for dyspeptics. PEPTIC BREAD Sift one quart of flour, four level teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a half teaspoonful of salt together three times. Beat two eggs, without separating, add one pint of milk, turn this into the flour, and stir quickly and thoroughly until the dough is well mixed. Turn at once into two greased pans, stand aside ten minutes, and bake in a moderately quick oven three-quarters of an hour. SCHOOL LUNCHEON BREAD Sift two cupfuls of flour, a half teaspoonful of salt and two rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder together ; add one cupful of chopped peanuts, or English walnuts, or pecans, and one cupful of currants or raisins. Beat one egg until well mixed, without separating, add one table- spoonful of molasses and a half pint of milk. Add these to the dry ingredients, stir until well mixed, turn into a greased square bread pan and stand aside ten minutes. Bake in a moderate oven forty minutes. Cut into thin slices and buttered, this makes exceed- ingly nice sandwiches for school luncheons. THE NUT LOAF Put two cupfuls of flour, two rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a half teaspoonful of salt in a flour MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 351 sieve, sift thoroughly once or twice and add two-thirds of a cupful of finely-chopped nuts, pecans or peanuts. Beat one egg lightly, without separating, add one cupful of milk, turn this into the flour mixture, stir thoroughly and quickly until well mixed, turn into a square greased pan, cover, stand aside ten minutes, and bake in a moderately quick oven three-quarters of an hour. Raisin Bread Make precisely the same as nut bread, substituting a cupful of chopped raisins for the nuts. QUICK BISCUITS While hot yeast breads of all kinds should be avoided both by the well and sick, a warm baking-powder biscuit may now and then be used. Put one quart of flour in a bowl, rub in quickly a tablespoonful of butter or a tablespoonful of olive oil. Add half a teaspoonful of salt, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, mix thoroughly and add sufficient milk, about a cup and a half, to make a moist dough. Take the dough out on the board, knead lightly and quickly, roll into a sheet half an inch thick. Cut into small round biscuits, stand them in a greased pan, sufficiently far apart not to touch. Brush the tops with milk and bake in a quick oven twenty minutes. These may be made from either whole wheat or white flour. GEMS Separate two eggs, beat the yolks and add one cupful (a half pint) of milk; add a half teaspoonful of salt and one and three quarters cupfuls of flour. Beat thoroughly, add two rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder, beat again, fold in the well-beaten whites of the eggs, and bake in twelve greased gem pans, in a quick oven, twenty minutes. This recipe will answer for whole wheat or rye meal gems. RICE GEMS Add a cupful of left-over cold boiled rice to the preceding recipe. 352 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK . OATMEAL GEMS Add one cupful of left-over oatmeal breakfast mush to- the recipe for gems. FRUIT GEMS Add a half cupful of chopped dates, figs or raisins to the recipe for gems just before folding in the whites of the eggs. Whole wheat flour is preferable to white flour for fruit gems. CORN DODGERS Put one pint of white cornmeal into a bowl, put in the center a tablespoonful of shortening, and pour over sufficient boiling water to just wet the meal ; it must not be too moist. Cover and let it stand until cool. Beat one egg, without sepa- rating, until light, add six tablespoonfuls of milk, and stir them thoroughly into the meal. Drop by tablespoonfuls on a greased shallow baking pan, and bake in a moderately quick oven a half hour. The batter must be sufficiently thick to keep the shape of the spoon when dropped in the pan. GERMAN PUFFS OR POPOVERS Beat two eggs, without separating, until well mixed, add a half pint of milk and pour gradually into a half pint of flour; mix well and strain through a sieve into the first bowl. Grease and heat the gem pans, half fill each with this thin batter, and bake in a moderately quick oven for forty minutes. These may be used as breakfast muffins, or served with a sauce as dessert. VIRGINIA WAFERS Put two tablespoonfuls of olive oil or two tablespoonfuls of butter into one quart of flour and rub thoroughly. Add half a teaspoonful of salt. Add sufficient milk to make a dough. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 353 Knead it thoroughly until it becomes soft and elastic and is free from stickiness. Then pound it for twenty minutes, folding the dough over and over. When light and filled with air bubbles roll it out into a very thin sheet, cut into squares of two inches, pick the tops with a fork, and bake slowly in a moderate oven. If well made, these will puff and be very light and crisp. Make without shortening for people with weak diges- tion, and bake until hard, to necessitate thorough mastica- tion. Use either whole wheat or white flour. MARYLAND BISCUITS Maryland biscuits may be made by following the pre- ceding recipe. Roll the mixture out about a quarter of an inch in thickness, cut it into round biscuits, pick it over the top with a fork and bake in a slow oven for a half hour. GLUTEN BREAD FROM MOIST GLUTEN Put two quarts of flour in a bowl, add sufficient wateir to make a very hard dough. Knead this dough until thor- oughly mixed, then put it on a sieve, under a small stream of water, and knead until the dough is nearly free from starch. When the water is clear, take the remaining gluey mass to the bread board, add a teaspoonful of baking powder, mix, break off a piece about the size of an English walnut, and roll it out under your hand into a stick about four inches long and the size of a lead pencil. Put these on an oiled paper and bake in a very slow oven until crisp. If these are to be served warm, bake them in a quick oven, which gives an entirely different effect. THE GLUTEN LOAF Scald one pint of milk; when lukewarm add one com- pressed yeast cake moistened in a half cupful of warm water, and a half teaspoonful of salt. Stir iii sufficient 80% gluten flour, beating all the while, to make a rather stiff dough; 23 354 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK cover and stand aside for three hours. Then beat rapidly five minutes, turn into a greased square bread pan, and when again light, about one and a half to two hours, bake in a moderate oven three-quarters of an hour. Gluten bread may be used for rheumatic patients, or to give variety in tuberculosis cases, where the diet is restricted for a long time. It is not fit, however, for diabetic persons unless you use 80% gluten flour. ALEURONAT GEMS Beat the yolk of an egg until creamy, then fold in the well- beaten white, add a saltspoonful of salt, four level tablespoon- fuls of aleuronat ; mix carefully, drop by tablespoonfuls into greased gem pans, bake in a quick oven a half hour, then cool the oven and bake ten minutes longer. ALEURONAT MUFFINS Separate one egg; beat the yolk until it is creamy, add a half cupful of milk and a saltspoonful of salt. Sift a half cup- ful of aleuronat with a level teaspoonful of baking powder; stir this into the egg and milk, fold in the well-beaten white of the egg, and bake in a quick oven twenty minutes. These may be eaten warm, or pulled apart and toasted. This quan- tity makes four muffins. ALEURONAT MUSH Put a half cupful of water in a small saucepan ; when boil- ing add a saltspoonful of salt, stir in carefully two level table- spoonfuls of aleuronat, stir constantly for five minutes, boiling all the while. Turn at once into the serving saucer, and when partly cool serve with cream or milk. Serve cool because the odor of hot gluten food is par- ticularly disagreeable to many persons. MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 355 CEREAL FOODS Under this heading I shall place all the ordinary grains, the seeds of grasses, as wheat, oats, barley, corn and rice, although the recipes for cooking rice will be found under the starchy vegetables. Many of these seeds are almost typical food for man. Wheat, for instance, needs only the addition of a little fat. White bread, however, must not be mistaken for the whole wheat grain. In making flour many elements of the wheat are lost, and unless we purchase a good strong flour we are robbed of mineral matter and protein. The principal carbohydrate is starch, which is about seventy per cent, of the entire grain. The mineral matter is about two per cent, of the grain. The cellulose is found principally in the outer husk ; it is indestructible in the digestive tract, and for this reason is used in severe cases of chronic constipation ; but I doubt very much if bran can be eaten any length of time without serious results. All cereals must be thoroughly cooked. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF GRAINS These tables are principally from Farmers' Bulletin, by Jenkins and Winton. PERCENTAGE COMPOSITION Grains Water Mineral matter or ash Album- inoids or protein Cellu- lose or crude fibre Starch and trace of sugar Ether extract fats gums Spring wheat Winter wheat Flour, fine white . . Rye . IO.4 10.5 12.2 II.6 1.9 1.8 0.6 I.Q 12.5 11.8 14.9 10.6 1.8 1.8 0-3 1.7 71.2 72.O 7O.O 72.^ 2.2 2.2 2.O 1.7 Rye flour I'M O7 67 O.4 783 0.8 Oats II.O 7.O ii 8 O. 1 ? en 7 e o Oatmeal 7.0 2.O 14 7 o.o 6? 4 7.1 Rice 12.4 O.4 7.4 O.2 7O.2 O4 Barley IOQ 2.4 12 4 2 7 698 18 Corn 10.6 I.S IO ^ 2.2 704 c.o Corn meal 15.0 1.4 Q.2 I.Q 687 3-8 Buckwheat 12 6 2.O IO.O 8.7 64.^ 2.2 Buckwheat flour . . 14.6 1.0 6.9 0-3 75.8 1.4 356 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK WHEAT GERM COMPOSITION (Church) Water 12.5 Albuminoids, diastase, etc 35.7 Starch, with some dextrin and maltose 31.2 Fat or oil 13.1 Cellulose 1.8 Mineral matter 5.7 COMPOSITION (Yeo) Fine Whole flour wheat Water 12.0 14.0 Proteids 9.3 14.9 Fat 0.8 1.6 Carbo-hydrates (starch, sugar, etc.) .. 76.5 66.2 Fibre 0.7 1.6 Mineral matter 0.9 1.7 OATS (Avena sativa) Oats is very rich in nitrogenous matter and contains more fatty matter and iron than most grains. Well cooked and served with milk and a little salt, it makes an ideal breakfast food for children. The old-fashioned Scotch or Irish oatmeal and Akron oatmeal should be cooked for several hours. Rolled oats cooks in less time, but even this should be boiled for one to two hours. In serving cereals, use one morning, oatmeal, another Cream of Wheat, another Wheatena or Wheatlet, carefully- boiled rice, bran mush, cornmeal mush, hominy grits, or stale cubes of bread and cream. Keep in mind that oatmeal and hominy grits and wheatena and wheatlet are typical winter or cold-climate foods, and rice, Cream of Wheat and farina are better adapted to warm weather. SCOTCH OATMEAL Sprinkle three tablespoonfuls of Scotch oatmeal into one pint of boiling water, in the top of a double boiler; put MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 357 this directly over the fire for a minute, bring to boiling point, add a saltspoonful of salt, cover, put the upper part back in the lower part of the boiler and cook continuously for two hours ; stand it aside over night. In the morning reheat without stirring. It should be jellylike and soft, not pasty. Do not add sugar to cereals, either for the well or sick. This recipe will answer for all kinds of rolled oats. Put one pint of boiling water in the upper part of a double boiler, add a saltspoonful of salt, and when the water in the under vessel is boiling rapidly sprinkle in one cupful of rolled oats; allow each grain, if possible, to fall in separately. Do not stir it. Cover and boil continuously for one hour. Dip this into the serving dish carefully, with- out breaking the grains. OATMEAL WITH FRUIT MERINGUE Left-over oatmeal may be turned at once into a small round mold; at serving time turn out the mold, cut the oatmeal into thin slices, put a slice in the serving dish, cover with strawberries, raspberries, very ripe blackberries, or sliced peaches; put on another slice of oatmeal and dust lightly with powdered sugar. Beat the white of one egg to a stiff froth, add a tablespoonful of powdered sugar, beat again until fine and glossy; spread this over the oatmeal top and sides, dust again with powdered sugar, run it in the oven just a moment, to brown the meringue. Serve at once, with a tiny pitcher of cream. Excellent for children and good in cases of chronic constipation. A baking-powder box makes an exceedingly good mold. ROLLED WHEAT This may be cooked precisely the same as rolled oats. 358 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK BARLEY (Hordeum vulgare) Rolled barley may be cooked precisely the same as rolled oats. This is frequently used in place of oats, or grits for the rheumatic and gouty. RYE The common rye (Secede cereale) makes an exceedingly good food in cases of chronic constipation, rheumatism, gout and intestinal indigestion. RYE MUSH Purchase rye meal, a coarse meal containing a part of the bran. Put a pint of water in the upper part of the double boiler, add a saltspoonful of salt; when this is boil- ing sprinkle in carefully, stirring all the while, a half cupful of rye meal ; cover the saucepan and cook slowly one hour. Serve with cream or milk. WHEAT GERM CEREALS We find in the markets of the United States a long list of breakfast foods quite different in chemical composi- tion from common cereals. Many of them are made from a portion of the grain only. If they contain the germ of the grain, they are rich in fatty matter. When well cooked, and served with milk, without sugar, they are excellent winter breakfast cereals for children and the aged. They are sold under the names of Wheatena, Wheat- let, Farinose, Yuca, Germea, Wheat Germ Food, Vitos and Ralston's Breakfast Food. WHEAT GERM PORRIDGE This rule will answer for the cooking of all wheat germ cereals. Put a pint of boiling water into the upper part of a double boiler, add a saltspoonful of salt, and when this is boiling sprinkle in slowly, stirring all the while, a half MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 359 cupful of cereal; stir and boil for six minutes, then cover the vessel and cook for a half hour. As these are rich in fat, serve with milk instead of cream and do not add sugar for children. Cold left-over germ cereals may be molded and served cold with a sauce Sabayon, plain cream or fruits. WHEAT GERM TIMBALE Pour left-over cereal into a custard cup and stand away until cold. At serving time turn out the cereal and scoop out the center, leaving a very thin wall. Stand the "cup" in a dainty serving dish, fill the center with straw- berries, raspberries, blackberries or chopped peaches; dust lightly with powdered sugar and serve with a tiny pitcher of cream. Very pretty. WHEAT GERM SOUFFLE Cook a half quantity of wheat germ cereal according to the first recipe ; when done add to it the yolk of an egg, stir, and fold in the well-beaten white, turn it into an in- dividual baking dish and bake in a quick oven fifteen or twenty minutes. Serve in the dish in which it was baked. This takes the place of cereal and meat for breakfast. FARINA Farina does not contain as much nitrogenous matter as cereals made from the whole grain, but it is delicate and easy of digestion. For young children and invalids it makes an admirable supper food. Cream of Wheat may be cooked according to any of the recipes given for farina. FARINA PORRIDGE Put a pint of boiling water into a saucepan directly over the fire, add a saltspoonful of salt, and sprinkle in slowly a half cupful of farina, stirring all the while. Boil 360 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK rapidly, stirring now and then, for ten minutes. Push it to the back of the stove to cook slowly twenty minutes longer. Left-over farina may be made into a mold according to the directions for wheat germ. I consider farina souffle one of the nicest supper dishes for children or the aged. It takes the place of both bread and meat. FARINA SOUFFLE One Serving Put a half cupful of milk in the upper part of a double boiler; when hot add a grain of salt, and sprinkle in slowly two tablespoonfuls of farina ; stir until it thickens, cover and cook ten minutes. Take from the fire, drop in the yolk of one egg, mix, and then fold in quickly the well-beaten white of the egg. Turn this into a baking dish and bake in a mod- erately quick oven thirty minutes. Serve as a spoon bread and eat it with butter. GLUTEN MUSH All gluten preparations are quickly prepared, and while most of them contain a considerable amount of starch, they are much richer in protein than ordinary cereals. They are better served with cream than milk. Do not use sugar. To each half pint of water allow three tablespoonfuls of gluten flour. Sprinkle the dry flour slowly into cold water, stirring all the while ; stand the vessel in another of hot water, or use a double boiler ; cook twenty minutes and serve. COOKED, READY FOR SERVING We have in the markets of the United States an end- less variety of the so-called prepared cereals. Some are good, some middling, others totally worthless. To serve, put them in the oven a few minutes to renew their crisp- ness, and then they may be served with fruit juices, milk or cream. Avoid sugar. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 361 FRUITS The sub-acid and sweet fruits mulberries, huckleber- ries, guavas, bananas, cantaloupes, watermelons, peaches, pears, apples and grapes, should be served quite cold. The acid fruits oranges, grape fruit, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries and currants, should be only moderately chilled; overchilling makes them sour and unpalatable. All fruits should be thoroughly washed in cold water. Grapes at serving time should be washed and served on finely chopped ice. To wash small fruits, put them in a colander, and lift the colander down and up several times in a pan of cold water. Wash strawberries before they are hulled. To serve fruit, use an appropriate dish, both in shape and color, and after the fruit is arranged garnish the dish with a fern or other appropriate green. A fresh rose at the side of a dish of strawberries is most attractive. A peach, apple or pear may be served on a dainty doily, on a pretty plate. The French, those wonderful people who know just how to cook and serve, use artificial leaves where fresh leaves cannot be obtained. To me, this is not attractive, but the beautiful is always to be considered when feeding the sick. Strawberries are dainty served with the hulls on. Arrange them around a little mound of powdered sugar, on a pretty dish. Serve all fruits without sugar, if possible. If they are too acid to be palatable, I should say they were too acid to be served. This is Nature's way of warning us against unwholesome foods. Moreover, sugar does not correct an acid ; it only disguises it so that it may pass the palate. The fruit and sugar enter the stomach in their original condition, the acid as an acid, and the sugar as sugar. A simple food has been complicated. Canned fruits are far better than no fruits at all, but are inferior to fresh fruits, not because they are cooked, 362 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK but because they frequently contain a goodly quantity of added sugar. If fruits are too sour to be stewed without sugar, combine the sweet and the sour fruits in cooking. Good combinations are cranberries and raisins, cranberries and figs, cranberries and dates, currants and raspberries. Fruits, ripe and fresh, or simply stewed, should form a part of the daily food of persons in health ; in sickness they are a necessity. In fevers, fruit juices are the most essential and most appetizing of all foods ; orange and lemon juice are especially good. Fresh fruit juices in this country take the place of the old-fashioned German fruit soups, and are certainly much more palatable. In cases of biliousness, sick head- ache and fevers, all acid fruit juices, carefully strained, are admissible. In pupura hsemorrhagica, fresh grape juice is indispensable not the grape juice that one buys in a bottle that has been sterilized, but fresh pressed grapes ; the juice must be alive, not dead. In fevers, orange, lemon, lime, apple, currant and grape juice are to be preferred. A scraped apple, a fig, carefully masticated, or a half dozen raisins, seeded and masticated at bed time, will fre- quently cure obstinate constipation. Raw pineapple juice contains a digestive enzyme known as bromelin, which aids in the digestion of the albuminoids. Fresh raw pineapple juice is especially beneficial in cases of tonsilitis, membranous croup and diphtheria. Cooking of course, renders the enzymes inert. The papaya (Carica papaya) is a large tropical fruit of Central and South America. Like the pineapple, it contains an enzyme, which aids in the digestion of the albuminoids. In hot countries where meat must be eaten a few hours after it is killed, the piece to be used is wrapped in a bruised papaya leaf and put aside for two hours ; it is then tender and eatable ; in other words, the enzyme has partly digested the tough fiber. MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 363 FRUIT JUICES Where fruit juices are to be used for the sick, make them fresh each day. Keep the fruit in a cold place, mash and squeeze it as wanted. The following table gives the average composition of a few of our common fruits (after Bauer Yeo) : Apple Pear Peach Grape Straw- berry Cur- rants Orange (pulp only) Water 83-58 83.03 80.03 78.18 87.66 84.77 80.01 Nitrogenous Mat- ters 0.39 0.36 0.65 | 0.59 1.07 0.5 1 O.7 1 * Free Acids 0.84 O.2O O.O2 O.7Q O.Q^ 2 I 1 ; 2.44 Sugar 773 8.26 4.48 14.36 6.28 6.38 4.5Q Other non-Nitrog- enous Matters.. Cellulose and Ker- nel 5-17 1.98 3-54 4.30 7.17 6.06 1.96 3.60 0.48 2.32 0.90 4. 57 0.95 1.70 Ash 0.31 O 11 O.6o O.S3 0.8 1 O72 O.4Q The following gives the composition of certain dried fruits : Apple Cherry Raisin Fig Water 27.95 4988 32.02 31 20 Nitrogenous Matters 1.28 2 O7 2.42 4.OI Fat 0.82 O 3O O 4O I dA Free Acid 1.60 1. 21 Sugar 42.81 11.22 54.26 4O.7O Other non-Nitrogenous Matters. Cellulose and Seeds 17.0 4.95 14.29 0.61 7.48 1.72 4-SI 4.98 Ash . 1.57 Ufa I.2I 2.86 The above tables show that the nutritive value of fruits consists of a small amount of nitrogenous matter, and a goodly quantity of sugar. They are valuable, however, 364 MRS. RORER'S- DIET FOR THE SICK for the vegetable acids and salts they contain. Malic acid is found in apples, pears, peaches, apricots, currants, man- goes, gooseberries and plums ; tartaric acid in grapes ; and citric acid in all the citrus fruits ; they possess valuable anti- scorbutic properties. Some fruits contain agreeable aro- matic oils, others contain a large amount of pectin or vegetable jelly; the most important among the latter, are the guava, quince, banana, crab apple and the ordinary apple. APPLES 'Tis said: "It beggars a physician to live where apple orchards thrive," and still many perfectly healthy persons claim they cannot digest a raw apple ; I do not believe, how- ever, that it is the fault of the apple. Many people bolt, rather than masticate, their food, and this renders the apple indigestible. Again, many persons take an apple after a hearty meal of other foods; this is a mistake. Fruits should be eaten alone, or as a part of the meal, not as an addition to the meal. Stale or tough, unripe, or cold storage apples will frequently produce digestive disorders. If apples are eaten raw, they must be thoroughly masticated or scraped, and eaten alone as a luncheon, or taken at the beginning of breakfast. In cases of constipa- tion, the apple is particularly beneficial ; it has a marked influence over the peristaltic movement of the intestines. Fresh apple juice is a liver and stomach tonic. A fresh apple contains about 84 to 86 per cent, of water, and 8 per cent, of sugar. TO BAKE AN APPLE Wash, wipe the apple, and with a sharp knife cut through the skin around the apple about an inch from the stem ; this prevents the skin from cracking, and keeps the apple in better shape ; remove the core with a sharp knife or an apple corer, stand the apple in a porcelain or granite dish, put a teaspoonful of sugar in the cored space, cover the bottom of the dish with water and bake in a moderately MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 365 quick oven, basting once or twice. The apple must be perfectly tender, and should be served warm ; cold baked apples are indigestible. Omit sugar for children. BAKED PANNED APPLES Wash and core a good-sized tart apple, but do not pare it; cut it into halves, then into quarters, and cut each quarter into thin slices. Put a layer of apples and a sprinkling of sugar, and another layer of apples in the bottom of an individual casserole or ramekin dish, add four tablespoonfuls of water, cover the dish and bake in a hot oven about twenty minutes, until the apple is perfectly transparent and soft. Do not allow the patient to eat the skin, but apples cooked with the skin on have, by far, a better flavor. SMOTHERED APPLES Remove the core from a perfectly smooth tart apple; with a sharp knife cut the skin of the apple around at what might be called "the equator," fill the core space with sugar if admissible, stand it in an individual casserole or ramekin dish, add a quarter of a cupful of water, cover and bake slowly until the apple is almost transparent, about thirty to forty minutes. Serve warm. CODDLED APPLE Pare a good-sized tart apple and remove the core. Put the apple in an individual granite dish, put a teaspoonful of chopped nuts in the core space, add four tablespoon- fuls of water, cover the pan and cook in the oven until the apple is tender. Serve warm, plain or with thick cream, or Devonshire cream. APPLE TAPIOCA Coddle an apple according to the preceding recipe. While it is baking soak a tablespoonful of granulated 366 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK tapioca in a half cupful of cold water, bring this to boiling point; the tapioca must be perfectly clear. Fill as much as is necessary into the core space of the coddled apple, cover the baking dish and bake five or ten minutes longer. Serve hot or cold, plain or with cream. This should be cooked in an individual casserole or ramekin dish, so that it can be served in the dish in which it is cooked. APPLE JUICE Procure perfectly fresh, sound apples, and plunge them for a minute into boiling water, then into cold water. Then put them into a small press, grind and press out every par- ticle of juice ; strain and put at once into a clean fruit jar, and keep in a cold place. A small inexpensive fruit press is made by the Enter- prise Manufacturing Company. APPLE a la ZOUAVE Grate half of a tart apple into a half cupful of good milk ; add a tablespoonful of sugar beaten with the yolk of one egg, and six blanched almonds, chopped or ground very fine; turn this into a custard cup, stand it in a pan of hot water and bake in a moderate oven until "set" in the center; test by putting a silver knife in the center, if it comes out milky, it is not done; it is just right when the knife comes out clean. Beat the white of the egg to a stiff froth, add a teaspoonful of powdered sugar and beat again. Spread this over the top of the custard, dust it with pow- dered sugar, and brown a moment in the oven. Serve cold. STEWED APPLES Pare, quarter and core one tart apple, put it in a granite saucepan, cover with cold water, cover the saucepan and bring quickly to a boil ; take from the fire and add two tablespoonfuls of sugar. The apple should be quite trans- parent, and the pieces perfectly whole. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 367 APPLE SAUCE Quarter and core two tart apples ; do not pare them. Put them in a granite saucepan, with a half cupful of cold water, cover the pan and bring quickly to a boil. Press through a sieve and serve warm. Add sugar, or not, as ordered. APPLE FLUFF Stir the well-beaten white of one egg into apple sauce after it has been pressed through a sieve and is still warm. This may be served hot or cold, plain or with cream. MARLBOROUGH APPLE SAUCE Press the pulp from one hot baked apple through a sieve, add to it, while hot, four tablespoonfuls of cream and the yolk of one egg. Heap this into a glass dish and serve. APPLE SNOW Beat the white of one egg until very, very stiff; grate into it a quarter of a tart apple ; mix quickly ; heap it into a glass lemonade cup, dust it with powdered sugar and serve. To give variety, the cup may be partly rilled with cold soft custard, or cream. LEMON APPLE Pare, core and quarter one good-sized apple. Put four tablespoonfuls of sugar and six tablespoonfuls of water iri a saucepan, add a teaspoonful of the grating of yellow rind of a lemon, bring to a boil, skim, boil two- minutes, strain, return the syrup to the saucepan, add a tablespoonful of lemon juice and the apple, cover the saucepan and stand it on the back of the stove, where it cannot possibly boil, until the apple is tender and clear. 368 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK GRILLED APPLES Shell two large or four small chestnuts, remove the brown skin, throw them into salted water and boil care- fully until they are tender; drain. Take the core from one tart apple; do not pare it. Cut two good slices, a half inch thick, from the center of the apple, put these on a wire broiler and broil carefully over a clear fire, five min- utes, until they are tender. Dish them on a heated plate, put one large or two small chestnuts in the center of each ; stand them in the oven a minute while you boil together two tablespoonfuls of sugar and six tablespoonfuls of water. As soon as the sugar and water have boiled, skim and add a level teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in a tablespoon- ful of water, boil a minute, add a dash of lemon juice and baste it over the apples. APPLE OMELET Beat one egg, without separating, until well mixed ; add a tablespoonful of powdered sugar and the soft portion from one baked apple. Put a tablespoonful of olive oil into a shallow pan, and when hot turn in the egg mixture, brown quickly and stand in the oven a moment until set ; fold over, turn on to a small heated platter, dust with powdered sugar and serve at once. SCALLOPED APPLE Stew one apple. Roll and sift sufficient dry bread to make four tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs. Put the stewed apple in an individual casserole or baking dish, dust over the bread crumbs, dust the top lightly with sugar and bake in a moderate oven about twenty minutes. Serve warm, plain or with cream. APPLE SPONGE Wash and core one tart apple, cut it into slices; put it in a saucepan with a half cupful of cold water, bring to a boil, add two tablespoonfuls of .sugar, a teaspoonful of MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 369 lemon juice and a teaspoonful of gelatin that has been soaked for a half hour in two tablespoonfuls of cold water. When the gelatin is dissolved, press the whole through a sieve, and pour while hot into the beaten white of one egg. Turn into an individual mold and stand aside to harden. Serve with plain or whipped cream, or a soft custard made from the yolk of the egg and a half cupful of milk. FROSTED APPLE Pare one nice tart apple, core and stand it in an indi- vidual baking dish ; fill the core space with a teaspoonful of granulated sugar, add a half cupful of water, cover and bake until the apple is perfectly tender. Beat the white of one egg until light and dry, add a level tablespoonful of powdered sugar, and beat again. Take the apple from the oven, cover it thickly with the meringue, dust with pow- dered sugar and return to the oven until a golden brown. Serve hot or cold. YORKSHIRE APPLE Cook an apple according to the preceding recipe, filling the core space with orange marmalade instead of sugar. Serve warm. APPLE WITH QUINCE JELLY Cook an apple as directed for frosted apple. Fill the core space with quince jelly. Serve warm or cold, plain or with cream. BRANDY APPLE Pare a large tart apple, remove the core, stand the apple in a baking dish or individual casserole mold, fill the core space with orange marmalade, add a half cupful of water, cover the mold and bake slowly until the apple is tender. Soak a tablespoonful of gelatin in two tablespoon- fuls of water, add a tablespoonful of sugar, two tablespoon- fuls of brandy and a half cupful of boiling water; stir until the gelatin is dissolved and stand aside to cool, not harden. 24 370 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK When the apple is done, remove it from the baking dish, and when partly cool baste it with the brandy jelly, and keep on basting until the apple is thoroughly coated with the jelly. Serve plain, or with plain or whipped cream. APPLE SALAD Pare and core one perfect tart apple. Sprinkle over the apple a tablespoonful of lemon juice, mix thoroughly until each piece is covered; this will prevent discoloration. Put a saltspoonful of salt in a bowl, add to it a half drop of Tabasco, two tablespoonfuls of oil and a half tablespoon- ful of lemon juice or vinegar; mix, baste this over the apple, heap it neatly on a little nest of crisp lettuce leaves and serve at once. If admissible, the apple may be mixed with very tender young celery. To make it more attractive the apple may be scooped from the fresh red skin and the salad served in the skin. To prevent the inside of the skin from discoloration, wash it thoroughly with lemon juice. APRICOTS To serve fresh apricots, wipe the skin thoroughly, stand them in a cold place until slightly chilled, and dish on a dainty doily. Serve also a finger bowl and fruit knife. The skin must be removed before eating. \ APRICOT PUREE This makes a very nice sauce for any of the gelatin jellies, mock charlotte, or to plain blancmange. Wash two apricots, cut them into halves, remove the stones, put them in a saucepan with a half cupful of cold water, bring quickly to boiling point, add a teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in a little cold water, and two table- spoonfuls of sugar; boil just a minute until the cornstarch is thoroughly cooked, and press them through a sieve. This should be as thick as very thick cream ; if too thick add a tablespoonful or two of hot water. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 371 APRICOT TOAST Make a puree of apricot according to preceding recipe. Cut a slice from a square loaf of bread, trim off the crusts, dry the bread in the oven, toast it quickly on one side, then on the other, put it at once on a heated small dish and cover it with apricot puree. This is exceedingly nice for a child's breakfast. If not convenient to make toast, put it over the upper crust of a shredded wheat biscuit. APRICOT SOUFFLE Make a puree of apricot according to the first recipe, pour it while hot into the well-beaten white of one egg. Dish at once in a pretty individual glass stem dish or lemonade cup, dust with powdered sugar and stand aside to cool. BANANAS There are many varieties of bananas grown in Central and South America that are not exported. The one best known in the United States is the Gross Michael ; I have noticed, however, in the markets of New York large quantities of the ordinary red banana, and a yellow banana, short and thick like the red one, known as the Congp, and a white, thick banana, the Governor "fig," also known in some parts of South America as the apple "fig." All bananas are known to the natives in the districts where bananas grow, as Indian "figs." The word banana, how- ever, is always applied to the red banana. Bananas are, without doubt, the most nutritious of all fruits in common use. They should not, however, be given to the sick or children unless they are thoroughly and- simply cooked. The so-called "lady fingers" or Gross Michaels are best for cooking. Banana flour is made from underripe bananas, thor- oughly dried and ground. It is exceedingly good for dia- betic, rheumatic and gouty patients. It may be made into mush, or gems, or small cakes. 372 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK BAKED BANANAS Take the banana out of the skin by stripping off one piece and then lifting it out. If you strip the skin down you are very apt to leave the bitter portion fast to the fruit. Put the banana into an earthen or granite baking dish, brush it with a tablespoonful of olive oil, dust it with a teaspoonful of granulated sugar and bake in a quick oven thirty minutes. Bananas to be just right should be a golden brown and very tender. Serve warm. SCALLOPED BANANA Peel the banana and cut it into thin slices with a silver knife. Put a layer in the bottom of individual casserole or ramekin dish, a little dusting- of sugar, another layer of banana, and so continue until you have the ingredients used. Bake thirty minutes in a moderately quick oven. BANANA SOUFFLE Select a full ripe banana, skin and mash it ; put it in a saucepan with a tablespoonful of orange juice and a tablespoonful of sugar. When hot fold into it carefully the well-beaten white of one egg. Serve cold. BANANA MUSH This is made from banana flour, which is easily digested and very agreeable. It frequently contains just a trace of glucose. Put a half cupful of water into a saucepan, when boiling add two tablespoonfuls of milk. Moisten two teaspoonfuls of banana flour, stir it into the hot milk and water, bring to a boil, and take from the fire. The flavoring of this may be changed by adding a little orange or lemon juice, by making the gruel entire milk, or entire water. Serve with cream. This is an exceedingly nice mush for. delicate children or invalids, but is not a good food for diabetic patients unless a starch-free flour is used. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 373 BANANA PUFF Separate one egg, beat the yolk with a tablespoonful of powdered sugar. Peel and slice a ripe banana, put it in a saucepan and stir it constantly over hot water until thoroughly heated, mash and add the yolk and sugar, cook a minute longer, fold in the well-beaten white ; heap it in rame- kin or individual dish, dust with powdered sugar and bake in a quick oven until a golden brown. A nice breakfast for a child, or an invalid or the aged. STEWED BANANAS Peel a banana, cut it in slices a half inch thick using a silver knife ; put it in a saucepan with four tablespoon- fuls of cold water and a teaspoonful of orange or lemon juice; cover and bring quickly to a boil. Serve warm or cold. BANANA CHARLOTTE Stew the bananas according to the preceding recipe, and beat with a silver fork until light ; stand aside to cool. When cool, add two tablespoonfuls of sherry instead of the lemon, and stir in carefully six tablespoonfuls of cream, whipped to a stiff froth. Serve in a pretty stem glass dish. BLACKBERRIES When fully ripe, blackberries, like raspberries, do not contain as much free acid as currants or cranberries. In cordial, syrup, jelly and jam, they give variety to the diet in cases of chronic diarrhoea. In vinegar or wine the blackberry makes a pleasant, cooling drink for convalescents. Blackberries and dewberries are laxative only when eaten raw. TO SERVE RAW Select large, fully ripe blackberries, arrange them neatly in a fruit dish, dust with powdered sugar, stand them in a cold place for ten minutes and serve. 374 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Fully ripe large berries have a core, which the patient must not swallow. BLACKBERRY MUSH Put a half cupful of very ripe blackberries in a sauce- pan with a half cupful of water, bring to boiling point, add one teaspoonful of arrowroot moistened in a little cold water; cook slowly five minutes, add one tablespoonful of sugar and press the mixture through a fine sieve. Put into an individual dish for cooling. Serve plain, or with cream. BLACKBERRY FLUFF Press sufficient full ripe blackberries through a fine sieve, to make a half cupful of clear juice. Bring to boil- ing point, boil a minute, add one tablespoonful of sugar, and pour while hot into the well-beaten white of one egg. Heap at once into a lemonade cup and stand aside to cool. BLACKBERRY JELLY Press sufficient underripe blackberries through a sieve to make one cupful of juice. Bring the juice to a boil, boil three minutes, add an equal quantity of sugar, boil about five minutes, until the mixture will jelly when cool. Turn into small serving glasses and stand in the refrigerator. The jelly must be soft and delicate, not tough. BLACKBERRY SHRUB Press sufficient very ripe blackberries through a sieve to half fill a tumbler; siphon into this either soda or plain carbonated water; or if a siphon is out of the question, add a split of Apollinaris, and serve at once. This makes an exceedingly nice drink in cases of chronic diarrhoea. BLACKBERRY SYRUP Squeeze sufficient slightly-heated, very ripe blackber- ries to make one pint of juice. Boil one pound of white MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 375 rock candy with a pint of water for ten minutes, add the juice, boil five minutes, bottle while hot and seal. BLACKBERRY CORDIAL I Heat four quarts of blackberries, stirring them all the while ; do not add water. Mash the berries and strain them through two thicknesses of cheesecloth, pressing out all the juice. Measure the juice, put it in a preserving kettle, add to each quart of juice, one pound of sugar, ten whole allspice, two cloves, and an inch piece of cinnamon. Bring to a boil, boil fifteen minutes, take from the fire, and when cool add one gill of brandy to each quart. Bottle in perfectly clean bottles, cork and seal. If good brandy cannot be purchased, use the best rye or Bourbon whiskey. BLACKBERRY CORDIAL II Mash and squeeze sufficient blackberries to make one quart of juice ; stir in one pound of granulated sugar. -Tie a teaspoonful of ground cinnamon, the same of allspice, the same of ginger and a saltspoonful of cloves into a little square of cheesecloth ; put it into the juice, bring to a boil and boil twenty minutes. Strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth, and when cold add a half pint of brandy. Bottle and cork. TO SERVE CORDIAL Put two ounces into an ordinary tumbler and fill the tumbler with cool, plain water. Or serve two ounces plain, in a wineglass. Good in dysentery and diarrhoea. BLACKBERRY VINEGAR Put two quarts of ripe blackberries into a stone jar, pour over one quart of good cider vinegar, cover the jar and stand aside for two days. Drain off the liquor without mashing the berries, pour it over a quart of fresh berries, cover and stand aside as before. Do this once more, using 376 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK fresh berries each time, this time straining through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. Measure the liquor, and add one pound of sugar to each pint. Boil slowly five minutes, skim, let it stand a minute to cool, fill it into clean bottles, cork and seal. This makes a cooling drink in hot weather for convales- cents or fever patients. BLACKBERRY BRANDY I quart of very ripe blackberries 12 whole allspice I clove 2 pounds of loaf sugar I pint of water I quart of good brandy An inch piece of cinnamon Mash the berries and strain them through two thick- nesses of cheesecloth. Boil the sugar and water ten min- utes, add the syrup to the juice, add all the spices and one quart of good brandy; stand the mixture away in fruit jars, lightly covered, for at least two weeks. Strain, bottle, cork and seal. BLACKBERRY JUICE Mash wild blackberries, bring them to boiling point and drain over night. Next morning put the juice in a pre- serving kettle; boil five minutes and skim; fill it into bottles, leaving a two-inch space in the neck; cork and put them, on their sides, in a wash boiler, with enough hot water to cover. Boil a half hour, and allow them to cool in the water. When cold dip the corks in sealing wax. BLACKBERRYADE Mash one cupful of ripe berries, strain through cheese- cloth, add two teaspoonfuls of powdered sugar, stir until the sugar is dissolved, put the mixture in a large tumbler, add a little cracked ice, and fill the tumbler with carbonated or plain water. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 377 BLACKBERRY BOUNCE Put one quart of very ripe blackberries in a granite or porcelain-lined kettle, add a half cupful of water, cover the kettle and when hot stir until the blackberries are thor- oughly heated; press them through a sieve sufficiently fine to take out the seeds. Add to this pulp ten lumps of Domino sugar and a half pint of boiling water. Boil two minutes, take from the fire, bottle, cork and stand aside in a cold place. At serving time put four tablespoonfuls of this in a wineglass or small tumbler, and add a tablespoonful of brandy. The patient must sip this slowly. Good as a mild stimulant for tuberculosis and chronic diarrhoea patients. Raspberry bounce is made precisely the same as black- berry bounce. Red and black raspberries may be mixed, or each used alone. Dewberries may be used the same as blackberries. CHERRIES The cherry, on account of its tough, indigestible skin and solid fruit, plays little or no part in diet for the sick. The sour morello cherry, when fully ripe, is the least objec- tionable of all varieties. < CHERRY JUICE Put a quart of morello cherries into an ordinary granite or porcelain kettle, add a half cupful of boiling water, stir over the fire until they are boiling hot, take from the fire, mash with an ordinary pestle, and strain through two thick- nesses of cheesecloth ; cool at once. Cherry juice may be substituted for orange, currant or raspberry juice as a cooling and refreshing drink. Cherries and cherry juice contains too much free acid to be used with starchy foods or milk. Such combinations quickly upset digestion. 378 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK In fever cases cherry juice may be substituted for orange juice as a base for the beaten white of an egg, or use it as a flavoring in gelatin jellies. Morello cherries, if the skins are rejected, will fre- quently relieve obstinate constipation. CRANBERRIES This fruit contains too much free acid to be used in any great quantity, unless so ordered by a physician. For convalescing patients, where admissible, they may be made into jelly, or may be stewed or baked. Baked cranberries are considered valuable in cases of chronic constipation. BAKED CRANBERRIES Wash a half pint of perfect cranberries, put them into a baking dish, add a half pint of sugar, mix thoroughly, cover the dish and bake in a moderate oven until the cran- berries are perfectly tender and transparent. CRANBERRY SAUCE Wash a half pint of perfectly sound cranberries, add a half pint of water, bring quickly to a boil and press through a sieve. Return them to the saucepan, add a half pint of sugar, bring to a boil and stand aside to cool. CRANBERRY AND APPLE SAUCE Pare, core and quarter a small tart apple, put it in a saucepan with a half pint of sound cranberries, add a half pint of water, bring to a boil, boil five minutes and press through a sieve ; add a half pint of sugar, stir over the fire until the sugar is dissolved, and stand aside to cool. CRANBERRY JELLY Wash a half pint of solid, perfect cranberries, put them in a saucepan with a gill (a half cupful) of cold water, MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK , 379 bring to boiling point, boil five minutes and press through a sieve. Return them to the saucepan, boil two minutes, add an equal quantity of sugar, and when the sugar is dissolved boil one minute and turn into small molds or glasses to harden. FROZEN CRANBERRYADE Put half a pint of fully ripe cranberries in a pint of water, boil for five minutes, mash and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth, and stand aside to cool. When wanted for use, put the desired quantity into an individual freezer, pack with fine salt and ice, and turn the freezer until the mixture is frozen like wet snow. This is very refreshing to fever patients, but should be used in small quantities, as one would use any acid sherbet. CURRANTS Currants, gooseberries and wineberries are remarkable for the amount of free acid they contain. The expressed juices of these fruits make an agreeable addition to effer- vescent waters. Currants eaten raw at the beginning of a meal, either plain or with sugar, are good in cases of chronic constipation. Currant jelly is one of the most palatable and attractive of all fruit jellies, and may be served with meats, or in the absence of fresh currants, may be dissolved in boiling water, cooled and used with effervescing waters in cases of fever. FROSTED CURRANTS Select large bunches of full ripe currants. Beat one e gg slightly, add ten grains of cream of tartar, then add gradually, beating all the while, sufficient powdered sugar to make an icing, about eight tablespoonfuls to the white of one egg. Wash the currants and see that they are per- fectly dry; dip them, or rather push them down into this icing, and dry them on a sieve, putting them upside down 380 - MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK if possible, so the currants will stand out from the stem and be thoroughly iced all over. Serve on a small glass dish, for breakfast or luncheon. There is no food value particularly in a bunch of currants, but they make one of the most attractive dishes for invalids; they are dainty, sightly and appetizing. CURRANT SHRUB Strip sufficient red currants from the stems to make a half pint; put them in a saucepan with a quarter of a cup- ful of water, cover the saucepan and bring to boiling point. Press them through a sieve or strain through two thick- nesses of cheesecloth, and stand aside until wanted. At serving time put one gill of this juice in a tumbler, and siphon the tumbler full of either seltzer or carbonated water, or Apollinaris. BLACK CURRANTS These are entirely different from red currants, both in taste and food value. The juice of black currants may be expressed the same as red currants, and used as a "shrub," or may be made into jelly to serve with game or red meats. CURRANTS AND RASPBERRIES The expressed juice of red currants, with an equal quan- tity of raspberry juice, makes an exceedingly nice beverage when diluted with Apollinaris or with carbonated water. These fruit waters are useful in fevers, and are espe- cially desirable where lime or lemon juice cannot be obtained. DATES (Phoenix dactylifera) Dates are the fruit of a palm. They frequently con- tain half their weight in sugar, and a goodly amount of flesh-forming elements. With bread and butter, or with milk and bread and butter, they make an exceedingly good meal for children. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 381 To cleanse Take off the desired quantity, pull them apart, put them in a colander, plunge them quickly into a bowl of boiling water, then into cold water, and throw them on a towel to dry. Sterilize enough one day to last for a week. Candy-eating children may be cured of the habit by substituting dates for candy. According to Church, one pound, without stones, con- tains the following: Water 3 oz. 143 gr. Albuminoids, etc I oz. 25 gr. Sugar 8 oz. 280 gr. Pectose and gum i oz. 354 gr. Fat o oz. 14 gr. Cellulose o oz. 385 gr. Mineral matter o oz. 1 12 gr. STUFFED DATES Plunge the dates into boiling water, remove the stones and put in their places either half of a pecan or an almond, or a mixture of chopped nuts or another stoned date. DATE MUFFIN Scald and stone the dates and put them through a meat grinder. Separate two eggs, add to the yolks one cupful of milk and one and a half cupfuls of whole wheat flour; beat thoroughly, add a half cupful of the chopped dates and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder; when well mixed fold in the well-beaten whites of the eggs. Bake in ten shallow muffin pans. DATE MUSH Stir finely-chopped dates into well-cooked oatmeal, at serving time. DATE SANDWICHES Stone and chop a half dozen dates. Butter two thin slices of bread, put the dates between, press them together, trim the crusts, cut into triangles and serve. 382 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Put a quarter of a pound of dates in a wire basket, plunge them down into boiling water, lift quickly, remove the stones and cut the dates rather fine. Separate two eggs, beat the yolks, add a half pint of milk, a quarter of a teaspoonful of salt and one cupful of whole wheat flour and one cupful of Roman meal ; beat thoroughly, add two level teaspoonfuls of baking powder, beat, add the dates, mix and stir in carefully the well-beaten whites of the eggs. Bake in gem pans, in a quick oven thirty minutes. These, with milk, make an exceedingly nice supper for children. ELDERBERRIES Elderberry juice, wine or cordial is said to have a slightly diuretic effect. Elderberry jelly is thought to be beneficial in cases of tuberculosis. To make a perfectly stiff jelly, however, the elderberry juice must be mixed with an equal quantity of green grape, apple or crab apple juice. Alone, it will not form a true jelly. Strip sufficient elderberries from the stem to make a half pint, put them in a saucepan with a half cupful of water, stew five minutes, mash and strain them through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. Return this juice to the saucepan, add one teaspoonful of cornstarch or arrowroot mixed with a little cold water; stir and cook five minutes, add two tablespoonfuls of sugar and pour over a nicely toasted slice of bread. This also makes a nice sauce for blancmange or other puddings. ELDERBERRY CORDIAL Strip the elderberries from the stems, mash them with a potato masher and strain them through a jelly bag or cheesecloth. To each half pint of this juice add two table- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 383 spoonfuls of sugar, stir until the sugar is dissolved and stand aside in a pitcher or large jar for twenty-four hours. Then, add to each half pint, one gill of the best brandy. Bottle and cork, leaving plenty of space at the neck ; stand the bottles in a saucepan of cold water, bring to boiling point and boil continuously for a half hour. Lift the lid, let the bottles cool in the water. Dip each cork into sealing wax and stand aside for keeping. This makes an exceedingly nice drink for chronic diarrhoea or dysentery. Being slightly astringent, it should not be given to persons inclined to constipation. ELDERBERRY WINE Mash four quarts of elderberries that have been stripped from the stems; add to them one quart of water and one pint of brown sugar, stir thoroughly and put it aside in a stone crock, the top of which is covered with a plate or loose fitting lid. Let this ferment for a week or ten days. Rack it off carefully into bottles, cork the bottles loosely and let them stand in a cold place until fermentation ceases; then put it 'into clean bottles, cork, tie and seal with wax. ELDERBERRY JUICE Mash four quarts of elderberries, add one pint of water and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. Fill the juice thus expressed into bottles, leaving considerable space at the neck; cork the bottles loosely, stand them in a kettle, surround them partly with cold water, bring to a boil and boil continuously for a half hour. Then lift each bottle, push in the corks, put them on their sides and con- tinue the boiling for another thirty minutes. Cool the bottles in the water. Seal with wax. Serve plain or with plain or carbonated water. FIGS Figs, both fresh and dried, contain a large amount of sugar; dried figs about forty-nine per cent. They also 384 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK contain a little nitrogenous matter, which makes them much more nutritious than most of our common fruits. Both fresh and dried they are aperient. If dried figs become hard, they may be scalded and soaked three or four hours, or over night. Dried figs must be thoroughly masticated; in fact, it is better, if the skin is tough, to reject it entirely. TO SERVE DRY FIGS Purchase the so-called pulled figs, put them in a wire basket, plunge them into a kettle of boiling water to thor- oughly sterilize the outside. If you have not a wire basket, put them on an egg beater, a few at a time, and hold them in the water for at least two minutes; lift and throw them on a plate to drain. Serve on a dainty plate, with a fruit knife and fork. Buy, a few figs at a time, and put them at once in a cold place to keep. At serving time fill a small individual serving dish with cracked ice, sink the figs in the ice, stem end up. These are rich and luscious, and must be handled very lightly. STEAMED FIGS Wash the given amount of pulled figs in cold water, let them soak for two hours ; place them in a colander, over a kettle of boiling water, steam continuously for three quarters of an hour and stand aside to cool. These may be cut into pieces and eaten with a fork, or they may be eaten from the fingers. STEWED FIGS Wash a half pound of pulled figs, cover with a pint of water and soak them over night. Next morning bring to boiling point, add a bay leaf, cover the saucepan and push it to the back of the stove where it will keep boiling hot for one hour. Serve cold, plain or with cream. . MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 385 FIG TOAST Put two stewed figs through a meat grinder, then into a saucepan with four tablespoonfuls of water, and stir con- stantly until they reach the boiling point. Have ready on a breakfast plate a slice of bread, toasted to a golden brown and buttered; put over the fig mixture and serve at once, with cream or milk. This takes the place of fruit and cereal, and is an excel- lent remedy for obstinate constipation. It makes a good supper as well as a good breakfast dish. FAIRY TOAST Toast a slice of sponge cake, cover it with the fig mix- ture and serve with cream or milk. FIG CARAMELS Soak a half pound of pulled figs over night. Next morning bring to boiling point, boil five minutes and drain. Put them through a meat grinder. Blanch a half pound of Jordan almonds, put them through a meat grinder, and mix the two together. Knead the same as bread, roll the mixture into a sheet a half inch thick, cut into "caramels," wrap each in waxed paper and keep in a cool place. These make a nice "candy" for children. Two, slowly eaten, just before going to bed, will relieve obstinate con- stipation. FIGS AND ALMONDS ON TOAST Wash, scald and soak two figs over night ; next morn- ing put them through the meat grinder with twenty-four blanched almonds. Add two tablespoonfuls of water, or enough to make it the consistency of a thick sauce ; spread it on a slice of hot buttered toast; eat plain or with milk. An excellent breakfast for school children. 25 386 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK FIG SANDWICHES Use the same mixture as above, without water, be- tween two slices of bread and butter. GRAPES Fresh ripe grapes are enjoyed mostly on account of their flavor and aroma. They are rich in sugar, frequently containing nearly twenty per cent., but this is not more im- portant than the potash salts they contain. The acid is chiefly tartaric, a part of which is combined with the potash. The seedless grape, such as the black Hamburg, is an excellent food for children and invalids. The white and purple California grapes, with the seeds removed, are equally palatable and wholesome. Grapes, on account of their sugar, are forbidden to diabetic, rheumatic and gouty patients. The ordinary Con- cord or similar grapes must be very carefully eaten. If the pulp is to be swallowed, the seeds must be removed be- tween the teeth, and the rich juice on the inside of the skin should be drawn out, and both skin and seeds discarded, as they hinder digestion and frequently cause diarrhoea. A special grape cure has been established in many grape-growing countries, but the fact is that almost any restricted diet will cure stomach or liver trouble and aid in the removal of chronic constipation, if the patient will adhere to it for a given length of time. It matters not so much whether the "cure" is the "peach," "grape," or "apple cure ;" the point is to put the patient on a limited diet until a cure is effected; patients with these troubles are fre- quently large eaters. Restricted feedings of all kinds must be prescribed and carried out under the eye of a physician and a trained nurse or attendant. The fruit of some varieties of grapes are dried and known as raisins ; these are very rich in sugar. The ordinary dried "currants" are merely dried small grapes ; they are indigestible and should not be given to the sick. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 387 TO SERVE RAW Wash the grapes as soon as they come from the market, and put them in a cold place. At serving time fill either a grape goblet or an individual dessert plate with finely- shaved ice, put the bunch of grapes down into the ice, stand on a service plate and serve with them on the same tray a finger bowl partly filled with warm water. \ GRAPE JUICE Pick the quantity of ripe Catawba or Concord grapes from the stems, put them into the preserving kettle with water enough to prevent scorching, and stir and cook until soft. Mash them with a potato masher and put them into a jelly bag to drain over night. Next morning bring the juice to boiling point and skim. Have the bottles ready, cleaned, and clean corks. Fill the juice into the bottles, leaving a space at the necks ; cork them tightly and drop them at once into a boiler of hot water. When the last bottle is in, cover the boiler and boil continuously for a half hour. Cool the bottles in the water, dip the corks in sealing wax and put them in a cool place for keeping. GRAPE JUICE WITH SUGAR Strain the juice according to preceding recipe ; meas- ure, and to each quart allow a half pint of sugar. Boil the juice, skim, add the sugar, stir until the sugar is dissolved, bottle and finish as directed in preceding recipe. FRESH GRAPE JUICE I This is considered very beneficial in cases of purpura haemorrhagica. Pick from the stems sufficient grapes to make a quart; pulp them and put the skins through either a meat grinder or an ordinary fruit press and strain the juice through cheese- cloth. This expressed juice is quite thick. Keep in a cold place until wanted. 388 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Two ounces may be given every three or four hours, between feedings. If the grapes are fully ripe, it will take one quart of grapes to make a half pint of juice. FRESH GRAPE JUICE II Pulp Concord or other black grapes; save the skins. Heat the pulp just a minute, press it through a sieve, cool quickly, then add the skins, and put the whole through an ordinary meat grinder or regular fruit press. A large lemon squeezer will answer if no other machine is at hand. GRAPE JAM Pick sufficient Concord grapes from the stems to make one quart; wash them, pulp the grapes, saving the skins. Put the seeds and pulp in a saucepan, bring to boiling point and press them through a sieve. Add the skins to this ; measure, and to each pint allow a half pint of sugar. Put the skin mixture in a saucepan, stir and cook until the skins are tender, then press them through a sieve sufficiently fine to make a soft pulp, and sufficiently coarse to allow all the skin to go through. Bring to boiling point, add the sugar, boil twenty minutes, and put into tumblers or jars. FRESH GRAPE JELLY Freshly made jelly is much more acceptable to the in- valid; old jelly, unless carefully covered, is apt to taste musty. Pick a pint of grapes from the stem, put them in a kettle with a little water to prevent scorching, bring to boiling point, mash them and strain through two thick- nesses 'of cheesecloth. Measure the liquor; you should have a half pint; put it in a saucepan, bring to boiling point, boil ten minutes, add a half pint of sugar, boil ten minutes and begin to try. As soon as it forms a jelly when cool, turn it into small stem glasses and stand aside to cool, or cool it into small fancy molds. MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK GRAPE WATER ICE Sweeten and freeze ordinary grape juice. GRAPES IN ORANGE JELLY Cover two teaspoonfuls of granulated gelatin with a half cupful of cold water, soak twenty minutes ; stir over the fire until the gelatin is dissolved ; add an equal quantity of orange juice and two tablespoonfuls of sugar, and stand aside to cool, but not thicken. Skin twelve large, white grapes, cut them into halves, remove the seeds, arrange the grapes neatly in an individual mold, pour over the orange jelly and stand aside to harden. GRAPE TOAST Boil together four tablespoonfuls of grape juice and two tablespoonfuls of water, add a teaspoonful of cornstarch or arrowroot moistened in a little cold water, a teaspoonful of lemon juice and a tablespoonful of sugar. Pour this over a slice of nicely-toasted bread and serve at once. Or in place of toast use the upper half of a toasted Shredded Wheat biscuit. RAISINS Raisins are a dried sweet grape known as the "raisin grape." They contain more sugar than ordinary grapes, and have no place whatever in diet for the sick except as flavoring to milk dishes. Layer raisins, seeded, or the ordinary seedless raisins, carefully stewed, may be used to advantage in cases of chronic constipation, and in winter they may be used as a breakfast fruit for children, providing the children have been taught to masticate. They should be well washed and soaked over night before cooking. STEWED RAISINS Put a pound of seeded raisins into a colander in a bowl of cold water, wash thoroughly, lift them, put them in 390 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK a saucepan with just boiling 1 water to cover; cover and stand aside over night. Next morning the water should be absorbed by the raisins. Add a little more water, bring slowly to boiling point, take quickly from the fire and turn out to cool. I)o not add sugar or flavoring. RAISINS AND RICE Children frequently like boiled rice and raisins as a dessert or luncheon dish. Boil the rice carefully as directed for boiling rice, and cover it with seeded stewed raisins. The raisins are suffi- ciently sweet to sweeten the rice without additional sugar. GRAPE FRUIT AND SHADDOCK Grape fruit closely resembles the shaddock, and is called "grape fruit" because it grows in clusters like grapes, while the shaddock and alemoen grow singly. The skin surrounding each carpel in the shaddock instead of being white like other citrus fruit is pale pink ; the pulp is also pink, and unlike grape fruit, is only moderately acid. TO SERVE GRAPE FRUIT Wash the grape fruit and stand them on the ice until moderately cold. Acid fruits must not be icy cold, or they are unpalatable. Cut the skin into strips and peel it off. Separate the carpels, and holding each carpel in the hand, break it open, disclosing the pulp ; with a pointed knife take the pulp carefully from the bitter envelope, put it into an individual glass dish, and serve it at once ; or it may be placed on the ice until wanted. GRAPE FRUIT IN THE HALF SHELL Wash the grape fruit, make it moderately cold, plunge it into boiling water and cut it at once into halves. With a sharp knife take out the seeds and loosen the flesh of each carpel. Serve plain or with sugar; without sugar they are decidedly more wholesome. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 391 GRAPE FRUIT FOR LUNCHEON Proceed according to the foregoing recipe ; remove the seeds and cut out the core. Fill the core space with brandy or sherry, according to directions. GRAPE FRUIT FOR THE DIABETIC Remove the seeds and core, space from a perfectly sound grape fruit; put into the core space two teaspoon- fuls of olive oil, and serve. People can soon accustom themselves to eating grape fruit with olive oil. It is wholesome and palatable. GRAPE FRUIT SALAD Remove the carpels from the grape fruit according to the directions for serving grape fruit, and place them on crisp lettuce leaves. Put two tablespoonfuls of olive oil into a bowl, stinwith a piece of ice until the oil thickens, then add the juice that drained from the grape fruit ; beat thoroughly, baste it over the salad and send it at once to the table. TO SERVE SHADDOCK Remove the thick skin and this, by the way, may be reserved for candying or conserving not for the sick separate each. carpel; pick up one carpel at a time, taking the ends between the forefinger and thumbs, bend it back, cracking the white bitter skin in the center. Peel this skin off, or turn the pulp out into an individual glass dish, sprinkle over a little finely-shaved ice, and serve at once. This is frequently flavored with a tablespoonful of sherry or Madeira. HUCKLEBERRIES, BLUEBERRIES, WHORTLEBERRIES OR BILBERRIES These berries, known by different names in different places, commonly grow wild in our woods ; in fact they are rarely cultivated. They contain some free acid and a little 392 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK sugar, and on account of their seeds are moderately laxa- tive if eaten alone ; with other food they are frequently quite constipating. Huckleberry juice is used as a remedy for chronic diarrhoea. Being sub-acid, the large blueberries can be eaten by people with whom acid fruits disagree. TO SERVE RAW Select the large blueberries and put them in the refrigerator until moderately cold. Dish them in a small glass dessert dish, and if necessary dust with powdered sugar. Fruits of this kind are better eaten plain, without either sugar or cream. HUCKLEBERRY JUICE Mash the huckleberries with an ordinary potato masher, in a granite or earthen bowl; put the juice into a jelly bag and squeeze and press it. Stand aside 1 in a cold place ; use as directed. It may be served alone, or with carbonated or plain water. HUCKLEBERRY FLUMMERY Peel one banana, cut it into slices and press it through a fine sieve. Mash sufficient large huckleberries to make half a cupful ; add this to the banana, stir over the fire until they reach boiling point, add a teaspoonful of arrowroot moistened in cold water, and two teaspoonfuls of sugar; cook five minutes and strain into a small glass dish. Serve cold, with plain or whipped cream. LEMONS AND LIMES Lemons and limes are not true foods from an ordinary standpoint, but they are agreeable as flavorings, and the potash and other salts they contain, mingled with vegetable acids, makes them valuable anti-scorbutics. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 393 Lemon juice added to plain water is excellent in obesity. In fevers, it cleanses the mouth and stomach, aids digestion and allays thirst. In large quantities, lemon juice hinders digestion by overpowering the more mild natural acid of the stomach. Taken in the mouth with starchy foods, it hinders the mouth digestion of these foods by neutralizing the alkaline saliva. A few drops of lemon juice on fish or meat aids in their digestion. Pure lemon juice is said to be excellent in cases of ptomaine poisoning. Lemon juice intensifies the flavor of many other frui'ts. The yellow rind contains a volatile oil ; grated, it may be added as flavoring to custards and other dishes. MANGOES Mangoes seldom come to the United States in good condition. In .countries where grafted mangoes can be obtained fresh and ripe they are certainly the most luscious of fruits. It is said by the natives of mango countries that if you take a piece of skin the size of an ordinary silver ten-cent piece and masticate it thoroughly and swallow it, before eating the mango, they will never produce diarrhoea. I think, however, that diarrhoea is caused by eating under- ripe or stale fruit. TO SERVE MANGOES Wash the mangoes thoroughly in cold water and put them on the ice. At serving time fill a little individual glass dish with finely-shaved ice and sink the mango down into the ice. Always serve with it a finger bowl, as it is difficult to eat a mango without soiling the hands. To eat the mango, cut off the "cheeks," to the stone; with your knife make a cross on the flesh of each cheek and bend the skin back; simply bite the flesh from the skin. 394 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Then peel the remaining portion around the stone and suck the flesh from the stone. To be good they must be free from strings. To eat a mango with strings, however, work it with your fingers, without breaking the skin, until you feel that it has been reduced to a pulp; make a hole in one end and suck out the flesh as you would suck an orange, leaving all the strings inside, or eat it with a spoon. ORANGES The common sweet orange is a very useful fruit, both in health and sickness. It is always refreshing, and not liable to upset digestion. It is especially useful for chil- dren who have weak digestion. In fevers it allays thirst. Orange juice should be used daily for children who have rickets, between the meal hours. TO SERVE ORANGES IN THE HALF SHELL Chill the oranges. At serving time plunge them into boiling water; do not allow them to remain an instant. Wipe, cut them into halves and serve on a dainty doily. Induce the patient to eat oranges and grape fruit with- out sugar. TO SERVE IN GLASS DISH Chill the orange, plunge in boiling water according to preceding recipe, quickly remove the skin and all the white portion underneath the skin. With a sharp knife remove each carpel, take out the seeds, put the solid flesh in a pretty glass dish and serve. TO SERVE AN ORANGE IN THE SKIN Plunge a cold orange into boiling water; do not allow it to remain an instant. Cut the skin into eighths, begin- ning at the blossom end, but do not detach it from the stem end. Loosen the skin carefully from the flesh, take the orange out, and remove every particle of white pith from MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 395 the outside. Separate the carpels without breaking the skin, put them together as they were originally in the orange, stand the orange back in the skin, tucking the end of each bit of skin down, forming a sort of loop. This will keep the orange from falling apart, and makes an ex- ceedingly pretty dish. Serve on a paper mat or pretty linen doily. COMPOTE OF ORANGE Separate the carpels of a fine seedless orange, Put four tablespoonfuls of sugar and two of water in a sauce- pan, stir until it reaches boiling point, boil two minutes, add the juice of half an orange, pour hot over the carpels and stand aside to cool. ORANGE COCKTAIL Purchase a large bright yellow-skinned orange for the "basket." Cut through the skin into the flesh, making a handle from a band of skin, and a basket ; scoop out the pulp. Throw the basket thus made into cold water until crisp and bright. Cut a sweet orange into halves, scoop out the pulp, saving the juice and rejecting the seeds ; add to the pulp and juice a tablespoonful of powdered sugar and a tablespoonful of brandy and fill the orange basket. Serve on a mat or doily. If the basket is troublesome, cut the orange into halves, scoop out the flesh and use "the half shell." These baskets are also pretty for whipped cream and orange jelly. ORANGEADE Squeeze the juice of one orange in a tumbler, add a teaspoonful of powdered sugar, stir until the sugar is dis- solved and fill the tumbler with plain cold water. ORANGE SQUASH Put the juice of one orange in a tumbler, add a tea- spoonful of powdered sugar, and when the sugar is dis- 396 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK solved fill the glass from a siphon of either plain, car- bonated water, seltzer or soda water. ENGLISH ORANGE SQUASH Put a rasping of the yellow rind of an orange, two tablespoonfuls of sugar and a half cupful of water in a saucepan to boil, boil five minutes and strain. When this is cold add the juice of a large orange; put it in a glass, add a little finely-shaved ice and fill the glass with soda or carbonated water. FROZEN ORANGE JUICE Squeeze the juice from one orange, sweeten it with a tablespoonful of powdered sugar, put it in an individual freezer, pack with salt and ice, and turn now and then until frozen like wet snow; then stir rapidly a minute and it is ready to serve. Serve in a small dainty punch glass or ice cream stem glass. For fever patients omit sugar. ORANGE SORBET Follow the preceding recipe, pack the freezer, and stir constantly until the mixture is frozen. Beat the white of one egg until stiff, add a tablespoonful of powdered sugar and beat again ; remove the dasher from the freezer, stir in the meringue, cover and let it stand thirty to forty minutes. ORANGE SPONGE Squeeze the juice from one orange ; it should measure two-thirds of a cupful. Cover a teaspoonful of granulated gelatin with a tablespoonful of water to soak for a half hour; stand over hot water until the gelatin is dissolved. Turn the orange juice into the bowl, add the gelatin and stir until the mixture is cold, but not stiff; then fold in the well-beaten white of one egg. Turn into an individual mold or pretty glass dish and put in a cold place for one hour or more. Sweeten if admissible. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 397 ORANGE SOUFFLE Follow the preceding recipe, and when the gelatin is cold (not stiff) fold in six tablespoonfuls of cream, whipped to a stiff froth. The pudding put a teaspoonful of flour and a half teaspoonful of cornstarch in a saucepan ; measure a half cupful of milk, add this gradually to the flour and corn- starch. Bring to boiling point; it should be smooth and thick. Take from the fire, beat in the yolk of one egg and then fold in the well-beaten white. Turn into a custard cup, stand the cup in a shallow pan of boiling water and bake in a moderate oven fifteen minutes. When done turn it carefully into a dessert saucer, pour over the sauce and serve at once. The sauce grate sufficient yellow rind of an orange to make a teaspoonful, add a tablespoonful of sugar and a teaspoonful of cornstarch ; mix thoroughly and add hastily a half cupful of boiling water; stir until the mixture boils, boil two minutes and strain. Take from the fire and add two tablespoonfuls of orange juice. This is a nice dessert for convalescing patients, in- valids or children. ORANGE JELLY Cover a teaspoonful of granulated gelatin with two tablespoonfuls of cold water, soak a half hour, add a table- spoonful of powdered sugar, stand over boiling water and stir until the gelatin is dissolved. Add the juice of an orange, stir carefully, strain, turn into an individual mold and stand at once in the cold. Orange jelly may be cooled in a shallow pan, cut into blocks and served in an orange basket. 398 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ORANGE WHIP Cover -one teaspoonful of granulated gelatin with" two tablespoonfuls of cold water to soak for a half hour ; add a tablespoonful of powdered sugar, stir over the fire until the gelatin is dissolved, and add two-thirds of a cupful of orange juice. Stand this aside until it begins to jelly, then stand the dish in another of cracked ice or ice water, and whip with an ordinary egg beater until the whole mixture is as white as snow. Turn at once into an individual mold and stand on the ice. This is nice served with a compote of orange. ORANGE SALAD Peel the orange, remove the carpels very carefully and arrange them neatly on a heart of lettuce. Put a saltspoonful of salt and one of sugar, and a tablespoonful of oil into a bowl, put in a piece of ice and stir until the salt and sugar are dissolved ; remove the ice and baste the mixture over the orange on the lettuce leaf. Squeeze on top a half teaspoonful of lemon juice, and serve at once. ORANGE FLOAT Moisten two level teaspoonfuls of cornstarch with a half cupful of cold water, stir constantly until it reaches the boiling point, boil about two minutes and add a table- spoonful of sugar; take from the fire, add a grating from the yellow rind of an orange and two tablespoonfuls of orange juice ; and pour while hot into the well-beaten white of one egg. Turn this at once into a little glass stemmed dish and put in the refrigerator to cool. At serving time fill the dish with orange juice and stand it on a pretty mat on a service plate. PEACHES AND NECTARINES Nectarines are not easily obtainable in this country, so need not be considered singly; they may be used the same as peaches. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 399 Peaches are wholesome, easily digested, and contain less sugar than other fruits ; for this reason, they are suited to the rheumatic, the gouty and the diabetic; in diabetes, however, they must not be used unless ordered by the physician, and then they must be fully ripe. When mellow, soft and ripe, freshly picked from the tree, they are con- sidered curative in cases of chronic diarrhoea. A little underripe, eaten alone, they are laxative. TO SERVE WHOLE, RAW Wash the peach and thoroughly chill it; sink it in a little dish of shaved ice, stem end up; if possible, garnish with peach leaves and serve at once. For serving raw always select' a fine specimen. TO SERVE,, SLICED Pare and slice the peach at the last moment; dust it lightly with powdered sugar, or serve it plain. Do not use cream or milk ; such combinations complicate digestion. PEACH PUREE Peel one large mellow peach, press it through a sieve, heap it in a punch or lemonade glass, make a hole in the center, put in a tablespoonful of sherry or brandy, dust it with powdered sugar and serve. BAKED PEACHES Select a very large free-stone peach, wash and wipe it ; stand it in a small saucer or porcelain dish, and in a hot oven for fifteen minutes. When done, pull the peach open with two forks and remove the stone; dust it with powdered sugar and serve. The patient must reject the skin, scoop- ing out the soft portion with a spoon. COLD PEACH SOUFFLE Mash one large mellow peach through a fine sieve and stir into it at once six tablespoonfuls of cream whipped to 400 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK a stiff froth. I prefer this to be served without sugar. If, however, the patient is allowed sweet dishes, sprinkle over a little powdered sugar. ICED PEACH ON TOAST Bake a peach according to directions for baked peaches ; when the peach is done, dish it on a square of toasted bread, cover it with a meringue made from the white of one egg, dust with sugar and return to the oven a moment to brown. STEWED PEACH Fruit stewed without sugar will frequently agree with persons who cannot eat raw fruit. To peel the peach, plunge it into boiling water and pull off the skin ; put it in a saucepan, add a half cupful of water, cover the saucepan and cook ten minutes. Lift to the serv- ing dish, baste with the syrup that has formed in the bottom of the saucepan, and stand aside to cool. Serve plain; do not add sugar. FROZEN PEACH Make a puree of peach, add four tablespoonfuls of cream, turn into an individual freezer, pack with salt and ice ; turn slowly now and then until frozen. Serve in an individual glass stem dish or punch cup. PEACHES a la'IMPERATRICE Dish one stewed peach on four tablespoonfuls of care- fully-boiled rice and baste the rice with the peach syrup. Serve with plain cream. PEACH TAPIOCA Put a teaspoonful of granulated tapioca into four tablespoonfuls of water, soak for twenty minutes, and stir over hot water until transparent and rather thick. Pare a large ripe peach ; with a skewer push out the stone, keep- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 401 ing the peach whole. Stand it in a ramekin dish, fill the stone space with tapioca, dust with a tablespoonful of powdered sugar and bake in the oven until the peach is tender and slightly brown. Just before you take it out, dust again with sugar and let it melt over the peach. Serve warm with cream. PEACH ICE CREAM Sweeten a half pint of good cream, turn it into an individual freezer and stir slowly until frozen like wet snow. Peel and press a very ripe peach through a sieve, stir it into the frozen cream, put on the cover and turn the crank slowly until the mixture is again frozen. PEACH DUMPLING Make the same as apricot dumpling. PEACH TOAST Peel one peach, remove the stone and crack it ; take out the kernel, cut it into halves, put it into a saucepan with a tablespoonful of sugar and a half cupful of water; boil two minutes, strain, and add the peach that has been pressed through a sieve, and a teaspoonful of almond paste or ground almonds. Have ready a square of nicely-toasted bread, heap the puree on the toast and serve. A nice breakfast for the chronic dyspeptic. PEACH PUFF Pare a ripe peach, press the flesh through a sieve and stir into it the well-beaten white of one egg; heap this into a ramekin dish, dust with powdered sugar and bake five minutes in a moderately quick oven. PEACH PUDDING One large mellow peach, peeled and pressed through a sieve; add to it the yolk of one egg slightly beaten, and 26 402 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK one tablespoonful of sugar. Dust an individual baking dish or casserole thickly with bread crumbs, put in the peach mixture and bake eight minutes in a quick oven. Beat the white of the egg to a stiff froth, add a tablespoon- ful of powdered sugar and beat until fine and dry ; heap this over the top of the pudding, dust it with powdered sugar and put back in the oven a minute to brown. Serve cold. PEACHES AND HONEY Put one tablespoonful of peach brandy into a glass, add a tablespoonful of honey, mix, and ,fill the glass with either plain or carbonated water. PEACH SYLLABUB Peel and mash one peach through a sieve, add a table- spoonful of powdered sugar, stir into it eight tablespoonfuls of cream whipped to a stiff froth, heap in a glass dish, and when very cold serve. PEACH BRANDY Mash a quart of ripe peaches, without peeling, and break half the stones ; put them in two half-gallon fruit jars, add a pint of 95% grain alcohol to each jar, and a pint of water; cover and stand aside over night. Strain off the liquor, carefully pressing the peaches, then strain this through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. Add a half pint of rock candy syrup and a tablespoonful of caramel; mix, bottle and cork. HOT PEACH TODDY This dish used to be ordered by physicians, more frequently than now, but the recipe is well worth having. Split a large mellow peach into halves, remove the stone, stand the peach, skin side down, into a baking dish, dust it with a tablespoonful of powdered sugar and bake until tender. Press it from the skin into a small pitcher; MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 403 add a teaspoonful of powdered sugar, a grating of nutmeg, four tablespoonfuls of brandy or whiskey, and sufficient boiling water to make a pint. Stir and stand aside to cool. When wanted, fill a tumbler quarter full of the toddy and fill it with boiling water. More brandy may be added if desired. This is excellent in cases of chronic diarrhoea and dysen- tery. PEARS The Bartlett pear when fully ripe is soft and luscious, and will almost "melt in your mouth." It is more easily digested than raw apple ; but the average pear contains tiny particles of silica throughout the flesh, which are apt to provoke gastro-intestinal irritation in children and invalids, even when cooked. PEAR HONEY Pare and remove the cores from four Bartlett pears ; put them in water to prevent discoloration. Boil together a half cupful (four ounces) of sugar and the same quantity of water until the syrup will spin a light thread when dropped from a spoon. Grate the pears into the syrup, boil five minutes and put in tumblers or jars. This makes a nice sweet to serve with toast or rusks. STEWED PEARS Peel a Bartlett pear, remove the core, put it into a saucepan, cover with boiling water and stew gently until perfectly tender. Lift the pear to the serving dish, add a tablespoonful of sugar to the water, boil until it forms a thin syrup, baste it over the pear and stand aside to cool. BAKED PEAR Peel a Bartlett pear, cut it into halves and remove the seeds. Put the halves into a ramekin or individual casserole, dust lightly with powdered sugar, add two tablespoonfuls 404 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK of water and bake in a quick oven until the pear is tender and slightly glazed. Serve hot or cold. COMPOTE OF PEAR Cut a piece of bread the shape of a half pear and toast it. At serving time butter it lightly and put on the half of a stewed pear, rounding side up. Grate the other half quickly into a half cupful of water; bring to a boil, add a half teaspoonful of cornstarch that has been moistened in a little cold water and a tablespoonful of sugar; stir and boil just a minute, take from the fire, add a teaspoon- ful of brandy or a tablespoonful of sherry, and baste it over the pear and the toast. It is wise to make the grated pear first, so the whole may be served warm, not necessarily hot. PINEAPPLE Pineapple juice contains an enzyme, bromelin, which aids in the digestion of the albuminoids. The raw expressed juice is said to be very beneficial in cases of sore throat, tonsilitis or diphtheria. PINEAPPLEADE Boil two tablespoonfuls of sugar and a half pint of water together for two minutes. Take from the fire, and when cool add one ripe pineapple, grated, and stand aside for two or three hours. Strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth, wringing the pineapple fibre dry. Put it in a jar, and keep in a cold place. This may be sipped slowly ; or put four tablespoonfuls in a tumbler, and fill the tumbler with plain or carbonated water. Raw pineapple should not be served with starchy foods alone. It is truly an accompaniment to foods rich in protein. PINEAPPLE CIDER Grate one pineapple, put it into a pitcher with two quarts of cold water, cover the top with a piece of cheese- MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 405 cloth and stand it aside in a rather warm place for two or three days ; stir it down during the last day. Strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth, bottle, cork, and wire down the corks; put the bottles on their sides in the refrigerator for twenty-four hours, and it is ready for use. PINEAPPLE SHRUB Grate one large ripe pineapple, put it into an ordinary two-quart fruit jar, add one cupful of sugar, and fill the jar with cold water; shake and stir thoroughly until the sugar is dissolved. Put the top on the jar loosely and stand it in a warm place (about 80 Fahr.) for three days until the shrub begins to ferment. As soon as fermentation is quite pronounced, stand it in the ice and it is ready for use. This may be served, a teaspoonful or a tablespoonful at a time, to persons who have sore throat, or to tuberculosis patients, or may be given in a tumbler with cr-acked ice and carbonated water; or, if admissible, two tablespoonfuls may be mixed with two tablespoonfuls of rum in a tumbler, and the tumbler filled with carbonated water. GRATED PINEAPPLE This is used frequently in cases of tonsilitis and sore throat ; it is also good for children with whooping cough. Pare the pineapple, remove the eyes, grate quickly, saving all the juice, strain and stand it aside or put it in a glass jar on the ice, to use as wanted, a teaspoonful at a time. It is much better if used without sugar. PLUMS Plums are rarely used as diet for the sick ; unless very ripe, they are apt to cause diarrhoea and intestinal colic. Green gages and large blue plums are more digestible than the smaller varieties. 406 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK TO SERVE RAW Select perfectly ripe large green o'r yellow gages, put them in a sieve, plunge them into boiling water, then into cold water. Peel carefully, arrange them in a pretty dish of cracked ice, and they are ready to serve. PLUM JUICE Cut a pint of blue plums into halves and remove the stones; put them into a kettle with a half cupful of water, cover and stew for ten minutes; mash and press them through a sieve; put this aside in a cold place. When wanted for use, add a pint of cold water, stir thoroughly and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. This may be kept in a jar in the refrigerator and used the same as grape or currant juice. PRUNES A small blue plum, long and narrow, known as the prune plum, is dried and sold in almost every market of the world. We have many varieties of prunes, some excel- lent, some good, and many inferior. The California large dried prune is, as a rule, very good. Dehydrated prunes retain their flavor to a marked degree, and are decidedly better than prunes dried by the ordinary methods ; in fact, dehydrated fruits, as a rule, retain all the flavor of the fresh fruits. Prunes contain a large percentage of sugar, and when eaten alone are easy of digestion and laxative. They should be soaked over night, and should not be cooked with sugar. A word of caution Do not eat stewed prunes for breakfast, and at the same meal drink coffee. I do not know of anything that will more quickly provoke indiges- tion and sour stomach. Cereals and prunes make a good combination, but do not wash them down with coffee. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 407 STEWED PRUNES Wash a pound of prunes through several cold waters ; cover them with a half pint of cold water and soak over night. Next morning bring them to boiling point, lift the prunes with a skimmer, add a bay leaf to the juice and boil it down one half; pour it over the prunes, and stand aside to cool. PUFFED PRUNES Wash the prunes through several cold waters, cover them with cold water and let them stand over night ; next morning drain, and they are ready to use. These are better for constipation than stewed prunes. PRUNES AND RICE Serve six puffed prunes on the top of hot boiled rice. Use cream if admissible. PRUNE PULP Press puffed prunes through a sieve sufficiently fine to reject all the skin ; serve this pulp in a glass saucer with a little thick cream. PRUNE SOUFFLE Press six puffed prunes through a sieve, fold into them the well-beaten white of an egg; put this into an individual baking dish or a custard cup, dust thickly with powdered sugar, bake in a quick oven five minutes, and serve at once. BAKED PRUNES Wash the prunes through several cold waters. To each pound allow one pint of fresh cold water. Put them in a casserole mold, pour over the water, cover and let them stand all night. Next morning put them in a slow oven and bake for at least one hour. 408 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR T&E SICK PRUNE JELLY Press six stewed prunes through a fine sieve. Cover one teaspoonful of gelatin with two tablespoonfuls of cold water to soak for a half hour, then add two tablespoonfuls of hot water, stir until the gelatin is dissolved, add the prunes, stir until well mixed, turn into a small fancy mold and stand away to harden. Serve with plain cream. PRUNE CREAM Skin and stone four stewed prunes, press the flesh through a fine sieve, fold in six tablespoonfuls of whipped cream, heap it in a small glass stem dish, make a tiny hole in the center and put in one tablespoonful of orange juice; serve at once. QUEEN PRUNES Press six stewed prunes through a sieve ; heap the pulp into an individual glass dish, cover it thickly with toasted bread crumbs, garnish the dish with whipped cream, and use- it at once. This is better cold than hot. PRUNELLES Prunelles are the light Italian plum sold in our markets in great dried masses like dates. While they are exceed- ingly palatable and may be eaten by the well, they are not used as diet for the sick. QUINCES On account of the short summers in the United States, the quince never ripens sufficiently to be eaten raw. Even when thoroughly cooked we rarely eat it alone; and I find no place for them in diet for the sick, except as a flavoring to apples, or in jelly. Quince and guava jellies are the most wholesome of the sweet jellies; in fact they contain only a trace of free acids, and can be taken by persons who have to reject all acid fruits. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 409 QUINCE JELLY Wash the quinces and wipe them, cut them into halves and remove every particle of the seed core and seeds ; slice the quinces without paring, put them into a porcelain-lined or granite kettle, add, to each two pounds, one quart of water. Cover the saucepan, bring to boiling point, stew twenty minutes, or until the quinces are tender, and drain over night. Next morning measure the juice, and to each pint allow three quarters of a pound of sugar. Put the juice in a preserving kettle, bring it to a boil, skim, boil rapidly five minutes, add the sugar, stir until the sugar is dissolved and begin to try. As soon as it drops, jelly like, from a spoon, turn it into the jelly glasses. RHUBARB Rhubarb is really not a fruit, but as it is used in the place of fruit, it is considered under this heading. When thoroughly cooked, it acts as a laxative, but on account of the oxalic acid it contains, I find no use for it in diet for the sick in fact I find very little use for it in diet for the well. Mixed with dried soaked figs in equal quantities, it makes a good marmalade. It is said that the strawberry took its name from the old-fashioned way of cultivating and growing it. When the plants were of a fairly good size, the entire ground was covered with straw to protect the berry from sand and dirt so they were "straw berries." The popularity of the strawberry is based largely on its odor and flavor. It is wholesome when taken in mod- eration, and is always better when served plain, without cream. Strawberries and strawberry juice are considered valuable in diet for the gouty on account of the salts they contain (potash, soda and lime). They are cooling and laxative. Some people seem to have an idiosyncrasy for 410 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK strawberries; even a half dozen will produce a rash that is exceedingly unpleasant. The French, who always study to heighten the flavor of food, claim that a few drops of orange or lemon juice intensifies the flavor of strawbrries. Of this we are certain : strawberries served in orange juice are much more whole- some than strawberries served with cream. TO SERVE For the sick select large ripe sweet berries free from sand. Arrange them on a pretty dish, around a little mount of powdered ice. To eat, lift them by the stems, dip them in the sugar and bite off the berry. TO SERVE IN ORANGE JUICE Stem a half doeen large strawberries, with a silver knife cut them into halves, put them into a glass punch cup, strain over the juice of one orange, stand the cup on a pretty doily, on a service plate. These should be mod- erately chilled. FRESH STRAWBERRY JUICE Put the strawberries into a flat kettle, mash them with an ordinary wooden pestle, turn the mashed berries into two thicknesses of cheesecloth and wring them until the pulp is dry. Put it at once into clean glass jars and keep in a cold place. Fruit juices for the sick should be served without sugar. Put four tablespoonfuls in a tumbler, and fill the tumbler with plain or effervescing water. Induce the patient to take this slowly, and hold it in the mouth a moment before swallowing. To preserve strawberry juice follow the rule for grape juice. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 411 NUTS The fruits of trees, enclosed in hard woody coverings instead of soft skins, are) called nuts. In some, the fruit is drupaceous, as the almond, for instance we eat the "stone kernel" and reject the pulpy covering. This is true also of the nutmeg; although in countries where nutmegs are plentiful, the flesh, which closely resembles the peach, is used for jellies and jams. Nutmeg jelly is tart and tasty, and makes a nice 1 accompaniment to game. Nuts are divided into two classes, nitrogenous and carbonaceous. The nitrogenous are those containing a large amount of tissue-building foods, as peanuts, pecans, Eng- lish walnuts, hazel, filbert or cobnuts, pinons, and hickory nuts in general. Almonds and pistachio nuts are used largely as flavoring. The chestnut and the chinquapin are the only two starchy nuts in common use. The black wal- nut, white walnut or butternut, Brazilian nuts, souari and cocoanuts are oleaginous, containing considerable heat and energy food. The cashew nut (Anacardmm occidentale) , a common nut in Central and South America, has not until recently been introduced in the United States ; its chemical composition is not known, but the fruit itself is interest- ing. The tree is short and shrub-like. The fruit is the shape of an ordinary bell pepper, sometimes scarlet, some- times yellow, and both colors are found on the same tree. The fruit is known to the natives as "cashew apple" and is edible. The nut is inclosed in a leathery covering and springs from the blossom end of the fruit. The pulp around the nut contains a very caustic, acrid oily substance which is poisonous and can only be eliminated by heat ; for this reason cashew nuts are always sold, in the markets, roasted. Peanuts truly belong to the leguminous seeds, but in our market are classed with nuts. Pine or pinon nuts come from the small pinons of the West; they are cheap, easily digested and nutritious. 412 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK In many parts of the United States the common acorn is extensively used in making bread, which is, by the way, when properly made, palatable and nutritious. ALMONDS The almond is the seed of a tropical evergreen (Prunus Amygdalus, Baill.) The high price demanded for almonds places them, from a food standpoint, among the luxuries, appetizers and flavorings. They have, however, a decided medicinal value. Some physicians recommend an emulsion of almonds where fatty food is called! for and olive oil is not well borne. Almond milk is very beneficial in cases of stomach trouble. Six almonds, blanched and eaten raw, will frequently relieve an acute attack of indigestion, pro- vided they are thoroughly masticated. In the United States we have fixed 'in our minds some- where that almonds are digesters, so we serve them, salted and roasted, at the end of the meal. The enzymes are killed by the roasting, and the almonds become a burden rather than an aid to digestion. Serve them raw. BITTER ALMONDS Bitter almonds taste like the kernel of a peach ; they are only used for flavoring, and then in small quantities. ALMOND WAFERS Mix one cupful of almond paste with one and a half cupfuls of warm water, and stir in sufficient bran to make a hard dough ; this will take nearly one quart. Roll it to a very thin sheet, cut it into wafers four inches long and two inches wide, and bake in a moderate oven to a golden brown. The bran must be clean bran, free from flour. TO BLANCH ALMONDS Cover the almonds with boiling water; let them stand five minutes, drain, put them on a coarse towel and rub off the skins. Stand these in a cool oven, where they will MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 413 dry, without browning; if they are the slightest browned, the digestive qualities are killed. SALTED ALMONDS Shell and blanch the almonds. Put them in a pan, dust lightly with salt, and stand them at the oven door until they are thoroughly dried, not cooked or baked. To be of service as digesters they must not be baked, fried or browned. ALMOND BUTTER Grind blanched almonds through the finest "plate" of a meat grinder or in a nut machine, and pack the "butter" in tumblers. Keep in a cold place. ALMOND CAKE Blanch a quarter of a pound of sweet almonds, put them through the meat grinder twice, then add one ounce of butter, mix thoroughly, add a saltspoonful of salt and stir in the yolks of two eggs. When this is thoroughly mixed, fold in the well-beaten whites of the eggs. Bake in lightly greased gem pans, about two tablespoonfuls in each pan. To take the place of bread for the diabetic patient. ALMOND BISCUITS Blanch and grind two ounces of shelled almonds; pound them in a mortar if possible. Drop in the whites of two eggs, one at a time, beating all the while. When well mixed and smooth, drop by spoonfuls on oiled paper and bake twenty minutes in a very moderate oven. ALMOND PUDDING Blanch and grind two ounces of almonds ; add to them two eggs, well beaten, and a teaspoonful of butter; mix well, add four tablespoonfuls of milk and bake in a moderate oven, in an individual mold, fifteen minutes. Serve warm. 414 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ALMOND MILK Blanch and grind two ounces of almonds; put this "butter" into a pitcher and add gradually, stirring all the while, a half pint of cold water; stir continually for five minutes, strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth and stand aside until palatably cold. Where almond milk is to be used two or three times a day, it is wise to make the desired quantity in the morn- ing, and keep it on the ice in a covered vessel. Four ounces is a feeding. ALMONDS AND MILK Follow the preceding recipe, and substitute milk for water. After straining add ten grains of salt to each individual quantity. ALMOND CROQUETTES Wash and boil four tablespoonfuls of rice. When done, drain, throw it into cold water to soak for ten minutes, and drain again. Pound this in a mortar or press it through a sieve. Add twelve almonds that have been blanched and ground, and a saltspoonful of salt. Mix well, form into tiny cylinders, put them on a piece of oiled paper in the bottom of a baking pan, and bake in a quick oven ten or fifteen minutes, until a golden brown. Serve with egg, tomato or cream sauce. BEECH NUTS (Fagus ferruginea, Aiton) These tiny, three-sided nuts are sweet and tender, but take no part whatever in diet for the sick. Beech nut oil is used in many places instead of olive oil ; it is sweet and bland. CHESTNUTS The chestnut is the seed of a large tree belonging to the oak family and to the division Costanca. Chestnuts form an exceedingly good starchy diet where potatoes and MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 415 other starchy foods are not obtainable. Chestnut flour, a common article of commerce in almost all countries, makes good thickening for soups and gruels. BOILED CHESTNUTS Shell the chestnuts, remove the brown skin under- neath, throw them in a kettle of boiling salted water and boil rapidly for twenty minutes, until perfectly tender, but not water-soaked. Drain, turn into a heated dish and serve in the place of potatoes or rice. If admissible, they may be served with butter or cream sauce. CHESTNUTS a la POULETTE This is an exceedingly nice dish in cases of rheumatism or gout, where a little easily-digested starchy food is admissible. Boil the chestnuts as directed in preceding recipe, using stock instead of water. When the chestnuts are done drain and cover them with sauce a la Poulette. ' CHESTNUTS WITH WHIPPED CREAM Boil the chestnuts according to the directions in first recipe. When done press them through a colander or an ordinary vegetable press ; heap them in a serving dish, dust them with powdered sugar and garnish with whipped cream, or they may be served with plain cream. An exceedingly nice dish in cases of anaemia, where easily digested fat forming foods are required. COCOANUT (Cocos nucifera) Cocoanut is the fruit of a large palm growing in Central and South America. The soft pulp of a fresh cocoanut is excellent in cases of chronic constipation, but in the cen- tral and northern parts of the United States it is impos- sible to obtain fresh cocoanuts. The flesh of dried cocoa- nuts is most indigestible, but when made into cocoanut 416 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK milk or cream is a valuable fatty food. It is easily digested and palatable. COCOANUT MILK Grate a good-sized cocoanut, add a pint of boiling water, stir until it is thoroughly washed and water-soaked. Put it in a cheesecloth bag or towel and wring the fibre dry. Stand the milk thus obtained in a cold place ; throw the fibre away. The milk thus obtained may be used for sauces. The "cream" makes a nice salad dressing, or pudding sauce. COCOANUT CREAM Stand cocoanut "milk" aside in a cold place for four hours, then skim off the "cream" and use it in the place of ordinary cream or oil. COCOANUT CUSTARD Skim the cream from the surface of the cocoanut milk. Put a half cupful of the "milk" in a double boiler. Beat the yolk of one egg with two tablespoonfuls of sugar, add the hot cocoanut milk, stir in the double boiler over the fire until it thickens like soft custard ; take it from the fire and pour it slowly into the well-beaten white of the egg. Turn this at once into a pretty glass dessert cup and stand aside to cool. COCOANUT AND TOMATO Peel a solid tomato and cut it in slices one inch thick; put the two center slices on a serving dish, dust them lightly with salt and pour over two tablespoonfuls of cocoa- nut cream and serve. This is one of the most wholesome ways of serving tomatoes. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 417 AMBROSIA Remove the pulp from one orange or half a grape fruit ; arrange the flesh neatly on a glass individual dessert plate, pour over cocoanut cream and serve. Without sugar, this can be taken by a diabetic pa- tient ; it is exceedingly good for the rheumatic and gouty, and gives variety to long-continued diet for an invalid. PEANUTS (Arachis hypogaea, Linn.) In some parts of the United States these are also called ground nuts, but must not be confounded with the true ground nut (Apois tuberosa). The peanut is truly a legu- minous plant which ripens its seeds below the surface of the soil. COMPOSITION OF SHELLED PEANUTS (Church) Water 7.5 Albuminoids, etc 24.5 Starch, etc 1 1.7 Oil 50.0 Cellulose 4.5 Mineral matter 1.8 Peanuts, unroasted, ground and made into meal, make good thickenings for soup and sauces, or may be used in half quantity in breakfast muffins and in peanut bread. Roasted peanuts are used for peanut butter, peanut wafers, or like the unroasted ones, may be added to sauces and soups. They are an exceedingly concentrated food, and must not be eaten in large quantities. PEANUT WAFERS Mix a half cupful of peanut meal with a half cupful of peanut butter and one cupful of sugar. Dissolve a half teaspoonful of soda in a half cupful of warm water, add this to the nut mixture, and work in nearly a quart of Graham flour; the dough must be quite hard. Knead until 27 418 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK the dough is smooth ; roll it out in a thin sheet, cut it into squares of two inches and bake in a slow oven until a golden brown. A good bread for persons troubled with constipation. PEANUT BUTTER i Shell roasted peanuts, put them in a towel and rub them, and then blow away the skins. Dust them with salt, put them through the meat grinder with the finest plate, or use a regular nut grinder. Pack at once into glass tumblers, cover with paraffin and stand away, to use as needed. This may be used plain, or diluted with water. A meat substitute. PEANUT SOUP Put a quarter of a tumbler of peanut butter into a double boiler, with a half pint of water, a saltspoonful of salt, a slice of onion, a bit of chopped celery, or a half saltspoonful of celery seed. When scalding hot, add a level teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in a little water, stir for five minutes and serve. If too thick add a little hot water. PINONS OR PINE NUTS These nuts are sold in some markets under the name of pignolias, a corruption of the Italian name. They consist of the seeds of several varieties of pines. Those most commonly sold in the United States come from the scrubby pinon trees (Pinus edulis) of the far West; the larger ones from the hard cones of the South European pines. They are usually sold shelled. As they are threshed on the floor of barns, or in blankets, they are usually dirty, and require washing and drying before they are fit for use. They are cheap, nutritious and palatable, the most valuable of all the common nuts for everyday cookery. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 419 PINON BUTTER They may be made into butter the same as peanut but- ter. For the sake of variety, they may be mixed with ground meat for Hamburg steaks or beef roll, or a few may be sprinkled over a lettuce salad. They make good stuffing for tomatoes and cucumbers. PINE NUT MILK Pine nuts contain less nitrogen and more fatty matter than almonds. They are less dense than most nuts, which makes them a valuable diet for the sick. Put a quarter of a pound of pine nuts through a meat grinder, add one quart of cold water or milk, stir constantly with an egg-beater for five or ten minutes, and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. Keep covered in a cold place. PISTACHIO NUT (Pistacia vera) This nut contains a considerable amount of chlorophyll, the green coloring matter of plants, and is used only as flavoring. Now and then, however, a few salted in the shell are appetizing and aid in the digestion of other foods. This nut, the fruit of the genus Coryocar, a tree belong- ing to the Camellia or tea family, grows in the central part of South America, where they are universally called butter nuts, on account of their excessive fatty matter. It con- tains less cellulose than any other nut. In cases of perni- cious anaemia or tuberculosis, or any other disease where the object is to- increase the weight of the patient, they are most valuable, because they are palatable and easy of diges- tion. They may be ground and made into butter, and served on bread ; or they may be eaten, one or two at a time, thor- oughly masticated. Chopped fine, on a lettuce leaf, with a little French dressing, they are most appetizing. 420 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MIXED NUT MILK Make according to the preceding recipe, using a mix- ture of pine nuts, almonds and pecans. NUT ' CHEESE This is made by grinding a pound of mixed nuts, a half pound of pecans, a quarter of a pound of pine nuts, a quarter of a pound of almonds. Add just enough water to bind the whole together, pack the mixture into baking powder cans or tumblers and keep in a cold place. Thin slices of nut cheese between slices of whole wheat bread make a good school sandwich for children. Followed by a glass of Vichy or plain seltzer, make a good luncheon for rheumatic or gouty patients. NUT AND FRUIT CRACKERS Rub a half cupful of almond butter into one quart of whole wheat flour; mix, and add sufficient water to moisten; the dough must be very hard. Knead it for five minutes, pound with a potato masher for five minutes, and roll it into a very thin sheet. Sprinkle half of the sheet with either chopped dates, ground soaked figs or chopped raisins; fold over the other half, and with a rolling pin roll the two carefully together. With a sharp knife cut it into crackers two inches wide and three inches long, and bake in a moderate oven until brown and crisp, about twenty minutes. Peanut or pine nut butter may be substituted for almond butter, and Graham flour may be substituted for whole wheat flour. Eaten slowly at bedtime followed by a glass of water, they will frequently correct constipation. NUT SOUFFLE Soak one pint of soft bread crumbs in one pint of cocoanut milk or water for fifteen minutes. Stir over the MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 421 fire until perfectly smooth ; take from the fire, add a half pint of chopped pine or pecan nuts, the yolks of four eggs, a level teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper, and fold in carefully the well-beaten whites of the eggs. Turn this into a baking dish and bake in a quick oven twenty minutes. This dish takes the place of both bread and meat, and may be given to children as the noonday meal. It is good in cases of rheumatism and gout. This quantity is sufficient for four persons ; for a single portion divide all the ingredients by four. WATER CHESTNUTS These are really not nuts, but are classed with the nuts for the sake of convenience. They are the crisp vege- table ingredient in nearly all the rich stews made by the Chinese and Japanese cooks. In chemical composition they resemble closely the stachys and Jerusalem artichoke. Boiled in plain water.o.r in chicken stock, served with cre'am sauce, without thickening, they give variety to the long continued diet of the diabetic and the obese. MOCK CANDY Besides being a good candy for children, this mixture makes a nice filling for school sandwiches. Put through a meat grinder a half pound of soaked figs, a half pound of seeded raisins, a half pound of stoned dates, a half pound of pine nuts, a half pound of pecan meats, a quarter of a pound of blanched almonds and a quarter of a pound of Brazilian or black walnuts. The better way to mix them is to put a few at a time into the meat chopper, and by the time the last are ground they are well mixed. With your hand work the mixture until it is a little soft, pack it into baking powder boxes or jelly tum- blers, and stand it in a cold place to keep. If this is to be made at once into caramels, roll it out in a sheet a half inch thick ; cut it into caramels, wrap each in waxed paper and put them in a tin box for keeping. 422 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Chopped almonds, pecan meats and pine nuts may be sprinkled over lettuce or Romaine, covered with French dressing and used as dinner salad where meat is not allow- able. Pine nuts may be used as filling for birds or chickens. Peanuts may be added to cream vegetable soups. Where starch is not allowable, use pine nuts, almonds, Bra- zilian nuts and black walnuts for nut soups. Where feeding without meat must be continuous, a creative mind can invent many recipes in which nuts may be used to advantage. Sprinkled over boiled spinach or kale, or over a dish of stewed cabbage, they give a pleasant flavor, and add the necessary protein. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 423 GELATIN JELLIES GELATIN Gelatin is a nitrogenous food, but the nitrogen it con- tains is not available for tissue building. The ordinary commercial gelatin does, however, when made into jelly, give a good vehicle for the conveyance of other foods. Connective tissue of beef, veal, mutton and chicken will, by continued cooking in water, yield gelatin. For the sick, buy plain, unflavored gelatin. Isinglass, fish gelatin, is obtained from the swimming bladders of sturgeons ; and by many dietitians it is preferred to ordinary gelatin. I doubt very much whether the ordinary calves' foot jelly made at home, is better than a quick jelly made' from the commercial gelatin. The flavoring is different, and this may have something to do with the patient's liking for it. Gelatin is insoluble in cold water, but it is wise to mix even granulated gelatin with cold water before pouring over the boiling water. Where gelatin is boiled, a larger quantity of gelatin or a less quantity of water must be used. After rapid boiling gelatin does not readily solidify. Vegetable gelatin, clarified sea weeds, is quite nutritious. Gelatin water has been found very useful in cases of hemorrhage during typhoid fever. Meat jellies made by condensing beef, veal or chicken stock are not more nutritious than gelatins made from commercial gelatin. But they are more stimulating and have a pleasant flavor, and for this reason are more agreeable to the invalid. LEMON JELLY Cover one teaspoonful of granulated gelatin with four tablespoonfuls of water, soak a half hour, then add a half cupful of boiling water, four tablespoonfuls of lemon juice and three tablespoonfuls of sugar ; strain through two thick- nesses of cheesecloth and turn either into a pretty small 424 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK stem glass dish or in an individual mold. At serving time plunge the mold quickly into hot water, loosen the jelly around the top and turn it out on a pretty china serving dish. LEMON JELLY FOR DIABETICS AND OBESE Cover one package of gelatin with one cupful of cold water to soak for a half hour; then add a pint and a half of boiling water, stir until the gelatin is dissolved, add one gill (a half cupful) of lemon juice, a level teaspoonful of beef extract and a level teaspoonful of celery salt ; stir, strain, add two drops of Tabasco and put it in a mold to harden. Served with cold meat, or chopped fine on lettuce leaves with a little French dressing. ORANGE JELLY Cover one teaspoonful of gelatin with four table- spoonfuls of cold water to soak for a half hour; add a half cupful of boiling water, a half cupful of orange juice and six tablespoonfuls of sugar. Stir until the sugar is dissolved, strain and put into two molds or glasses to harden. This is very pretty if colored slightly brown with caramel. Serve turned from the mold, or cut it into blocks and serve in an orange basket. WINE JELLY While there is little or no nourishment in any of the gelatin jellies, they make exceedingly good vehicles for the conveyance of stimulants when stimulants are ordered. Cover a half package of gelatin with a cupful of cold water, let it soak for a half hour, then add a half cup- ful of sugar and a cupful of boiling water; stir over the fire until the gelatin is thoroughly dissolved. Strain, add one gill (a half cupful) of wine, turn at once into small stem glasses, sufficient in each glass for one feeding. This should make four glasses. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 425 Brandy or rum may be substituted for sherry, or brandy and sherry may be mixed. WHITE WINE JELLY Put a half package of granulated gelatin, covered with a pint of cold water, to soak a half hour; add four table- spoonfuls of sugar, stir the mixture over the fire until the gelatin is dissolved; add a half pint of white wine and a grating of the yellow rind of a lemon ; stir and turn at once into glasses. This should make three glasses. QUICK BEEF JELLY Put two teaspoonfuls of granulated gelatin in four tablespoonfuls of cold water and soak for a half hour. While this is soaking dissolve a teaspoonful of Liebig's beef extract in a cupful of boiling water, add a whole clove, a bay leaf and a half teaspoonful of celery salt; stir until the gelatin is dissolved. Let this stand until nearly cold, and add the white of one egg beaten with a table- spoonful of cold water. Put the mixture over the fire, bring to a boil, boil rapidly two minutes and strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. If well made this will be as clear as wine. Turn it at once into a small pan or dish, and stand it aside to harden. Use as a garnish for cold meat dishes, or it may be given in the place of beef tea where cold substitutes are ordered. This can be made in a very few minutes, and quickly chilled on the ice. CALVES' FOOT JELLY 4 calves' feet 2 inches of stick cinnamon 6 quarts of cold water I pound of white sugar Juice of four lemons Juice of two oranges Whites and shells of two eggs Clean the feet, wash and scrub them well in cold water. Put them in a soup kettle with cold water, and simmer Mb MRS. RORERS DIET FOR THE SICK slowly for eight hours. It should be reduced to two quarts. When done, strain the liquid into an earthen bowl, and stand it away until next day. In the morning, remove all the fat from the surface, and the sediment from the bottom of the jelly. Put it in a kettle, and stand it over the fire; and the cinnamon, sugar, lemon and orange juice, the whites of the eggs slightly beaten, and the shells crushed. Mix all the ingredients well tpgether, and boil it hard, without stirring, twenty minutes. Throw in a gill of cold water, let it come again to a boil ; then stand it on the side of the range, and keep it closely covered for a half hour. Dip a flannel jelly bag into boiling water, and hang it where a bowl can be placed underneath. Now pour the jelly into the bag carefully, and let it drip slowly. On no account must you squeeze or touch the bag, as this clouds the jelly at once. Turn it into molds and stand in a cold place. If you use wine, a half pint of sherry may be added before putting it into the molds. CHICKEN JELLY For this purchase a fowl ; the white meat may be used as food for the family. Take all the dark meat and the rough pieces. Crack the bones with a cleaver, put them in a saucepan with one quart of cold water, bring to a boil and skim. Simmer gently for at least three hours, then add a half teaspoonful of celery salt, a bay leaf, one clove and a thin slice of onion if admissible ; simmer thirty min- utes longer and strain. Stand this aside until perfectly cold, then remove every particle of the fat. Turn the jelly into a saucepan, add the juice of half a lemon and the white of one egg beaten with a tablespoonful of water; mix all together and boil rapidly five minutes; strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth and stand aside to harden. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 427 Use cold in the place of chicken broth, or to mask or garnish cold chicken dishes, or serve on lettuce leaves, with French dressing. i CRANBERRY GELATIN Wash a half pint of fresh cranberries in cold water, put them in a saucepan with a pint of cold water, bring to a boil, boil five minutes and press through a colander; add a cupful of sugar. Cover a tablespoonful of vegetable gelatin with two tablespoonfuls of cold water, let it soak ten minutes. Boil the cranberries, gelatin and sugar to- gether for five minutes, strain through cheesecloth and turn into a mold to harden. IRISH MOSS JELLY Press into an ordinary measuring cup sufficient Irish moss to make a half cupful, soak, and wash it through several cold waters; make sure it is free from sand and grit. Put one quart of milk into a double boiler, add the moss, bring to boiling point, cover and cook a half hour. Strain, add a half cupful of sugar, take from the fire, cool and flavor with sherry, brandy, a grating of nutmeg, or if admissible, a little vanilla; turn at once into molds and stand aside to harden. This will make five molds. For an individual recipe, take but two sprigs of moss and cook in a half pint of milk. IRISH MOSS JELLY No. 2 Wash two full sprays of Irish moss through several cold waters ; soak an hour in fresh water, then lift the moss, throw it into a half pint of boiling water, cover and simmer until the moss is dissolved ; add four lumps of loaf sugar and a tabelspoonful of lemon juice, strain and turn into glasses or molds. This is especially nice in cases of tuberculosis, tonsilitis, quinsy and whooping cough. MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK ISINGLASS JELLY Put a half ounce of the best isinglass, a quarter of an ounce of pure powdered gum Arabic, a half ounce of rock candy, a quarter of a nutmeg, grated, and a pint of port wine into a quart fruit jar, cover, shake and stand aside over night. Next morning stand the jar into a kettle of cold water, bring the water to boiling point and simmer until the gum is dissolved ; stir, strain and stand aside to cool. Give a teaspoonful at a time, in cases of exhaustion. I have also found it useful in cases of tuberculosis. QUICK GRAPE JELLY Put two teaspoonfuls of prepared vegetable gelatin into a half pint of grape juice, add two tablespoonfuls of sugar, stir over the fire until the gelatin is dissolved, and turn at once into small molds or small stem glass dishes. ORANGE AND WINE JELLY A level teaspoonful of granulated gelatin soaked in two tablespoonfuls of cold water; add two tablespoonfuls of orange juice, one tablespoonful of port wine and a table- spoonful of sugar ; stir over hot water until the gelatin is dissolved, fill at once into a small glass and stand it away to harden. If admissible, this may be served with whipped cream, or with a soft custard made from a half cupful of milk and one egg. COFFEE JELLY One teaspoonful of granulated gelatin, one tablespoon- ful of cold water; let this soak five minutes, add four table- spoonfuls of strong black coffee, two teaspoonfuls of sugar and two tablespoonfuls of cream ; mix thoroughly and turn into a small glass or mold and stand away to harden. Serve plain, or with cream. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 429 This may be used as a dessert forMiabetics by omitting the sugar. CREAM JELLY FOR DIABETICS One teaspoonful of granulated gelatin soaked in a tablespoonful of cold water; add a half cupful of thick cream and a dash of salt ; stir over the fire until the gelatin is dissolved and turn at once into molds. Served plain or with cream or with a little black coffee. PLAIN JELLY WITH FRUIT Fill a tiny mold with either white grapes that have been peeled and seeded, or a few white currants stripped from the stem, or red currants, or raspberries, or skinned and stoned cherries. Make plain lemon or wine jelly, and pour it over the fruit in the mold; stand away to harden. This is pretty and palatable. PORT WINE JELLY P'ut half an ounce of isinglass into a saucepan, add a half cupful of cold water, soak thirty minutes, then stand over hot water and stir until the isinglass is dissolved ; add two tablespoonfuls of granulated sugar, take from the fire and add one pint of the best port wine. Stir until every par- ticle of the isinglass is dissolved, strain through cheese- cloth and stand aside until cold. SNOW PUDDING For an individual serving, cover two teaspoonfuls of granulated gelatin with four tablespoonfuls of cold water and let it soak a half hour; add a cupful of boiling water, four tablespoonfuls of sugar and the juice of a lemon; stand aside until it begins to congeal but is not quite stiff. Drop in the unbeaten white of one egg, stand the basin in a pan of cold water and beat continuously until the mixture is as white as snow. Turn at once into a small mold and 430 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK stand away to harden. Put a half cupful of milk over the fire, add the yolk of the egg beaten with a tablespoonful of sugar, cook a minute, take from the fire, beat rapidly a few minutes with an egg-beater, and turn out to cool. Serve the pudding with a sauce poured around it. SPANISH CREAM ' A half tablespoonful of granulated gelatin soaked in a quarter of a cupful of cold water for a half hour; add a half cupful of milk and a tablespoonful of sugar, and stir the mixture over the fire until the gelatin is dissolved. Beat the yolk of an egg with a tablespoonful of sugar, stir this into the hot mixture, cook a minute, take from the fire and fold in the well-beaten white of the egg; pour at once into a small mold to harden. If properly made, this should be in layers, with the gelatin at the bottom. It may be flavored with a tablespoonful of wine, or if admissible a half teaspoonful of vanilla. Two level teaspoonfuls of granulated gelatin soaked in a tablespoonful of cold water for fifteen minutes ; add four tablespoonfuls of hot water, stir until the gelatin is dis- solved, add a half cupful of orange juice and a level table- spoonful of powdered sugar, stir until the sugar is dissolved and stand the mixture aside until it begins to congeal, then with an ordinary wire egg-beater beat in the well-beaten white of one egg, turn it into a small fancy mold and stand away to harden. This may be served plain, or with a little extra orange juice. Strawberry, blackberry and raspberry juice may be used in the same way. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 431 VEGETABLE GELATIN (GELOSE) JELLIES I think the fact has been established that, where gela- tin or mucilaginous foods are needed, vegetable gelatin is to be preferred. It is absolutely free from flavor in itself, therefore can be used simply dissolved in water; animal gelatin cannot be used in this way on account of the nause- ous odor that is intensified by heat. All vegetable gelatins that have come under my notice have been very well made. They escape the dangers of animal products and the neces- sary bleaching and cleansing of animal gelatins which gives them a higher food value and removes all danger of un- cleanliness. Like Irish moss and similar seaweed prod- ucts, it is useful as a vehicle for other foods ; it carries and holds wines and other liquors as stimulants if ordered by physicians. In all these recipes Kellogg's vegetable gelatin has been used. It is a well-known fact that animal gelatin is an admir- able vehicle for the growth of micro-organisms, which makes it necessary to carefully guard all gelatin dishes, especially meat jellies. Where acids are used there is very little danger of the jelly becoming contaminated. Vege- table gelatin answers the purpose of ordinary animal gela- tin in all desserts, and when combined with fruit juices, or wines, or brandy if ordered, can be kept from one day to another without fear of contamination. To Prepare Vegetable Gelatin or Gelose A quarter of a box of gelose will make four half-pint cupfuls of jelly. Wash the gelose through several waters, soak it in warm water twenty minutes, wash and drain. Put it in a saucepan with one cupful, a half pint, of boiling water, boil slowly, stirring every now and then, until the gelose is thoroughly dissolved, about ten minutes ; strain through a cheesecloth and stand aside until cold. It congeals very quickly and without ice. A quarter of this amount will make a half pint, two portions, of jelly. 432 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ORANGE GELOSE I Put one-quarter of the prepared gelose into a small saucepan with four tablespoonfuls of water and four table- spoonfuls of sugar, stir over hot water until thoroughly melted, add three-quarters of a cupful of orange juice and strain into glasses or molds. Currant, raspberry, strawberry and blackberry juice may be substituted for orange. Mashed peaches and apple sauce may also be used. ORANGE GELOSE II Put one-quarter of the prepared gelatin into a sauce- pan, add four tablespoonfuls of sugar, four tablespoonfuls of hot water, and when the gelose is dissolved add two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice and two-thirds of a cupful of orange juice; turn at once into glasses or molds. PINEAPPLE GELOSE Pineapple contains an enzyme which digests protein ; for this reason, pineapple jelly made with animal gelatin is not satisfactory ; in fact, if the gelatin is not chilled before the pineapple is added, it will entirely digest the gelatin, which keeps it from solidifying. No matter how long it stands, it never will form a jelly. A good pineapple jelly can be easily made from gelose, and without cooking the pineapple. Take the full amount of prepared gelose, put it in a saucepan with a cupful of warm water and a half cupful of sugar, stir, until the gelose is dissolved, take it from the fire and when partly cool add one and a half cupfuls of grated pineapple. Turn at once into dainty molds to harden. This will keep for several days. Use in cases of tonsilitis, quinsy and whooping cough. FRUIT GELOSE All fruit juices strawberry, raspberry and currant mixed, blackberries, mashed ripe peaches, carefully stewed apples may be used for fruit jellies. Always prepare the MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 433 gelose as directed, and remember that a quarter of a box will make four cupfuls of jelly. The quantity of sugar must be regulated by the acidity of the fruit. The liquid may be part water and part fruit juice, or all fruit juice. GELOSE DRINK Boil half the prepared gelose in one quart of water and add the juice of one lemon. This makes an exceed- ingly nice drink in fevers, and may be used as a mouth swab in place of Irish moss. Gelose drink is good in cases of whooping cough. RESTORATIVE GELOSE Quarter of a box of prepared gelose, a level tablespoon- ful of powdered white gum Arabic, two ounces of rock candy, all mixed well together; add two cupfuls of cold water and stand aside two or three hours. Then stir over hot water until the mixture is clear and the ingredients dis- solved; take from the fire and cool. Add one and a half cupfuls of good sherry, cover the jar or saucepan and let this stand over night. In the morning reheat, strain and stand aside until cold. This may be put at once into small molds or into individual glass dishes. 28 434 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK A FEW DESSERTS CEYLON PUDDING Two Servings Grate one cocoanut, pour over it one pint of boiling water, stir for two or three minutes, let it stand until cool and wring it through a cheesecloth or bag. Put the cocoa- nut "milk" thus made into a double boiler, add the beaten yolks of two eggs, cook just a minute until slightly thickened, take from the fire and turn into the serving dish. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth, heap them over the top of the pudding and stand it in the oven a minute to brown. This may be given as a change to diabetic patients. COCOANUT CUSTARD Two Servings Grate and wash a cocoanut as directed in preceding recipe. Put the cocoanut "milk" in a double boiler, add a 'teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in a little cold water. Beat the yolks of two eggs with a tablespoon f til of sugar, add them to the hot cocoanut "milk," stir until the thick- ness of soft custard, take from the fire and pour at once into the serving dish. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth, add two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar and beat until fine and dry ; heap them over the pudding, brown in the oven and stand aside to cool. Nice for tuberculosis and the anaemic patients. COCOANUT SOUFFLE One Serving Make the cocoanut milk as directed in Ceylon pud- ding, put half of it in a double boiler, add one tablespoon- ful of sugar and two teaspoonfuls of cornstarch moistened MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 435 in a little cold water; cook until thick, and pour while hot into the well-beaten white of one egg. Turn at once into a mold, and stand aside to harden. Serve with a soft custard made from the yolk of the egg. FRENCH FLOATING ISLAND Put a cupful of milk over the fire in a double boiler. Separate one egg, beat the white to a stiff froth, drop it by teaspoonfuls over the top of the hot milk, let it remain a minute, then lift with a skimmer and put them on a plate to cool. Add a level teaspoonful of cornstarch, moistened in a little cold milk, cook until the milk is slightly thickened, then add the yolk of the egg, beaten with a tablespoonful of sugar. When sufficiently thick to coat a knife blade, take from the fire, add a half teaspoon- ful of vanilla, and turn at once into the serving dish. Heap the whites over the top, and stand aside to cool. To give variety, if admissible, cover the top of the whites of the eggs with three or four almonds that have been blanched, dried and chopped fine. CARAMEL CUSTARD Beat one egg without separating until well mixed, add two teaspoonfuls of sugar and a half cupful of milk ; a little nutmeg may be added if admissible. Melt two table- spoonfuls of sugar in an iron pan ; when it begins to burn and brown, add a tablespoonful of water, pour this in the bottom of a custard cup, pour the egg and milk on top, stand the cup in a small baking pan half filled with hot water, and bake in a moderate oven about twenty minutes, until they are "set" in the center. To ascertain whether or not they are done, run a spoon handle or silver knife into the center ; if it comes out clean they are done ; if milky, cook longer; if watery, they are overdone. 436 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK CARAMEL CUSTARD No. 2 Beat one e'gg with a teaspoonful of sugar for a minute, add a half cupful of milk and a teaspoonful of caramel ; turn the mixture into a custard cup, stand in a pan of hot water and bake until "set" in the center. Serve warm in the cup, or turn it out on a saucer. ORANGE SOUFFLE PUDDINGS Two Servings Put a half pint of milk in a double boiler over the fire. Moisten a level tablespoonful of flour and a level tea- spoonful of cornstarch with four tablespoonfuls of cold milk, and when smooth add them gradually to the hot milk, stirring all the while ; when thick take from the fire and add the yolks of two eggs, mix, and stir in carefully the well-beaten whites of the eggs. Brush individual bak- ing dishes with a little butter, put in the mixture, stand them in a shallow pan half filled with boiling water, and bake in a quick oven fifteen minutes. While these are baking, mix a teaspoonful of sugar with a teaspoonful of flour, add a half cupful of boiling water and a half teaspoon- ful of grated yellow rind of orange ; bring to boiling point, add a tablespoonful of orange juice and strain. Serve in a little pitcher, on the tray, with the hot souffle. OMELET SOUFFLE Beat the whites of two eggs to a stiff froth, add the beaten yolk of one egg, a teaspoonful of powdered sugar, a half teaspoonful of lemon juice, and heap at once in an indi- vidual baking dish or a tiny platter, dust thickly with pow- dered sugar, and bake in a quick oven three minutes. Caution The oven must be ready before you begin to make the souffle. If the souffle is stringy you have baked it too long. It must be smoking hot, but soft and light. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 437 MARLBOROUGH CUSTARDS Press one left-over baked apple through a sieve, add a teaspoonful of sugar, one egg, well beaten, and a half cup- ful of milk. Turn this into a baking or custard cup and bake in a moderate oven until "set" in the center. Serve warm or cold. RICE PUDDING WITH MALT Put two tablespoonfuls of rice into one quart of milk, add a teaspoonful of malt extract and a tablespoonful of sugar. Bake slowly one hour, stirring down the crust two or three times. When done it should be about the con- sistency of good cream. PEACH CREAM Pare one large, very ripe, mellow peach, press it through a colander, using a silver spoon, or put it quickly through an ordinary vegetable press. Add a tablespoonful of pow- dered sugar, and fold in quickly ;six tablespoonfuls of cream whipped to a stiff froth. Heap at once into a pretty stem glass dessert dish, dust with powdered sugar and serve. BANANA CREAM Pare one very ripe banana; the skin must be almost black, but the flesh must be sweet and good. Whip it quickly with an egg-beater, add a teaspoonful of powdered sugar and a tablespoonful of orange juice, and then fold in six tablespoonfuls of cream whipped to a stiff froth ; dust with powdered sugar and serve at 'once. PRUNE CREAM (Recipe for this will be found under "Prunes.") PINEAPPLE CREAM Mash half of a baked apple through a colander, add two tablespoonfuls of grated fresh pineapple, a tablespoon- 438 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ful of powdered sugar and six tablespoonfuls of cream whipped to a stiff froth ; dish and serve at once. PINEAPPLE ALBUMIN DESSERT Grate sufficient ripe pineapple to make four tablespoon- fuls; add a teaspoonful of sugar and stir in quickly the well-beaten whites of two eggs ; heap this into an individual glass dessert dish, dust with powdered sugar and serve at once. This cannot stand even fifteen minutes ; the pine- apple will digest the albumin, which will make it bitter. TAPIOCA JELLY Wash through several cold waters a half cupful of granulated tapioca, cover it with one quart of cold water, soak over night in the refrigerator, or for two 'or three hours in a cold place. Turn it into a saucepan and add the juice of one lemon, a saltspoonful of salt, a pint of boil- ing water and a cupful of sugar; stir carefully over the fire until it reaches the boiling point, push it over a mild fire and cook fifteen minutes. Turn at once into molds and stand away to harden. Instead of adding the extra pint of water, wine may be added, but the cooking must be done before the wine is added. This will be sufficient to last several days, and is a very easily digested form of starch. With cream this makes an admirable dessert for "bloodless" girls or in cases of anaemia, where both starch and fatty matter are called for. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 439 PUDDING SAUCES SAUCE SABAYON Put a half pint of sherry in a double boiler, add a level teaspoonful of cornstarch moistened in a little cold milk, cook until the thickness of cream, add the yolk of one egg beaten with a tablespoonful of sugar, cook a minute, take from the fire and stand aside to cool. When cool, add the rasping of an orange. SOFT CUSTARD SAUCE Put one gill (a half cupful) of milk in a saucepan, stand it over hot water until it is scalding hot. Beat the yolk of one egg with two teaspoonfuls of sugar, add the hot milk, return to the saucepan, stir over hot water until it will "coat" or cover a knife blade ; be careful not to curdle. Take from the fire, and when cool, flavor. PLAIN PUDDING SAUCE Beat the yolks of two eggs until creamy, add slowly a half pint of boiling water, cook over the fire a minute, pour while hot into the well-beaten whites of the eggs, add a tablespoonful of powdered sugar and a tablespoon- ful of sherry or brandy, or this sauce may be flavored with the juice and a little grated rind of orange or lemon. COCOANUT SAUCE Follow the preceding recipe, using cocoanut milk in place of plain water. Or use cocoanut milk in place of cows' milk in a soft custard sauce or Sabayon. COCOANUT CREAM SAUCE Stand cocoanut milk in a cold place over night. In the morning take off the cream, put it in a bowl and beat with an egg beater until it is light and frothy; heap it in a glass dish, and stand on the ice to harden. Use on gelatin, or fruit puddings in cases of diabetes or tuberculosis. 440 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK NUT CREAM SAUCES Stir two rounding tablespoonfuls of nut butter into a half cupful of boiling water. Use plain, or slightly sweetened. For diabetic patients, however, it must be used without thickening or sugar. If it is too thick to pour, add boiling water. Almond paste or almond butter is preferable to other nut butters. FRUIT JUICE SAUCE Simply express the juice of any fresh fruit, and use it at once. These fruit juices are palatable over gelatin desserts in cases of diabetes or obesity ; they may be thickened and used for pudding sauces for invalidism, children, or the aged. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 441 ICE CREAM Among the ordinary nurses' outfit is a small pint ice cream freezer; these are not expensive, and only require four or five tablespoonfuls of salt and a pound of ice to freeze a pint or less. If such freezers cannot be purchased, fit a tall quart kettle into a bowl or into a larger tin kettle, and stand it aside to use for freezing cream and sherbets for the sick. While this is an old-fashioned way, if the kettle is twisted back and forward and the mixture stirred down from the sides every few minutes, it takes but a short time to freeze a pint of cream. In many cases a little frozen cream, unsweetened and unflavored, is acceptable and pleasing to the patient. In fever, frozen fruit juices or sherbets allay thirst. Pack the freezer or kettle with fine salt and ice, in the proportions pf two-thirds ice and one-third salt. For small freezers, use ordinary table salt if coarse salt is not at hand. Put the cream in the freezer, turn it slowly at first until the cream is icy cold, then freeze quickly. A tablespoonful of coffee, or a suspicion of chocolate, or a tablespoonful of sherry, used as flavoring, are always preferable to vanilla. ICE CREAMS AND SORBETS Add a tablespoonful of sugar to a half cupful of good cream; when the sugar is dissolved put the mixture into the ice cream freezer and stir until it is frozen. Coffee Ice Cream Add a teaspoonful of sugar and a tablespoonful of black coffee to a half cupful of cream ; freeze, Lemon Sorbet Take a rasping of the yellow rind from a lemon, put it, with two tablespoonfuls of sugar, into one cupful of boiling water, boil about two minutes, strain, and add the juice of a lemon. When the mixture is very cold, .freeze it, turning constantly until it is frozen. The mixture should be light and white. 442 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Orange Sorbet^ Make the same as lemon sorbet, using a half cupful of water with the sugar and grated yellow rind of a quarter of the orange. Boil and strain, and when cold add a half pint of orange juice, and freeze. Pineapple Sorbet Boil the sugar and water together, strain, take from the fire, and when cool add a half cupful of grated fresh pineapple, and freeze. Grape Sorbet Add four tablespoonfuls of water to eight tablespoonfuls of grape juice, and freeze. Mint Sorbet Boil two tablespoonfuls of sugar with a half pint of water for two minutes, add the leaves from four stalks of mint, chopped fine and pounded to a pulp. Stand this aside and let it steep slowly twenty minutes, press through a fine sieve, and when cold freeze. All fruit juices may be slightly sweetened and frozen. For fever cases freeze them without sugar they are grateful and beneficial. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 443 BEVERAGES AND WATER GRUELS Under this heading I shall not place simply tea and coffee, but all demulcent, nutritive, diuretic and refrigerant drinks. Put two ounces of pearl barley into a porcelain-lined or granite saucepan, add a quart of boiling water, boil for five minutes, strain, throw the water away ; add two quarts of boiling water to the barley, cover and simmer for two hours. Skim frequently, and when done strain through a fine sieve and it is ready for use. The first water is simply to cleanse the barley, and should not be retained. In cases where plain milk does not agree perfectly with the individual or child, barley water may be added to ad- vantage in proportion one-third barley water to two-thirds milk. As a liquid starchy food use its sweetened and flavored with lemon juice or wine. RICE WATER Make precisely the same as barley water, substituting two ounces of rice. OATMEAL WATER This is best made from Irish or other coarse oats. If you use rolled oats, measure carefully two level tablespoon- fuls. Sprinkle it into a pint of boiling water without stopping the boiling; boil rapidly thirty minutes and strain through a fine sieve. Add a pinch of salt and stand aside to cool. Use the same as barley water. TOAST WATER Toast, to a dark brown, one slice of bread ; put it in a bowl, poor over one quart of boiling water, cover and stand aside until cool. When cold strain and it is ready to 444 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK use. If admissible, a few drops of lemon juice may be added, but no sugar. APPLE WATER Select a perfect, tart apple, remove the core and roast the apple to a dark brown ; put it in a pitcher, pour over a quart of boiling water, stand aside until perfectly cold. Strain and it is ready for use. TAMARIND WATER Pour one pint of 'boiling water over two ounces of tamarinds ; when cool strain and use. This is exceedingly grateful in fevers, and is slightly laxative. LEMONADE I Boil for two minutes two tablespoonfuls of sugar in a half pint of water, with a bit of the yellow rind of a lemon. Strain, and when cool add four tablespoonfuls of lemon juice. Stand this near the ice, where it will get perfectly cold. LEMONADE II Grate the yellow rind from three lemons; add this to one pound of loaf sugar; add a quart of water, bring to a boil, skim and boil five minutes; add to this the juice of six lemons; strain, put into a glass jar and keep it in a cool place to use as needed. Fill a tumbler half full of this mixture, then fill, with either carbonated, Apollinaris water, or plain water. It makes an exceedingly nice, cooling drink. EGG LEMONADE Separate one egg, beat the white to a stiff froth, add the yolk and beat again. Pour into this slowly, a glass of well-made lemonade. Or, the egg may be dropped into a glass of lemonade and the whole shaken thoroughly together. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 445 LEMON SQUASH Put into a tumbler two tablespoonfuls of lemon water ice, and fill the tumbler from a siphon of soda water. In out of town places plain soda may be purchased in bottles. A siphon is always to be recommended, as after a bottle of soda is opened, the remaining quantity must be thrown away. LIMEADE Pare the lime carefully, cut it into halves, squeeze the juice into a tumbler. Stir two teaspoonfuls of powdered sugar in a glass of water, when the sugar is dissolved, add the lime juice. Add ice if necessary. Add syrup to the lime juice and siphon the tumbler full of soda, and you will have Lime Squash. IRISH MOSS WATER Wash thoroughly a half ounce of Irish moss and soak it in a pint (eight ounces) of water for two hours. Boil ten minutes and strain. You should now have a thick, mucilaginous water. Boil two tablespoonfuls of sugar and a half pint of water together for two minutes; when cool add the Irish moss water and the juice of a good-sized lemon, and stand aside for use. This is exceedingly grateful to persons with throats irritated from coughing. Omit sugar and use for whooping cough, quinsy and tonsilitis. SLIPPERY ELM TEA Use a half ounce of powdered slippery elm to a pint of water; soak for a half hour, bring to a boil, boil two minutes, and strain through a fine sieve or cheesecloth. Add the juice of a lemon and stand aside to cool. In fever cases this makes a good swab mixture for the mouth. 446 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK OLD-FASHIONED FEVER DRINK l /2 pint of red currants, fully ripe I quart of water l /2 pint of raspberries, fully ripe Mash the currants and raspberries together; strain them carefully through a jelly bag or two thicknesses of cheesecloth. Wash the residue in the given quantity of water, strain again and add it to the first juice. Stand in a cold place to keep. Ice may be added, or not, as directed. GELATIN WATER Pare the yellow rind from one lemon and put it in a good-sized pitcher; add the lemon sliced, one ounce of loaf sugar, one pint of boiling water, one tablespoonful (a quar- ter of an ounce) of granulated gelatin that has soaked in two ounces of cold water for a half hour ; cover the pitcher and let it stand until the contents are cold. Strain through a fine sieve or cheesecloth. Use in fever cases. ORANGE PEEL TEA Pare the thin rind from one orange, put it in a pitcher, add two ounces of sugar and one quart of boiling water; cover and stand aside to cool. When cold, strain, add a tablespoonful of orange juice and it is ready for use. LINSEED OR FLAXSEED TEA Put one ounce of linseed, crushed, and two drams of licorice root into a jug, pour over a pint of water, cover and stand in a pan of hot water, at a temperature of 200 Fahr. for three hours. Strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth and cool. This is exceedingly good to allay irritation from cough- ing, or for persons with pulmonary troubles. The flavor- ing may be changed by adding at one time lemon and at another orange. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 447 GUM ARABIC WATER Soak a half ounce of white powdered gum Arabic in a quart of cold water for at least two hours, or over night. Add' a bit of lemon peel, in the morning, stand the pitcher in a saucepan of hot water and stir until the gum is dis- solved. Strain through two thicknesses of cheesecloth. This is nice in febrile or inflammatory complaints. BRAN WATER Wash two ounces of bran through several cold waters, add two ounces of loaf sugar and one quart of cold water ; bring to a boil, boil continuously five minutes, strain and use either hot or cold. Cream or milk may be added, if admissible. To give this the flavor of cereal coffee, the bran may be toasted thoroughly, then added to the water and boiled; omit the washing. CINNAMON TEA Break a half ounce of stick cinnamon into small pieces, put them in an earthen or granite pitcher, add one pint of boiling water, cover and stand* it on the back part of the stove for ten minutes. Strain and it is ready for use. An astringent drink in cases of diarrhoea. LIME WATER Put a piece of unslaked lime, about the size of an or- dinary chicken's egg, into a large granite or porcelain-lined kettle; pour over two quarts of boiling water; stir until the water ceases to boil from the action of the lime; then let it stand until perfectly clear; drain off carefully, bottle and cork. JELLY WATER Put two tablespoonfuls of currant jelly into a half pint of boiling water, mash and work the jelly until it is dis- solved, and strain it at once into a tumbler. Put near the 448 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ice to cool, add a little finely-shaved ice and use in fever cases. BLACK CURRANT JELLY WATER Use the same quantity of black currant instead of red currant jelly. Beneficial in cases' of chronic diarrhoea. FRESH GRAPE DRINK Wash two pounds of Concord grapes; pulp them, put the pulp in a granite saucepan, bring to boiling point, and press them through a sieve sufficiently fine to remove the seeds. Add this pulp to the skins, add one quart of water and simmer gently for a half hour. Strain, and stand aside to cool. GRAPE SQUASH Put two ounces of grape juice in a tumbler and fill the tumbler from a siphon of plain soda. Orange juice, strawberry juice or currant juice may be substituted for grape juice, according to the condition and fancy of the patient. IMPERIAL WATER Dissolve a level teaspoonful of cream of tartar in a half pint of cold water. Add the grated yellow rind from a quarter of a lemon and four tablespoonfuls of sugar to a half pint of boiling water, boil three minutes ; and when cool strain into the cream of tartar water, and stand aside to use as a diuretic drink. To serve, fill a tumbler half full of this mixture, and fill it with plain water. EVANS'S TEA GRUEL Put one tablespoonful of gunpowder tea in a china or earthen pitcher, pour over one pint of freshly-boiled soft water. Cover the pitcher for ten minutes. Boil six lumps of cut loaf sugar with eight tablespoonfuls of water, strain the tea into this, add a grated nutmeg and stand aside to cool. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 449 This is valuable in cases of summer complaint for chil- dren, also in cases of diarrhoea. A tablespoonful three or four times a day is considered a dose. WELSH NECTAR Put one pound of seeded raisins, three lemons cut into slices, and two pounds of granulated sugar into two gallons of boiling water; cover and stand aside one week, stirring every day. Strain through a jelly bag, bottle, cork and stand in the cold. This will keep in a cold place for a month. WILD CHERRY CORDIAL Pick ripe wild cherries from the stems, put one quart in a two-quart jar, cover with the best Bourbon whisky, screw on the top and stand the jar away ; shake two or three times a week for four weeks. Drain off the whisky, pressing the cherries. Boil two cupfuls of sugar with one cupful of water for five minutes, when cold add it to the whiskey, bottle, cork and seal. Use in chronic diarrhoea and dysentery. TEA Tea is an aromatic beverage quite popular arn,ong the English. Scotch and Irish. It contains an alkaloid, thein, which is almost identical to caffein. While there is a sim- ilarity in the effects of tea and coffee, there is also a de- cided difference, due, no doubt, to the essential oils and the greater amount 9f tannin in tea. The aroma of tea, like that of coffee, is due to a volatile oil, which is' driven off and dissipated if the tea is boiled. Boiling spoils tea more, if possible, than it does coffee ; it not only drives off the aroma, but it dissolves and draws out a greater amount of tannin. Green teas contain more thein and volatile oils, and less tannin than black teas. Young Hyson is perhaps the best of the Chinese green teas, and Pekoe the best of the black. Good black teas from Ceylon and India are sold in the American markets from fifty cents to a dollar and 29 450 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK a quarter a pound. Fancy scented teas, like orange Pekoe, are expensive, not because they are better than ordinary teas, but because they are flavored. Tea, like coffee, must be selected, and must never be purchased from an open box. No matter what variety you use Ceylon, Gunpowder, Young Hyson, Imperial or English Breakfast Tea, see that it comes to you in a package unopened. To Make the Infusion Rinse the teakettle, fill it with clean cold water, bring it quickly to a boil. Scald the pot, which should be made of china or granite, turn out the hot water, put in a teaspoonful of tea to each half pint of tea needed, pour over the freshly-boiled water, cover the pot, put over a cozy or napkin, let it stand, away from the fire, five minutes, stir, and it is ready for use. Like coffee, tea must be poured at once from the grounds. Any form of teapot that will lift the grounds from the water after the tea is steeped is to be recom- mended. The S. Y. P. teapot is easily used and cleaned. In the upper part of the pot there is a compartment with a perforated bottom; the tea is put into this, the teapot is tipped on the side and filled with water; as soon as the tea is steeped the pot is adjusted, which lifts the grounds from the water. The small, cheap Chinese teapots, with perco- lator, are preferable to the old-fashioned pots. A Chinese tea basket is attractive and sightly, and makes good tea, providing you lift the grounds from the water. A Japanese or English tea cozy should be used to keep the tea warm while it is steeping and after you pour the first cup. ICED TEA Iced tea is not to be recommended for the sick at least I cannot think of any disease in which it would be especially advantageous. If, however, it is ordered, make the tea according to the preceding recipe, using double quantity of tea. Fill a glass two-thirds full of finely- cracked ice, put in a teaspoonful of powdered sugar, pour over the hot tea ; stir, and serve with it a quarter of a lemon. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 451 COFFEE Coffee removes the sensation of fatigue more quickly than any other stimulant. It allays hunger and strengthens the heart action to a marked degree ; for this reason it must be used in moderation. The aroma of coffee is due to caffeol, an oil liberated or created in the roasting. The stimulating effect is due to the caffein. Taken at night, even in a small quantity, it frequently produces insomnia. Persons in health may drink coffee in moderation, to their advantage, providing they do not take it with meals or with solid foods. Black coffee taken at the end of the meal is better than coffee with sugar and cream. To get the full effect of coffee, to have it do its work properly, one should take it alone, early in the morning, forty minutes before the regular breakfast. In tropical countries, coffee is brought to one's bedside at five o'clock in the morning; the general first meal of the day is not served until six-thirty, and coffee is not repeated at this meal. Coffee is injurious when it is boiled for a long time and taken with sugar and cream ; it always produces flatulency, and later on intestinal troubles. If taken at all, it must be freshly made, and taken with scalded, not boiled, milk, and sipped slowly. I observe throughout the country that most of the dyspeptics are found among people who take a mouthful of bread and butter and then a swallow of coffee, or who dip their bread in coffee to soften it. A diet of this kind is a sure road to destruction. It makes very little difference how much you pay for coffee if the infusion is carelessly made. Do not buy coffee shoveled from an open bin, in which it has been kept, un- covered, for a week or two after roasting. It has not only lost its flavor, but is possibly covered with dust, and under no circumstances will make a good infusion. 452 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK THE PERFECT CUP OF COFFEE To make a perfect cup of coffee three things are neces- sary : 1. Clean water, freshly boiled, in a clean teakettle. If the water is soft it must be taken at the first boil ; if hard, boil ten minutes. 2.. A good percolating pot, one that will hold the ground coffee above the water. 3. A good quality of coffee, carefully selected and cleaned, dry roasted and finely ground. Pulverized coffee is economical and good if the cook and housewife know how to use it, but unless percolated through a muslin bag or a hair percolator, the coffee is bitter and muddy. The coffee pot must be washed and scalded every day, rinsed thoroughly and dried. For breakfast coffee use scalded, not boiled milk. Do not use cream. I am speaking now from the standpoint of health. Hot coffee poured into cream makes a mixture that nine out of ten times produces "sour stomach" and flatulency. Allow one tablespoonful of ground coffee to each half pint of boiling water. To begin ; rinse the teakettle thor- oughly, fill it with cold water, stand it over a quick fire and bring to boiling point. Scald the pot, let it stand a minute, empty out the water, put in the desired quantity of coffee and pour through slowly the given quantity of boil- ing water. If you are making coffee for one person, use a small pot, otherwise the grounds will be distributed in too thin a layer over the percolator. Do not allow the infusion to stand even five minutes after it is made ; use at once, or it loses its flavor and becomes bitter. In percolated coffee one gets the aroma in the infusion ; if coffee is boiled, the aroma is driven off and the decoction is usually bitter. If you use an alcohol pot with a glass top, scald the under part of the pot, fill it with fresh boiling water and adjust the glass top, put in the given quantity of coffee, cover, light the lamp and allow the water to pass through MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 453 the coffee for at least five minutes. Turn down the lamp to keep the coffee hot until served. The grounds are so far above the coffee that they need not be removed. If coffee is made in the kitchen, percolated in a bag or in a "second story" pot, it should be lifted from the pot as soon as percolated. A few drops coming from the stale grounds will spoil the flavor of the whole potful. A funnel-shaped haircloth bag that can be purchased at any house-furnishing store, hung in a china pitcher or pot, makes a good percolator. Both pot and bag must be scalded before the ground coffee is put in. BOILED COFFEE If a percolator is not at hand, and you must make boiled coffee, see that the utensil in which you are to make it is perfectly clean. Rinse the teakettle, start with water freshly boiling, scald the pot, empty out the water, put in the coffee, allowing a heaping tablespoonful to each half pint of water ; add a very little white of egg and sufficient cold water to moisten the coffee ; pour over the bailing water, stand the pot over a quick fire, watch it carefully until it reaches boiling point, lift it from the- fire, put it down and let it boil again ; lift it again, bring to a boil the third time ; throw in a tablespoonful of cold water, if making a single cup, and let it stand a moment until the grounds have thoroughly settled. Heat a tiny pitcher or pot with hot water, empty it out, drain the coffee into the pitcher and cover. Have ready the same amount of scalding, not boiled milk ; put them on the tray and carry at once to the patient. DISHES FLAVORED WITH COFFEE If it becomes necessary to continue the use of coffee, it may be administered in many ways besides the regular infusion. Two tablespoonfuls of black coffee may be stirred into well-beaten egg, or a little whipped cream. 454 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK COFFEE JELLY Cover ' a teaspoonful of granulated gelatin with two tablespoonfuls of water, let it soak ten minutes, add a half cupful of boiling coffee, stir in a tablespoonful of sugar and turn at once into an individual mold. Serve with plain or whipped cream. COFFEE VELVET CREAM Make coffee jelly, according to the preceding recipe, and when cold and slightly thick stir into it four table- spoonfuls of cream whipped to a stiff froth. COFFEE MOUSSE Beat the yolk of one egg with two tablespoonfuls of sugar until light ; stir into it a half cupful of boiling coffee, stir over the fire just a minute, take from the fire, and when cold fold in carefully six tablespoonfuls of cream whipped to a stiff froth. Put this into a tiny kettle or mold and stand it in a pan of cracked ice and salt, for two hours. See that the mold has a tight cover, to prevent the entrance of the salt water. FROZEN COFFEE Sweeten a cup of coffee, and turn it into a small indi- vidual freezer ; pack with salt and ice, and stir slowly until frozen like wet snow. Serve in a glass. This is also called cafe frappe. COFFEE SHERBET This is made precisely like frappe; except stir rapidly until the mixture is frozen. COFFEE ICE CREAM Dissolve a tablespoonful of sugar in a half cupful of strong black coffee ; when perfectly cold add an equal quantity of thick cream. Freeze, stirring slowly all the while. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 455 ICED COFFEE Fill the serving tumbler half full of clean cracked ice, pour over half a cupful of boiling coffee; this coffee must be made fresh, the same as tea; it must not be a second boiling, and must not stand until it is cold ; it must be quickly chilled. Season with cream and sugar, if admissible. CHOCOLATE (Theobromin) While chocolate contains an alkaloid, theobromin, which is almost identical with caffein, it differs very much from coffee in its other constituents. The aroma of tea and coffee are driven off by boiling, while the aroma and food value of chocolate is enhanced by boiling. Chocolate is made from the beans or seeds of the cacao tree. These seeds grow in a large fleshy pod, from a "cushion" on the trunk of the tree. The fruit is imbedded in a white pulp, rather sour and pleasant to the taste. After the seeds or beans are taken from the shells they are thrown in a bin, covered and allowed to ferment, then they are dried in the sun, and polished by "dancing." In some places a sort of red clay is put over the bean after the first drying and before the dancing, which gives it a red polished sur- face. These seeds or beans must be roasted to develop the aroma and essential oils. After they are roasted, the shells are removed, the "beans" are ground and the fat extracted. The residue is made into the various prepara- tions known as chocolate, cocoa, and theobroma. Cocoa is the dry residue after the cacao butter has been pressed out. The cacao butter amounts to forty or fifty per cent, of the weight of the beans ; there is also about fifteen per cent, of starch, considerable mineral matter and albuminous substances. One can see that cocoa is a nutritious food, rather than a beverage, and cannot be substituted for tea or coffee. Chocolate is manufactured from the ground and fat- free cacao bean, with sugar, flavoring, and sometimes other substances added. 456 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK The following table, which was adapted from Konig, will show the reader the difference between the cacao beans and chocolate, and while in this table there seems to be no starch in the chocolate, it certainly is wise to boil it. Cacao Beans Chocolate Water 3.25 1.53 Nitrogenous Substances 1476 5.06 Fat 49.00 15.25 Starch 13.31 Sugar 63.81 Other Non-nitrogenous Matters ... 12.25 11.03 Woody Fibre .. . . . 3.68 1.15 Ash 3.65 2.15 TO MAKE CHOCOLATE Grate sufficient chocolate to make a tablespoonful, put it in a saucepan with a half pint of boiling water, stir it until it reaches boiling point, boil two minutes, add a tea- spoonful of granulated sugar, stir until the sugar is dis- solved, add one cupful of milk, stir until the milk is scald- ing hot, take from the fire, turn into the chocolate pot and serve it with whipped cream. TO MAKE CHOCOLATE SYRUP If chocolate is to be used as a daily beverage, it is wise to make syrup and put it aside in a cold place. Grate a half pound of chocolate, put it in a saucepan with one quart of boiling water, stir until it reaches boiling point, boil ten minutes, add one cupful of granulated sugar, stir and boil five minutes longer, take from the fire, add a teaspoonful of vanilla, and when cold put it into a jar, cover and keep in a cold place. When wanted for use, heat a cupful of milk, add one or two tablespoonfuls of chocolate syrup, beat rapidly, put a little whipped cream on top and serve. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 457 MEXICAN CHOCOLATE After the syrup and milk are well mixed, add a quarter of a teaspoonful of vanilla, a drop of extract of cinnamon and one of allspice. Whip it over the fire for three minutes and serve without whipped cream. COCOA Put one cupful of milk in a double boiler over the fire. Moisten one level tablespoonful of cocoa in a little cold milk, add the scalding milk, return to the double boiler, stir until the cocoa is thoroughly moistened, cover the boiler and cook about two minutes. Sweeten and serve with whipped cream. Broma and Alkathrepta are made precisely the same as cocoa. ICED COCOA Put one teaspoonful of cocoa into a saucepan, add grad- ually two ounces of cold water, bring to a boil, boil a minute, add four ounces of milk, take from the. fire and stand near the ice until it is perfectly cold. Sweeten and turn into the serving glass, and if admissible add a little shaved ice and a tablespoonful of whipped cream. Chocolate may be substituted for cocoa. COCOA FROM THE NIBS Boil two hours a half cupful of the broken cocoa in a farina boiler, with two quarts of water. To serve, add an equal quantity of hot milk. The first mixture will keep for two days. RACAHOUT POWDER i pound of rice flour i pound of cocoa I pound of confectioners' XXX 2 ounces of arrowroot sugar 2 ounces of sugar of milk i ounce of powdered saJep I vanilla bean Mix and thoroughly rub together, put into glass jars and fasten. 458 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK TO MAKE RACAHOUT Vz pint of milk i level tablespoonful of racahout I teaspoonful of sugar powder Put the milk over the fire in a double boiler, moisten the racahout powder in a little cold milk, add it to the hot milk, stir until it thickens, add the sugar, and serve with a tablespoonful of whipped cream on the top. RACAHOUT BLANCMANGE Three Servings Put one pint of milk in a double boiler, moisten two tablespoonfuls of racahout and one of rice flour in a little cold milk, add it to the hot milk, stir until it thickens, add a half cupful of sugar, and turn into small molds to harden. Serve with plain cream. MATE This is frequently called Paraguay tea, and is made from the dried leaves and small twigs of the ilex Para- guayensis, a tree closely allied to our ordinary holly tree. Mate contains a large amount of thein, and is valuable in exhaustion. It must be percolated the same as coffee. The better method is to make a funnel-shaped bag, put a wire or rod around the top, fit it to a china pitcher; scald the pitcher and bag, put a teaspoonful of mate in the bag, pour through a half pint of boiling water, lift the bag, and the infusion is ready for use. Serve plain or with sugar. According to Pavy mate contains an astringent prin- ciple analogous to tannin, a volatile oil, and thein amounting to i. 20 per cent. Mate is by far a greater nerve stimulant than Chinese tea, and should not be used to excess. The writer has used it in cases of alcoholism with good results. Cold or hot, it allays the craving for alcohol. PART III PHYSICIANS' READY REFERENCE LIST This department is arranged to facilitate the work of the physician, and conserve his time. A full list of correct foods is given for each case, at the same time emphasis is laid on what to avoid MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK ASTHMA MAY EAT Clear meat soups Lean beef Mutton Poultry Venison Sweetbreads Tripe Broiled white-fleshed fish A little lettuce Tender celery Grape fruit Plums Strawberries Currant juice and raspberries Blackberries A little apple butter An occasional baked potato, at noon Eggs Rice pudding, unsweetened Vegetable gelatins (Gelose) Stewed cucumbers Squash Cress Jerusalem artichokes Globe artichokes Spinach Almonds Brazilian nuts Prunes An occasional baked apple Oranges Shredded wheat Whole wheat bread, twice baked Gluten bread Gluten biscuit Coffee, early in the morning A cup of weak tea in the middle of the afternoon Milk and milk preparations Buttermilk Bonnyclabber Koumys Orange marmalade Guava jelly AVOID Fats Fried foods Sweets Pies Cakes Puddings Starchy desserts Mashed potatoes Gravies Highly-seasoned soups Sea foods except white-fleshed fish Cheese Cabbage All cereals Breads, except twice baked Underground vegetables, as tur- nips, asparagus, carrots, salsify Pork Veal Warmed-over meats Acids, as pickles 462 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK TUBERCULOSIS (PULMONARY CONSUMPTION) MAY EAT Raw eggs in milk Raw eggs alone Egg flip; eggnog Beaten white of egg on orange juice, or grape juice, or fresh apple juice Hard-boiled yolks of eggs on cream toast Hard-boiled yolks of eggs grated over creamed chicken Egyptian eggs Beauregard eggs Plain whole milk Milk and barley water Milk and rice water Gum and milk gruel Posset Junket with cream Plain junket Egg junket Koumys Leban Matzoon Zoolak Olive oil Cocoa ; chocolate Alkathrepta Racahout Puree of dried peas, beans and lentils Meiggs* Food Eskay's Food Whole wheat bread Graham bread Toasted pilot bread Crisp rolls Baked potato Broiled or panned steak Hamburg steaks Smothered meat Broiled chops Roasted lamb or mutton Roasted beef Sweetbreads Tripe Broiled chicken Creamed chicken Chicken timbale Golden chicken Ceylon chicken Boiled rice Carefully-cooked hominy Fresh peas, pressed through a sieve Lima beans with cocoanut sauce Lettuce hearts with cocoanut cream Carefully-cooked spinach A few ground, oily nuts (not with meals) AVOID All bulk foods Coarse vegetables Pork ; veal Ducks Goose All acid foods Sorrel Rhubarb Lemons Limes Pickles Pears Bananas, unless well cooked Strong tea Pastry Sweets in general All fried foods Hot breads; white bread MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 463 PNEUMONIA During the Severity of the Disease Give Skimmed milk Skimmed milk white of egg Plain milk contai 3% fat shaken with g not over Beef juice Nutritive beef tea Almond milk, strained Milk and barley water Milk and rice water During Convalescence, Add Milk foods such as Zoolak Koumys Matzoon Sour buttermilk Eggs, raw, with milk Egg, coddled Beef panada Bouillon Veal broth, strained Scraped beef cake A little milk toast Zweiback 464 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK TONSILITIS MAY EAT, in the Acute Stages Eggnog Slightly frozen sweetened Egg flip cream Junket Egg soup Egg junket Chocolate Modified junket Cocoa Koumys A little black coffee Matzoon Coffee ice cream Kefir Lemon and orange vegetable Kefir with white of egg gelatin. Meiggs' gruel Almond milk and isinglass Posset Rum and isinglass Fruit juices When Convalescence Begins, Add Laibose Beef juice Beef panada Zoolak Bouillon Buttermilk Consomme Milk soups Soup a la Reine Later Scraped beef cake Egg and milk preparations, as Raw egg and sherry custards Ground mutton cake with al- Boiled rice mond meal Baked potato Gluten mush Mashed potato Aleuronat mush, with cream AVOID, in Acute Stages All solid foods AVOID when Convalescence Begins Bread stuffs All raw vegetables and salads Coarse vegetable foods Pork Coarse cereals Veal All sweets Pink-fleshed fish Pickles and sour foods Rich sauces and soups Fruits stewed with sugar MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 465 QUINZY Diet the same as in Tonsilitis. SENILE HEART MAY EAT Very tender lamb Chopped beef cake, broiled Young chicken, broiled or boiled White-fleshed fish, broiled or boiled Oysters when in full season Whole wheat bread, twice baked Eggs, raw and lightly cooked Very ripe grapes Custards in place of meat Fruit juices Milk and milk preparations Cream soups, with toasted bread, as a meal Almond meal soup A little' well-cooked spinach Asparagus tips t An occasional baked potato Boiled ricel^r^t/*; Almond milk Raw tomato, with olive oil, if allowable All stimulating foods Salads All raw vegetables Coarse vegetables, as cabbage, onions, string beans, old beans and turnips Pears Plums Cherries Fruits cooked with sugar Tea, coffee and chocolate with meals Mashed and fried potatoes Green corn Melons Cantaloupes Hot breads Very hot and iced foods All fried foods Rich soups and sauces Cake Pastries Preserves Hot puddings Effervescing drinks 30 466 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ANGINA PECTORIS MAY EAT Eggs Tender green vegetables, as Milk and milk foods spinach, cooked cress, aspara- Leban gus tips, tender cauliflower, Koumys summer squash Buttermilk Oysters, lightly cooked, either Well-cooked cereals, with cream soup, stewed or broiled White bread, stale or dry A little white-fleshed fish, broiled Fresh fruits, and fruit juices, Stewed prunes alone Baked apples Cream soups Scraped mutton cake, broiled Predigested milk and oysters, if A little broiled young chicken necessary Rice An occasional baked potato AVOID Hot breads All sea foods except oysters and Fresh breads white-fleshed fish Cakes Rabbit Buns Rare steak Pies Rare roasted beef Sweets of all kinds Turkey Pickles Duck Meat salads Goose Pork All coarse vegetables Veal . Cereals with sugar All fried foods Starchy vegetables with the ex- ception of rice MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 467 ANEURISM MAY EAT BREAKFAST Glass of milk, one-third barley The top of a shredded wheat bis- water, sipped slowly cuit, toasted, with two ounces Two ounces of blocks of stale of grape juice bread, with four ounces of milk The beaten white of egg on Four ounces of any of the milk orange juice, and a wafer gruels The yolk of an egg, beaten with Two ounces of fruit juice over four ounces of milk a small saucer of dextrinized The white of an egg, thoroughly cereals, flakes of some sort shaken with six ounces of milk The top- of a shredded wheat bis- cuit, toasted, with milk DINNER Two ounces of scraped meat, Three ounces of chicken timbale, broiled with stale bread or cracker Two ounces of zwieback, pulled Four ounces of broiled sweet- bread or stale bread bread, with stale bread or pulled Two chops (a quarter of a bread pound), with stale bread Four ounces of puree of lentils, Two ounces of mutton cake, with or beans, or peas, with one stale bread or cracker ounce of toast SUPPER Three slices of milk toast (two Two ounces of toast, four ounces ounces of bread and six ounces of hot milk poured over, covered of milk) with grated hard-boiled yolk of Six ounces of gelose milk egg Six ounces of beef meal gruel, with two ounces of toast 468 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK APOPLEXY MAY EAT (When Sufficiently Recovered) Cream soups Milk and milk preparations "Ye perfect food" Cornmeal mush Chicken noodle soup Eggs in all forms, except hard boiled and fried White meat of chicken Boiled white fish Baked potato Boiled rice Summer squash Topground green vegetables, lightly cooked Desserts made from vegetable gelatin Fresh fruits, without skin Fruits stewed without sugar, as prunes and figs Dry hard bread Gluten gems Swedish bread Unleavened bread Cocoanut sticks Soups maigre Custards Occasionally tender lettuce, Ro- maine, tender celery, with French dressing Fresh fruits, except rhubarb Cooked bananas Light milk puddings Milk and cream toast Mock charlotte Sago snow A few coffee-flavored desserts Cream of Wheat, farina, well cooked Toasted shredded wheat, with hot milk and cream Rice pudding Rice a la Imperatrice Rice dumpling Rice cream Rice pudding, with malt Fruit toasts elderberry, black- berry and raspberry Apples, simply cooked AVOID Meats Pink-fleshed fish Oysters Crabs Clams Lobsters Shrimps Scallops All made-over dishes Fried foods Rich soups and sauces Boiled and mashed potatoes Fried potatoes Hot breads All sweets Pies; puddings Cakes Preserves Stewed fruits with sugar Ice creams and ices at the end of a meal Pickles Condiments of all kinds Rhubarb Raw apples, unless scraped Concentrated beef soups, like beef tea The internal organs of animals, as sweetbreads, tripe and liver All coarse vegetables White bread made with sugar and lard MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 469 PERNICIOUS ANAEMIA MAY EAT Predigested milk Predigested sweetbreads Modified milk Meiggs' food Albuminized milk Egg flip Raw egg, with sherry Raw egg, with cream Milk, with cream added Whey and cream Beef marrow, raw and cooked Homemade pemmican Ground almonds in milk Asses' milk Tigers' milk Orgeat Brazilian nut butter Cocoanut cream Cocoanut milk and egg Albuminized cocoanut milk Broiled scraped beef Roasted and broiled beef Broiled chops Puree of dried peas Puree of lentils Wheat germ food, with cream Beef meal Beef panada Soup a la Reine Milk soups, with whole wheat bread Chocolate Cocoa Revalenta Arabica Arrowroot Rice flour Potato flour cooked in milk Boiled rice Laibose Maltose Somatose Roborat ANEMIA (CHLOROSIS) MAY EAT Eggs Milk Milk and cream Koumys Matzoon Buttermilk Junket with cream Broiled and roasted beef Mutton Chicken Sweetbreads Stewed tripe Baked potato Boiled rice Macaroni Spaghetti Fruits Fruit juices Whole wheat bread Rye bread Graham bread Corn bread Brown bread Tender topground vegetables Peas 470 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Continued Very young beets and turnips Asparagus tips Cauliflower Butter Olive oil Cream Cocoanut cream Cup custards Soft custards Chestnuts with cream Wheatlet Wheatena Oatmeal, occasionally Milk soups Puree of lentils Portuguese soup Beef gruel "Ye perfect food" Eggs, poached or coddled Eggnog Golden toast Beauregard eggs Cocoa Racahout Rice desserts Milk desserts Light green, salads, with French dressing Prunes, figs and dates, without sugar AVOID Pork Veal Salt meats Salt fish Pink-fleshed and oily fish Lobsters Crabs Shrimps Clams Oysters Goose All made-over dishes Warmed-over meats Rich made dishes Hot breads Fresh white bread Skimmed milk Strong tea Coffee, except in the morning All coarse vegetables, as boiled cabbage, turnips, parsnips Mashed potatoes Fried foods Sweets, as pies, cakes, puddings and candies Iced foods Iced water Rhubarb Lemons Limes Pickles of all kinds Highly-spiced dishes PURPURA H^MORRHAGICA MAY EAT Fresh grape juice, freely Milk and barley water Almond milk Gelatin water and lemon Limeade Orange juice and white of egg Dry albumin in milk MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 471 GASTRIC DISTURBANCES TOO LITTLE HYDROCHLORIC ACID MAY EAT Peptonized milk Peptonized oysters White of egg and whey Skimmed milk gruels Well-cooked Cream of Wheat and farina, with skimmed milk Baked potato with salt, no butter Scraped beef cake, broiled Scraped mutton cake, mixed with eight blanched, grated almonds; broiled Cocoanut milk custards Lightly-cooked eggs Boiled mutton Boiled chicken Rice pudding made from skimmed milk Skimmed milk koumys Stale bread, without butter Daintily-cooked topground vege- tables ; skimmed milk sauce Tender hearts of lettuce, with lemon j uice Albumin in skimmed milk Albumin whey Beef panada, made with water An occasional clear beef soup Chestnut puree, made from skimmed milk Boiled rice Carefully-baked banana, without sugar or butter Bananas stewed in water, very slightly sweetened Fruit juices Fresh ripe soft fruits, without skin or seeds AVOID All fatty foods, as cream, butter, olive oil, cocoanut creams Highly-seasoned dishes Iced dishes Iced water Strong tea and coffee Chocolate Pork Veal Duck Goose Turkey Fried foods Sweets Puddings Pies Cakes Coarse underground vegetables Hot breads, as muffins, gems, etc. Rich cream soups All sea foods, with the excep- tion of white-fleshed fish, and oysters, broiled All spiritous liquors, unless or- dered by a physician 472 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK WITH EXCESS OF HYDROCHLORIC ACID MAY EAT Whole milk Milk soups Cereals with cream Whipped cream desserts Nut dishes Nut milk Whole wheat and white bread one day old, well buttered Eggs, lightly cooked, not fried Koumys Matzoon Buttermilk Leban Dainty green vegetable salads, with French dressing Baked potatoes, mashed with cream Boiled rice Gluten bread, well buttered Broiled meats, in a small quantity Puree of lentils Purees of fresh green vegetables Broiled bacon Beef meal Cocoa Chocolate made from milk, with whipped cream AVOID Excessive meat diet Pickles Spiced foods All sweets Soft breads Hot breads' Fruits stewed with sugar Fried foods Fish Crustacea Mollusks Tea and coffee Milk and meat at the same meal Eggs and meat at the same meal Sauces and rich soups Coarse underground vegetables Pork Veal Duck Goose and turkey, except a little white meat Ice creams and ices All spiritous liquors, unless or- dered by a physician Malt liquors Iced drinks Nibbling between meals MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 473 DILATATION OF THE STOMACH MAY EAT Broiled, boiled and baked lean meats Baked potatoes Boiled rice Macaroni Spaghetti Hominy grits Spinach Cauliflower Tender lettuce Cooked cress Stewed summer squash Stewed cucumbers Carefully-cooked fruits Fruit tapiocas Dried fruits, stewed without sugar Milk puddings Fruit vegetable gelatins Well-cooked cereals Whole wheat bread White bread Carefully-made corn bread Pilot bread Potato sticks Cocoanut fingers Eggs, lightly cooked Broiled white fish Oysters, lightly cooked Custards, baked and boiled AVOID All concentrated foods All fried foods Coarse vegetables, as boiled cab- bage Pork Veal Sea foods, except white fish and oysters Pies Cakes Preserves Candies Highly-seasoned sauces and soups Gravies of all kinds Pickles Alcoholic and malt liquors, unless ordered Overdone meats Hot breads, except corn bread and well-baked waffles Tea, coffee, chocolate and milk, with meals 474 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK DYSPEPSIA WITH FLATULENCY MAY EAT Hard dry bread Broiled steak Broiled chops Boiled beef Eggs Milk and milk preparations Orange, apple and grape juice Beef tea Mutton broth Chicken broth Blanched and dried almonds Sliced tomato Tender heart of lettuce, with lemon juice Baked potato, occasionally Whole wheat bread AVOID Tea and coffee, with sugar and milk Tea and coffee, with meals Milk with meals All soft foods Milk soups All sweets Made dishes Coarse vegetables Fruits stewed with sugar Pork Veal Bacon Ham Fish Lobsters Oysters and clams Water with meals AVOID at all times and under all conditions, even after a so called "cure" is effected: All fried foods Sweets Cooked fats of meat Tea and coffee with sugar and cream with meals Chocolate with meals Salads with mayonnaise dressing Pork Veal Sausages Highly-seasoned sauces Meat gravies of all kinds Pies Cake Preserves Iced food at the end of the meal Pickles Boiled cabbage Boiled dinners in general The outside pieces of baked or roasted meats Hot breads, except crisp, well- baked waffles Fruits stewed with sugar Sea foods, except white-fleshed fish Thick rich soups Wines at meals MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 475 ATONIC DYSPEPSIA MAY EAT Orange juice Apple juice Grape juice Blackberry juice Baked potato, with a little butter and a drop of tabasco Chopped meat cakes, seasoned with tabasco Broiled steak Roasted beef Chicken Turkey Dainty green vegetable salads, with French dressing Grape fruit Oranges Strawberries Guava jelly Orange marmalade Cauliflower Summer squash Tapioca, flavored with fruits Clam broth Oyster bouillon Beef tea Chicken tea Meat jellies Milk Koumys Leban Matzoon Buttermilk AVOID All fried foods Sweets Bulk foods Cereals Soft breads Hot breads Pickles Skins of fruit Coarse vegetables Pork Veal Pink-fleshed fish Shad Chocolate Cocoa Tea and coffee, with sugar and milk Water with meals Milk with meals 476 MRS. RORERS DIET FOR THE SICK HUNGRY DYSPEPSIA MAY EAT Cream soups Strained cereals Baked potatoes Boiled rice Stewed macaroni Hominy Hominy grits Baked sweet potatoes Mashed and baked sweet potatoes Pumpkin, baked or stewed Stale breads Green peas Cauliflower Spinach Broiled, roasted or baked meats Eggs Milk and milk preparations Nuts (a few) Almonds with meat Raw pineapple, grated, served as a sauce to broiled meats, or sliced, eaten with broiled meats Light desserts, like fruit tapiocas Very tender green salads AVOID Tea Coffee - Pork Veal Fried foods Sweets in general Pickles Bran bread Pepper Rich soups and sauces Coarse vegetables Beans with hulls on Underground vegetables, with the exception of potato Pears Watermelons Cantaloupes Spiced foods MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 477 NERVOUS "DYSPEPSIA* MAY EAT Puree of lentils Milk soups Dry bread Fruit juices Oranges Grape fruit Baked potatoes Boiled rice Milk and milk preparations Clam broth Oyster bouillon Broiled steak Chops Roasted beef Mutton Broiled chicken Salisbury cakes Rorer meat cakes Scraped beef cakes Crisp French bread Fresh green peas Spinach Celery Romaine Lettuce Stewed cucumbers Dry boiled rice Unroasted and unsalted almonds A little cream Cocoanut milk and cream Well-cooked Wheatena or Wheat- let Simple whipped-cream desserts Orange marmalade Guava jelly Blackberry jam Hard bread Pilot biscuit Water crackers Eggs, except fried AVOID All meat soups Acids Pickles All sweets Pies Puddings Preserves Cakes Candies All fried foods Coarse vegetables Cereals, except those mentioned Fruits stewed with sugar Tea Coffee Chocolates Liquors, malt and alcoholic All hot breads Soft breads 478 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ACUTE GASTRITIS MAY EAT, in the Order Given Predigested milk preparations Almond milk Peptonized milk gruels Koumys Albuminized whey Matzoon Modified milk, without cream Kefir Banana meal mush, with milk Leban Egg flip Meiggs* food Egg cordial Fruit juices Followed by Cornmeal and arrowroot gruel Scraped beef cake "Ye perfect food" Scraped mutton cake Broiled sweetbreads Soup a la Reine Double soup Oatmeal mutton soup, strained Double bouillon Veal broth Later Well-cooked light cereals, or the Broiled scraped meat cake, with a ready-cooked cereals, with milk little fresh grated pineapple Very ripe subacid fruits, as Broiled tender chops peaches and fresh guavas Broiled birds Cooked bananas A little well-cooked rice Strained blackberry and raspberry Somatose juice AVOID Fresh breads Rich soups and sauces Hot breads Highly-seasoned dishes All dry foods Coarse vegetables Old peas, beans and lentils Raw apples and pears Pork Acid foods, as pickles Veal Uncooked vegetables Fried foods Anchovies Salt foods Herring Lobsters Caviar Clams Alcoholic and malt liquors, tin- Crabs less ordered Shrimps Strong tea and coffee MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 479 CHRONIC GASTRITIS MAY EAT Predigested food, if necessary, but Dark grapes, without seeds or only occasionally skins Broiled tender meats Pilot bread White fish An occasional aleuronat gem Cream soups Cocoanut milk Milk and milk preparations Cocoanut cream Junkets of all kinds Tomato with cocoanut cream Vegetable gelatin desserts Heart of lettuce, with cocoanut Milk gelose cream Carefully-boiled rice Spinach Tender lettuce or celery, occa- Green peas sionally Asparagus Stewed prunes, without skins Stewed cucumbers Eggs, carefully cooked Squash Cereals, strained and well masti- Cooked cress cated A little olive oil Crackers A little cream If Accompanied With Constipation, Add Baked apples Fruit juices in the early morning, Coddled apples and fig panada the last thing Scraped apples at night Fig panada AVOID Pork Hot breads Veal Highly-seasoned foods Oysters Beef tea Clams Tea, coffee and chocolate with Crustacea meals Salt foods All liquors, unless ordered by a Warmed-over meats physician Fried foods Black pepper Candies Spices Puddings Very little salt Pies Fats in general Cakes Fruits with sugar, stewed or raw Sweets 480 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK ULCER OF THE STOMACH MAY EAT Predigested milk and oysters Milk and milk preparations Milk and vichy Milk and apollinaris Cream soups Later, broiled chop Finely-minced meats, carefully broiled Broiled chicken Sweetbreads Tripe Birds Baked potato Pulled bread Unleavened breads Warm cup custards Soft custards Boiled rice Stewed cucumbers Stewed summer squash Green peas, pressed through a sieve A little pulp of sweet corn, with- out the husk of the grains Oysters, stewed and in soup An occasional baked apple Stewed prunes Prune souffle Prune jelly Vegetable jellies Guava jelly AVOID All fried foods Sweets Severe acids All underground and coarse veg- etables, as cabbage, onions, turnips Hot breads Pastry Uncooked vegetables, as let- tuce, celery Uncooked fruits Coarse cereals Condiments Highly-seasoned sauces and soups Rich dishes Fruits stewed with sugar Sea foods, except oysters All salt foods Old peas, beans and lentils Fruit jellies, except guava MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 481 INTESTINAL INDIGESTION MAY EAT Beef, broiled, boiled, baked or roasted Mutton, broiled, boiled, baked or roasted Chicken, broiled, boiled, baked or roasted Birds Venison White-fleshed fish, broiled or boiled Eggs, soft - boiled, steamed, poached; yolks and hard-boiled, pressed through a sieve on milk toast Sweetbreads, creamed or broiled Olive oil, a little Butter, a little Whole wheat bread, well baked Bread sticks; mush bread Boiled rice Rice pudding Cup custard; junket Soft custards Koumys Modified milk Orange juice Prunes, dates or figs, stewed with- out sugar Lettuce Celery Cream soups, as spinach, celery, or lettuce Carefully-cooked cauliflower Roquefort or other ripe cheese in small quantities The early spring mushrooms New turnips, cooked below boiling point in unsalted water, served with cream sauce Stewed cucumbers Stewed squash Baked bananas, cream, horseradish sauce Very young peas, pressed through a sieve Cress, chicory, endive, lettuce A cup of coffee, alone, once a day Very weak tea AVOID Boiled coffee Boiled tea All sweets Fried foods White bread Crackers Cakes Small acid fruits Pork in all forms Veal Turkey Duck Cooked cabbage Starchy foods and sweets in gen- eral 31 Beets Corn, green Potatoes Pickles Spiced foods Gelatin desserts Red or dark fish Salt foods All the Crustacea Clams Oysters Iced water Acid drinks Flavored soda water 482 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK ACUTE INTESTINAL CATARRH MAY EAT Modified milk, without milk sugar Albuminized water Gelatinized water Junket Vegetable gelatin with fruit juice Soft-cooked eggs Eggs and milk Meat cake Broiled chops Meat broths, with dry albumin Predigested gruels Aleuronat wafers Almond wafers Zwieback Tea Leban Koumys, occasionally Strained gruels Meat juice An occasional bit of toast Grape juice Strained orange juice Apple juice Blackberry toast Elderberry jelly Huckleberry jelly Very ripe peaches Fruit gelose MUST AVOID All vegetable foods Coarse cereals Fruits, except those mentioned All acid foods, as pickles, etc. Highly-seasoned meat soups Bread Coffee All fats and fatty foods Puddings Pies Cakes Rich desserts Sauces Sea foods ULCER IN THE DUODENUM MAY EAT White of egg and water White of egg in whey Modified milk Meiggs' food Barley water and milk German food gruel "Ye perfect food" milk Rice water and Milk and vichy Albuminized milk Mutton broth with barley, strained Cocoa from the nibs Weak tea MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 483 During Convalescence Rice purees Milk soups Finely-chopped or scraped beef Broiled chop Soup a la Reine Beef panada Pulled bread Swedish bread Pilot bread Hard toast Orange and grape juice Leban Matzoon Koumys Clabber A little honey Occasionally tender heart of let- tuce, with French dressing AVOID All vegetable foods Gruels Fruits, in general, except fruit Cereals juice Pork Sweets Veal Fatty and starchy foods Crustacea All sour foods Oysters Raw vegetables Clams CHRONIC CONSTIPATION MAY EAT Portuguese soup Oatmeal broth Cream of carrot soup Veal broth Coffee, with scalded milk, no sugar, alone in early morning Well-cooked cereals Steamed figs Dates Baked apples Plums, very ripe and without skins Grape fruit Orange juice Grape juice Apple juice Toasted shredded wheat and milk Bran mush Oatmeal mush Wheatlet All topground green vegetables, carefully cooked Raw cabbage salad Lettuce Cress Endive - Chickory Celery Celery and apple, with French dressing Stewed macaroni without cheese Baked potato Baked pumpkin Stewed squash Nut foods in place of meat 484 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK MAY EAT Continued Buttermilk Leban Koumys Matzoon Zoolak Kefir Broiled white fish Raw scraped apple, at night Grated turnip, with salt, at night Stewed grated carrot Milk, with milk sugar added Carefully-cooked spinach Kale Asparagus tips Young peas Bran bread Graham bread Whole wheat bread Brown bread Corn bread Roman meal gems Gelatin desserts Vegetable gelatin desserts Brown Betty , Bread and milk pudding Fig panada Chicken Lamb Mutton Chopped meat cakes Broiled steak Stewed veal Sweetbreads Tripe Sliced tomato, with cocoanut cream Green vegetable salads Fruit salads, French dressing An abundance of water AVOID Milk with meals Cheese and cheese preparations All fried foods Pies Cakes Preserves Tea Soft foods in general Coffee and chocolate with sugar Stewed fruit with meals Pickles White bread Mashed potatoes Fried potatoes Beef tea Consomme MRS. BORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 485 APPENDICITIS MAY EAT, in Early Stages Milk and cream Prune pulp Modified milk, with double quan- tity of sugar of milk Meiggs' food Egg and milk Junket Fruit juices, especially orange and apple juice Prunes, steamed, without skins Grape fruit Baked apple Apple sauce Cranberry jelly All fruit jellies not too sweet Coffee, if allowable Later Whole wheat bread, well but- tered and masticated thor- oughly Cornmeal souffle Baked potato Milk soups Carefully-cooked, strained cereals Spinach Puree of green peas Asparagus tips with French dressing Sliced tomato without seeds Puree of tomato Stewed cucumbers Stewed squash Nut roll Almond and apple pudding Eggs, poached, steamed, and hard-boiled yolks Artichokes Jerusalem artichokes Cauliflower Puree of sorrel Stewed rhubard Boiled mutton, beef and chicken White fish, broiled or boiled Game AVOID All bulk foods Skins of fruit and vegetables Pork Veal All fried foods Lobsters, crabs, clams and oysters Mashed potatoes Boiled cabbage Underground coarse vegetables, as turnips All complicated sweets Toast, either dry, buttered or milk toast Seeds of small fruits String beans Pickles of all kinds Condiments White bread Soft drinks Lemonade Cocoa Chocolate Tea MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK CHRONIC DIARRHOEA MAY EAT Predigested milk Modified milk, without milk sugar Blackberry cordial Elderberry toast Blackberry toast Mutton broth, with barley and rice Browned rice gruel German flour and milk Barley gruel Toasted crackers Zweiback Hard, dry toast Weak tea Mulled port wine Port wine whey Claret whey Fresh grape juice Concord grapes Soft, ripe peaches followed later with milk soups, hard crackers, lamb chops, boiled minced mutton, Cream of Wheat, well cooked and thoroughly masticated; a little boiled rice, and an occasional baked potato, as the patient grows better. AVOID Variety at meals Geese All vegetable foods, except baked Turkeys potato and boiled rice Pies All uncooked vegetables Cakes All fried foods Puddings Coffee Prunes All the crustacea, oysters, clams Figs and fish Dates Soft breads Pears Rich sauces Rhubarb Soups Strawberries Pork Raspberries Veal Currants Bacon Citrus fruits Ducks MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 487 ACUTE DYSENTERY MAY EAT, in the Early Stages Modified milk Modified milk with albumin Gelose with brandy Meiggs' food Modified milk, without sugar of milk Mutton broth, boiled with rice or barley, and strained Dry toast Zwieback Water crackers, well masticated Boiled rice Browned rice gruel Arrowroot gruel "Ye perfect food" German food gruel Blackberry jelly water Blackberry drink Blackberry juice Grape juice A few ripe blackberries, without cores Very ripe peaches MAY EAT, When Convalescing Broiled, boiled or roasted mutton Water crackers White fish, broiled Baked potato Boiled rice Cream of Wheat Farina Eggs, soft Raw eggs Milk and milk preparations Junket Occasionally tapioca, cup custards, soft custards Zweiback Pilot bread Hard toast White bread, without lard Tea Vegetable gelatin desserts White of egg on orange juice Dark, ripe grapes, without seeds or skins Very ripe peaches Toast water Blackberry dishes Elderberry jelly Guava jelly Orange marmalade AVOID All coarse vegetables v Bran bread Cereals Fruits, except those mentioned Fats and fatty foods Coffee Beef Pork Veal Chocolate Cocoa Raw vegetables Gelatin Sweets, pastries and preserves Turkey Duck Goose 488 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK DIET IN HEMORRHOIDS MAY EAT Baked potatoes Grated and stewed carrots Carefully-cooked spinach Cauliflower Young sweet peas All green vegetable salads especially string bean salad Onions, carefully boiled, baked, made into soup Cereals, well cooked Graham bread Unleavened bread Corn bread Whole wheat bread Nut milk Vegetable gelatin dishes Leban Koumys Matzoon Buttermilk Clabber Broiled and roasted beef Mutton Chicken Duck Turkey All fresh fruits Dates Figs Prunes, cooked without sugar Fruit juices Tomatoes, raw or baked Eggs Butter Cream Cocoanut cream Kefir An abundance of water AVOID All fried foods Pork Veal Fat meats Fruits with seeds Rhubarb Pickles Sour dishes Asparagus Boiled cabbage Old beans, peas and lentils Cheese All spiced dishes Alcoholic beverages unless ordered Strong tea Rich sauces Meat soups Puddings Pies Cakes Candies MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 489 PERITONITIS MAY EAT, in Early Stages Modified milk Veal and lamb broth, strained White of egg beaten with water Port wine whey Strained mutton broth Junket whey Chicken tea Gelatin water Chicken jelly Toast water Beef jelly Arrowroot gruel and milk Followed by Strained gruels Bartholow's Food Milk and barley water Beef panada Koumys Gelatin bouillon Matzoon Bouillon a la Colbert Bonnyclabber Semi-solid beef Buttermilk Eggs Later Scraped meat cake Golden chicken Broiled chop Ceylon chicken Stewed tripe Baked potato Oyster soup Boiled rice Oatmeal broth, with mutton Stewed prunes Cornmeal broth, with mutton Baked apple Sweetbreads Fruit juices Chicken souffle Toast, hardtack or cocoanut Chicken puff fingers Chicken, in potato cases AVOID, for a Long Time Excessive fats All highly-seasoned meats, Starchy foods soups and sauces Mashed potatoes Curd of milk, unless especially All underground vegetables treated Coarse vegetables, as kale and Raw fruits, except orange juice cabbage and grape fruit Condiments Sour foods Raw vegetables 490 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK OBESITY MAY EAT Clear meat and vegetable soups Meat broths, strained Meats in jelly Chicken tea Chicken jelly Chicken in jelly Broiled, boiled and baked beef, mutton and chicken; occasion- ally veal Broiled chipped beef White-fleshed fish Eggs, lightly cooked Tender green vegetables, as cooked cucumbers, squash, string beans Lettuce, chicory, celery, endive and raw cabbage, with lemon juice and a little oil Stewed turnips Spinach Kale Asparagus Onions Cauliflower Brussels sprouts Dandelions Sour dock Oysters, raw, broiled and boiled Oyster bouillon Clam broth Bellevue bouillon Artichokes Olives Tomatoes Fruit juices, without sugar Raw fruits, without sugar Very little stale bread Cocoanut fingers Almond wafers Aleuronat gems Gluten gems Junket from skimmed milk Buttermilk occasionally Ripe cheese, as parmesan and schmierkase Hazel nuts and cob nuts Soy preparations Coffee, without sugar and cream Clear weak tea One glass of water between meals Oranges Grape fruit Ripe peaches Baked apple, without sugar and cream Currants Raspberries Blackberries AVOID Milk soups Butter Cream Olive oil, except a little on green vegetables Sea foods, except white fish Salt foods Pork Veal All made meat dishes Rich sauces and soups Potatoes, sweet and white Macaroni Cereals MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 491 AVOID Continued Rice, except occasionally Parsnips Beets Corn All sweet dishes and candies Malt and alcoholic liquors, un- less ordered All sweet wines, including cham- pagne Pickles Bacon Breads in general Duck Goose Liver and kidneys Dates and figs Pears Chocolate and cocoa Water in large quantities DIET FOR LEANNESS MAY EAT Cream soups Broiled and boiled beef Mutton Turkey Chicken Game Breakfast bacon Good white bread, well baked Baked potatoes Asparagus Onions Cauliflower Rice Macaroni Hominy and hominy grits Well-cooked cereals, with cream Salads Butter and cream Olive oil Cocoanut cream Nuts as pecans, black walnuts, pinons, a few almonds and pea- nuts Sweet fruits Light cream desserts Plenty of cool, pure water AVOID All bulk foods, as cabbage, tur- nips, kale Clear soups Sea foods, with the exception of white-fleshed fish and oysters Candies All salt meats Pies Puddings Cakes Rich sauces Liver and kidneys Tripe Pork Veal Pickles Fried foods Tea and coffee with meals MRS. KOKEK S DIET FOR THE SICK GOUT MAY EAT All forms of hard bread Milk soups, without butter Clam broth Bellevue bouillon Skimmed milk Roquefort cheese, small quantity Eggs, occasionally Broiled bacon Chopped meat cakes, broiled Farinaceous foods and cereals Rice Puree of lentils Sago and fruit Tapioca and fruit Strawberries, if they agree Young peas French canned peas String beans Celery Stewed turnips White potatoes, occasionally Okra Artichokes, French and Jerusalem Stewed cucumbers Light salads, little oil and plenty of lemon juice Stewed summer squash Cauliflower Kohl-rabi Baked eggplant Lettuce, cress, endive AVOID Meats in general ; pork, veal and salt meats in particular All appetizers, as anchovies, caviar, herring and herring roe All warmed-over meats and entrees Fat foods in general All fresh hot breads Buckwheat cakes Pastries, preserves and candies All sweet drinks Jams and jellies Melons Peaches Plums Nectarines Apricots Grapes Figs Bananas Prunes All sour foods and condiments Pickles and spiced dishes Indigestible foods, as mushrooms Cheese Such green vegetables as radishes, asparagus, rhubarb, spinach, to- matoes, garden cress, beets, parsnips, salsify and yellow turnips, because they are dense ; boiled cabbage, onions, baked beans MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 493 RHEUMATISM The Anaemic Rheumatics May Eat Whole milk, with cream Modified milk Koumys Leban Matzoon Buttermilk Wheat germ food Oatmeal Stewed veal Eggs Eggs ' in milk White of egg and milk Hard-boiled yolks on milk toast Milk toast Puree of lentils Nut soups Peanut souffle Boiled rice Stewed macaroni Hard bread Vegetable soups Vegetable broth Milk soups Vegetable gelatin desserts Baked apples Orange juices Grape fruit Almond croquettes Boiled or stewed chestnuts Vegetable broth Soup Crecy AVOID All fried foods Preserves Jellies Soft breads Hot breads Red meats Pork Veal, fried or baked Poultry, except white meat chicken Pies of Cakes Puddings Candies Tea and coffee, with sugar and cream Prunes Figs Dates Coarse vegetables Potatoes 494 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK RHEUMATISM The Obese May Eat Cream of Wheat, with milk Shredded wheat Farina Tapioca Sago Banana mush Soy bean mush Hard toast Skimmed milk Gluten biscuits Swedish bread Ship biscuits Pilot bread Bent's water crackers Milk toast Toasted crackers, with milk White of egg and milk Later Puree of rice Soup a la Reine Puree of old beans Puree of green peas Stewed macaroni Boiled rice An occasional baked potato Yolks of hard boiled eggs White of egg and milk Orange juice Grape juice Apple juice Lemonade Baked apple, occasionally, with- out sugar Blackberries Blackberry jam, without seeds Currant juice on raspberries A little stewed veal Broiled white meat of chicken Nut foods Peanut souffle Gruels Hearing Recovery, Add A little well-cooked spinach Raw celery Stewed celery Tender lettuce, Romaine, endive, dandelions, with French dress- ing Apple and celery, with French dressing Broiled oysters A bit of broiled fish Lamb chop At All Times Carbonated water and vichy, with milk Orange juice and white of egg Orange juice and plain water Grape juice Apple juice MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 495 AVOID All meat soups Meat broths Meat jellies Red meats Pork Roasted and fried veal Poultry, except a little chicken Potatoes All sweets Sauces Highly-seasoned dishes Entrees Preserves Pickles Coarse vegetables Tea and coffee CHRONIC RHEUMATISM MAY EAT All farinaceous foods Shredded wheat Farina Oatmeal Rolled wheat Barley Cornmeal mush Cornmeal gems Stale bread Swedish bread An occasional gluten biscuit Broiled white fish Eggs Spinach Stewed cucumbers Squash Kale Brussels sprouts String beans Lima beans . Soy bean souffle Soy bean gems Soy bean soup Stewed veal occasionally If the Patient is Anaemic, Add Koumys, leban, matzoon, egg and milk AVOID The same as in Acute Rheumatism. 496 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK BILIOUSNESS MAY EAT Clam broth Oyster bouillon Nut milks Leban Koumys Clabber Buttermilk Dandelions All tender green vegetables, care-. fully cooked without fat Delicate green salads, with French dressing Tender celery Fruit juices Apples Oranges Grape fruit Strawberries Raspberries Prunes Figs Grapes Spinach Kohl-rabi Stewed cucumbers Summer squash Young peas Water cress Watermelon Nut dishes Broiled or roasted beef, mutton and chicken Sweetbreads and tripe Eggs occasionally Junket Milk and vichy Lemonade Raspberry vinegar Blackberry vinegar Plenty of water A little black coffee before break- fast AVOID Fatty foods Pies, cakes and puddings Sweet dishes Candy Fruits stewed with sugar Pears ; peaches Cantaloupe Potatoes All spices Pepper Salt in quantities All fried foods Veal ; pork ; sausages Hot breads Buckwheat cakes Crustacea Old peas and beans Alcoholic and malt liquors Tomatoes ; turnips Beets ; carrots Sweet potatoes Cabbage ; cauliflower Brussels sprouts Kale Pickles Rich sauces and soups All salt foods All dried fruits The internal organs, as liver, kid- neys Cereals ; Such oily dishes, as sardines, canned salmon ; in fact all fish should be avoided Corn breads Tea and coffee with meals MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 497 CATARRHAL JAUNDICE MAY EAT Clam broth Leban Oyster bouillon Matzoon Chicken tea Zoolak Chicken jelly Fruit juices, with effervescing Strained mutton broth waters Junket whey Lemonade White of egg, shaken in water Lemon squash White of egg in whey Orangeade Buttermilk Nut milks In Convalescence Milk toast from skimmed milk Zwieback Beef broth Clear coffee the first thing in the Beef panada morning Broiled chop Stewed cucumbers Soup a la Reine Boiled summer squash Raw fruit alone, not with meals Raw tomato AVOID '"> Sweets Veal Fats Bacon Fried foods Crustacea Indigestible meats Mollusks Eggs Vegetable foods in general Pork Tea, coffee and chocolate 32 498 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK CIRRHOSIS MAY EAT Modified milk, without cream Orange juice Junket whey Apple juice Milk and barley water Koumys Milk and rice water Leban White of egg and water Matzoon White of egg and whey Zoolak Grape juice Kefir AVOID Everything except the articles mentioned in the preceding list, until a change is ordered by the physician MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 499 GALL STONES MAY EAT Coffee early in the morning Tea in the middle of the after- noon, without food Lettuce, cress, cabbage, with French dressing Brussels sprouts Acid fruits White bread Unleavened bread Gluten biscuits Cocoanut sticks Fruit gelose Baked potatoes Potatoes mashed and baked Lemonade Orangeade Effervescing waters Plain water in abundance An occasional nut dish Almond milk Leban Koumys Buttermilk Clabber Albuminized milk Albuminized whey Orange juice and white of egg Apple juice and white of egg Baked apples Strawberries Strained currant juice, with effer- vescing waters Grape juice Grapes A little stewed veal and lamb AVOID Whole wheat bread Cereals Spinach Sorrel Old peas and beans Lentils Carrots Yolks of eggs All fish Meats in general Calves' brains Sweetbreads Tripe Liver, kidneys Underground vegetables All fruits, except those men- tioned Peaches Bananas Figs Dates Raisins Prunes Pies Cakes Puddings Fried foods Hot breads 500 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK SICK HEADACHE MAY EAT BREAKFAST A mellow sour apple, well mas- ticated Each must be taken alone, without other food One cup of clear coffee, or The juice of two oranges, or A grape fruit, or A saucer of prunes, without sugar, or 10.30 A glass of zoolak, or buttermilk, or koumys, or clabber or skimmed sweet milk 12.30 A bit of white-fleshed fish, or Chicken, boiled or broiled, or Boiled calf's head, with lemon juice; or Boiled calf's feet with lemon juice; or Breads allowable Gluten biscuit, stale bread, whole wheat bread, Boston brown bread Drink pure water between meals Fruit juices, without sugar, served with : Asparagus, spinach, cress, dan- delions, endive, cauliflower, kohl-rabi, stewed cucumbers, summer squash, string beans without fat, or stewed tender celery Eat acid fruits with meat, rather than bread Strawberries, oranges, grape fruit and water ices allowable now and then AVOID Tea, coffee and chocolate with meals Soups at the beginning of meals Pork Veal Turkey Goose Game Red meats, except occasionally Rich sauces Puddings Pies Cakes Sweets Cabbage, cooked and raw Kale Peppers Carrots, except grated, raw Sweetbreads Tripe Liver Sea foods, except white fish and oysters Kidneys Starchy foods, as potatoes, rice and macaroni MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK AVOID Continued Fresh white bread Hot breads Sour dishes Pickles Salads with mayonnaise dressing Tomatoes Old peas, beans and lentils Sweet fruits Fried foods Fatty foods Ice creams URIC ACID DIATHESIS MAY EAT fish, broiled or Cream soups White-fleshed boiled An occasional bit of chicken Soup a la Reine Puree of lentils, peas and beans Vegetable gelatins, unsweetened Very little butter Dishes made from white of egg Coffee, cocoa, chocolate, broma, alkathrepta, racahout, without sugar Skimmed milk Modified milk Whole wheat bread Oatmeal bread Unleavened bread Crisp crackers Well-cooked cereals Rice without sugar Macaroni and spaghetti, without cheese Gluten mush Gluten bread An occasional aleuronat gem Soups, maigre Fresh green vegetables Peas Lima beans Tender hearts of lettuce Young celery Baked potato Globe artichokes Stewed turnips Jerusalem artichokes Fruits without sugar Fruit juices AVOID All sweets Red meats Sauces Meat soups Yolks of eggs Fat Pork Veal All pink-fleshed fish, Crustacea, dysters, clams Rhubarb Gooseberries Strawberries Grapes Pears Dates Figs Raisins Prunes Currants Coarse vegetables Cheese Milk, except in coffee and cocoa Sour milk dishes, leban and kou- mys 502 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ALBUMINURIA MAY EAT Water gruels, especially cornmeal gruel Skimmed milk Modified milk, without cream Buttermilk Skimmed milk koumys Fruit juices Carefully-cooked fruits, without sugar Cream soups Rice and rice preparations Cereals with milk Skimmed milk toast Gluten toast, without butter Baked apple, occasionally Blancmange Vegetable gelatin preparations Stale breads Cocoanut fingers Gluten biscuits Unleavened bread Whole wheat bread Corn breads Later Eggs may be added, but butchers' meats must be wholly ex- cluded for a long while. Crisp crackers may now and then be substituted for bread. All topground vegetables are admissible, except boiled cabbage and onions. AVOID The same things that you would avoid in Nephritis. MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 503 FUNCTIONAL ALBUMINURIA IN CHILDREN MAY EAT Milk Milk and barley water Arrowroot milk gruel Farina milk gruel German flour gruel Meiggs' food Barley and rice gruel Later Hard-boiled yolk of egg over milk toast Milk soups Nut soups Fruit juices Carefully-cooked cereals Boiled rice Rice pudding Puree of lentil meal Carefully-cooked spinach Cooked cress Tender cauliflower Cooked celery Tender lettuce, with French dress- ing Apples, raw and baked Fruit gelose Sour milk foods, as zoolak, mat- zoon and buttermilk Very ripe small fruits Stale bread Whole wheat bread Nut bread Baked potato, occasionally AVOID Meats' and meat soups Sea food White of egg Fried foods All sour foods, as pickles Sweet dishes, as pastry, cakes, preserves and candies Old peas, beans and lentils, ex- cept puree of lentil meal Adults who have this disease may add to the preceding list a little chopped white meat of chicken, a bit of broiled white-fleshed fish, and occasionally hard-boiled yolks of eggs grated over milk toast. 504 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK CHRONIC BRIGHT'S DISEASE MAY EAT, following the Milk Diet Milk toast Milk gruels Cream soups Carefully-made nut dishes An occasional puree of lentils Golden toast Occasionally boiled white fish Chicken timbale Soup a la Reine Topground vegetables Baked potato Cereals Buttermilk Skimmed milk clabber Vegetable gelatin desserts Fruits cooked without sugar Dry bread Whole wheat bread Corn bread Light green vegetable salads Weak chocolate and cocoa ; alka- threpta, broma and racahout AVOID All meats Fish Crustacea Oysters Clams Coarse vegetables All meat soups Eggs, unless ordered Hot breads Fresh white bread Tea Coffee, unless ordered All sweet dishes Pickles Spiced foods Rich sauces Pastry Cakes Preserves Fruits stewed with sugar Rhubarb MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 505 ACUTE NEPHRITIS Milk sipped slowly Alkaline waters Effervescing waters Lemonade Lemon squash Imperial drink MAY EAT Modified milk Koumys Buttermilk Meiggs' food Cornmeal gruel If Edema is Present Reduce the liquids Boiled rice, pressed through a Farina, well cooked, without salt sieve, with cream, no salt or Cream of Wheat sugar Two ounces of dry toast, with four ounces of cream Browned rice gruel twice a day If Diarrhoea Occurs Give Evans' tea gruel If Constipation Occurs Give Buttermilk Koumys Leban, and an ounce of cream at each feeding Sanitas almond meal soup Nut milks * When solid foods are indicated : Chicken timbale Milk toast with cream Farina pudding; blancmange Tender green peas, pressed through a sieve Rice Whole wheat bread Tender stewed celery Dark grapes, without skin and seeds A half dozen blanched, un- roasted almonds Baked apples Apple juice Orange juice Grape juice Bartliolow's food Carefully-cooked prunes Gluten biscuits Red meats Rich soups and sauces Meat soups Sweets ; pastry Pies ; puddings Spiced dishes; pickles Tea; coffee Sour salads Fried foods AVOID Sea foods ; salt foods Coarse vegetables Hot fresh breads New beets Sweet corn Raw cucumbers Cantaloupes Mushrooms Cheese 506 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK CHRONIC NEPHRITIS MAY EAT Milk Modified milk Milk and barley water Milk gruels, strained Milk and rice water Later Milk soups Water crackers Toast Later Light white meats Very young green peas, pressed Broiled white-fleshed fish through a sieve Freshly killed game Tender young corn Cauliflower Fruits and fruit juices AVOID All raw vegetables Red meats Salads with mayonnaise All fried foods Old peas, beans and lentils Sweets Mushrooms Rich, sauces String beans Meat soups Asparagus Hot breads MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 507 OXALURIA MAY EAT White meat of chicken and lamb Cornmeal water gruel White-fleshed fish, broiled or Prunes boiled Vegetable jelly desserts Stale white bread Nut dishes Crisp crackers Milk toast, without butter Gluten biscuits Dry toast, with a very little but- Orange juice ter A half pint of hot water, one Arrowroot gruel hour before each meal Imported endive Soft water between meals New beets Rice String beans Whole wheat bread Tender lettuce Rye bread Stewed cucumbers Shredded wheat biscuit Green peas Oatmeal Weak tea Meiggs' food Cocoa AVOID Strong tea Apples Strong coffee Pears Chocolate Strawberries Carbonated water Cranberries Tomatoes Currants Onions Cress Spinach Liver Cabbage Kidney Kohl-rabi Sweetbreads Brussel sprouts Tripe Cauliflower Salt foods Sorrel Meat soups Fresh green peppers Gelatin dishes of all kinds Rhubarb All rich and indigestible foods Citrus fruits 508 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK CALCULI, RENAL MAY EAT Rice String beans Baked potato Peas Nut purees Cauliflower Nut dishes in general Cornmeal mush Almond milk Blancmange Stale breads Eggs, occasionally Hominy Light salads, with a little olive Hominy grits oil and lemon juice Stewed cucumber Fruits, cooked without sugar Squash Fresh fruits Sweet fresh corn Cream soups Celery Boiled white fish AVOID Red meats Cabbage Pork Cress Veal Brussels sprouts Pink-fleshed fish Parsley Sweetbreads Meat soups Liver All fatty foods Brains Sweets Tripe Pie All salt meats and fish Cake All highly-seasoned dishes All cereals except farina and Spiced dishes Cream of Wheat Butter Sour foods, like pickles Bacon All small fruits, as raspberries, Rhubarb strawberries, currants, blackber- Carrots ries, cherries and plums, unless Spinach ordered by a physician Sorrel MRS. RORRK'S DIET FOR THE SICK 509 DIABETES MAY EAT Cream of turnip Cream of oyster Soups : Clear meat soups Tomato broth Clam broth Oyster broth Chicken broth, with celery Fish: Fresh white-fleshed fish, broiled, boiled or planked Oysters, in small quantities Terrapin Meats : Beef, mutton, poultry and game, broiled, baked or stewed Calves' sweetbreads Tripe Boiled calves' heads Sauce : Cream, egg and Tomato without thickening Eggs: Eggs in all ways, except fried or hard boiled Milk: Skimmed milk Skimmed milk junket Cheese in small quantity Vegetables : Celery Shaved raw cabbage Carefully-boiled cucumbers, without sauce Cauliflower Broiled fresh mushrooms Cress lettuce Chicory French artichokes, with butter sauce Spinach Raw tomatoes Cymlins Breads : Almond wafers Almond bread Gluten bread, made from eighty percent, gluten flour Gluten gems Aleuronat gems Aleuronat zweiback Soy gems Bran loaf Bran wafers Eighty percent, gluten biscuits Fruits : Oranges Lemons Grape fruit In mild cases', peaches Desserts : Cup custard Almonds Brazilian nuts Beverages : Clear weak tea and coffee Plain and aerated waters Fats. A little olive oil, with lemon juice, on lettuce Cocoanut butter may be used on vegetables A little unsalted, perfectly fresh butter may be taken once a, day 510 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK AVOID All warmed-over meat dishes All highly-seasoned soups Milk soups with thickening Salt fish Lobster Crabs Shrimps Pink-fleshed fish Clams Scallops Veal and pork, with the excep- tion of broiled bacon Liver and kidneys Potatoes Parsnips Carrots Peas Salsify Old Peas Beans Lentils Sweet corn Asparagus Boiled cabbage Canned mushrooms Radishes Raw cucumbers Winter squash Sweet potatoes Yams Breads and all cereals Boiled coffee Cocoa Chocolate Wines Liquors Beer All fruits, except those mentioned All sweets, pastries and puddings MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 511 FOODS ADMISSIBLE FOR CHILDREN FROM THREE TO FOUR MAY EAT Milk and milk foods Milk gruels Milk soups Buttermilk Matzoon Leban Clabber Junket and junket preparations Well-cooked cereals Vegetable gelatins with fruit juices Fresh fruits and fruit juices Nut preparations made from ground nuts Whole wheat bread Occasionally corn bread Now and then, stale white bread Carefully-cooked chicken, beef, lamb and white-fleshed fish Warm custar,ds Occasionally, ice cream Tender green vegetables, with French dressing Baked potatoes Potatoes, mashed and browned in the oven Eggs, lightly cooked Occasionally, soft boiled onions Summer squash Cauliflower Stewed celery Prunes, stewed without sugar Sterilized dates Baked and stewed bananas An occasional mutton chop, broiled Rice and rice preparations Occasionally, carefully-stewed macaroni Simple desserts, as blancmange, rice pudding, fruit gelatins, cup custards, soft custards, dishes made from fruits AVOID All sweet made dishes Meat soups Highly-seasoned foods Gravies Bread and butter and sugar Butter highly salted Undercooked cereals Fried foods All hot fats Fat meats Sea foods, except white fish Cakes Preserves Pastry 512 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK FROM FOUR TO TEN BREAKFAST Cream of Wheat Stewed prunes Farina Stewed figs Hominy grits Chopped dates Cornmeal mush Whole wheat bread, well but- Oatmeal tered Rolled wheat Milk or cream, according to the Shredded wheat cereal Puffed rice Baked apples Corn flakes Baked bananas DINNER Puree of peas, beans, lentils and Green corn, pressed from the peanuts cob Baked potatoes Summer squash Boiled rice Carefully-cooked spinach Carefully-stewed macaroni Tender lettuce, with French Boiled chestnuts, with cream dressing sauce Cooked cress Occasionally chopped white Cooked kale meat of chicken Stewed celery Soup a la Reine Stewed grated carrots Chicken boudins Stewed turnips with' cream A little chopped mutton cake sauce Clopps Desserts : An occasional piece of broiled Junket and junket preparations white fish Tapioca and sago, with fruit Eggs a la Martin j^iice Poached eggs Cup custards Eggs Cardoze Soft custards Eggs Jefferson Floating island Vegetables: Vegetable gelatins with fruit Stewed cucumbers juice Young peas SUPPER Rice pudding and toast Whole wheat bread and butter Poached eggs on toast Toasted crackers and butter Beauregard eggs Milk crackers Cereals Toasted pilot bread, with milk Milk toast Cornmeal mush and milk Golden toast Leban Junkets and toast Buttermilk and brown bread Milk soups and toast MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 513 AVOID Strong meat soups Rich sauces Stewed fruits with sugar All coarse vegetables All fried foods Pickles All complicated sweets, like cakes, pies,, preserves and puddings Fruits and cream Crustacea Pink-fleshed fish Oysters Clams Tea Coffee Chocolate Cocoa All red meats Raw nuts, unless ground Candies Bread and sugar Cookies Sweet crackers Foods between meals, except fruits Lemonade Soda waters All soft drinks MARASMUS MAY EAT Cream Olive oil Cocoanut cream Modified milk, with cream Orange juice Cream and barley water Cream and plain water Meiggs' food Barley water and top milk Barley water, milk and cream Rice water, milk and cream 33 514 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK MEASLES MAY EAT, During the First Three Days Milk and hot water, half and half Warm water, with a little sugar Hot milk and barley water and cream Whey and grape juice Later, When the Appetite Appears, Give Milk soups Cream of Wheat Milk toast Thirst may be allayed by weak Farina tea, clover tea, or hot water The top of a shredded wheat bis- with sugar and milk cuit, with milk When Convalescing, Give Cereals and milk, with the excep- Fruit and fruit juices tion of oatmeal Baked potato, carefully mashed Cream soups Plain boiled rice, with milk Cup custards Potato souffle Blancmange Potato timbale Junket Rice dumplings Egg junket Rice cream Eggs, lightly cooked Rice pudding Plum porridge , AVOID All meat dishes Preserves Meat soups Ice cream Sauces All cold dishes Gravies Sea foods Cakes Hot breads Pies Coarse vegetables MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 515 CHOREA MAY EAT Eggs and egg preparations Milk and milk preparations, ex- cepting koumys Cream Broths Cream soups Whole wheat bread Cup custards Soft custards Fruit juices Vegetable gelatin, flavored with fresh fruit Carefully-made nut foods Now and then a piece of white meat of stewed chicken An occasional lamb chop, but never at the same meal with eggs or milk All carefully-cooked topground vegetables AVOID All sweets Highly-seasoned made-over dishes Coarse vegetables Pickles Red meats Bulk foods Tea Coffee Chocolate Puddings Pies ; cakes Such raw vegetables as cucumbers, cabbage, or the outside stalks of celery 516 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK DIPHTHERIA MAY EAT Modified milk Eskay's food Albuminized milk Cream and whey Arrowroot gruel Meiggs' food German flour gruel Pineapple Juice Mutton tea Vegetable bouillon ' ' Ye perfect food ' ' Cream, eggs and beef Cornmeal gruel Eggs and whey Plum porridge Beef meal MUMPS MAY EAT Milk Milk soups Mutton broth "Ye perfect food' Semi-solid beef Beef gruel Egg and milk Cream soups, and such milk foods as kefir, buttermilk, almond milk, albuminized milk, plum porridge, arrowroot milk and milk gruels WHOOPING COUGH MAY EAT Milk Milk and barley water Milk and white of egg Gelatinized milk Milk, rum and isinglass Eggnog Egg soup Chestnut soup Warm cup custard Soft custard Floating island Well-cooked cereals Junket Buttermilk Milk toast Milk toast with hard boiled yolk grated over Egg flip Chicken broth, with rice Soup a la Reine Strained mutton broth Fruit juices Lemon and orange Irish moss Fruit gelose AVOID, During the Severity of the Disease All solid foods and fruits, except orange and lemon juice MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 517 ENURESIS MAY EAT Eggs, simply cooked Well-cooked cereals, with milk or cream Dry toast Milk toast Stewed prunes Stewed figs Baked bananas Milk and milk preparations Carefully-cooked chicken White-fleshed fish Boiled rice Baked potato Young peas Spinach Sweet corn Very young turnips Tender celery Fruit tapiocas Blancmange Custards Fruit gelose Whipped cream Zwieback Toasted rusk Lright crackers Whole wheat bread Gluten bread A few ground nuts, bread and butter between AVOID, at All Times Tea Coffee Spiced foods Red meats Sour foods Candies Cakes Rich puddings Pies Pork Veal Fried foods All meat soups Hot breads Bran breads Coarse vegetables Eating between meals Liquid foods after four o'clock MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK DIET FOR THE AGED MAY EAT Vegetable soups Milk soups / Meat broth Purees of peas, beans and lentils Celery and oatmeal broth An occasional piece of broiled white fish Klopps Boudins Mutton casserole Chicken timbale Golden chicken Salisbury steak Lamb Broiled chicken Stewed tripe Mutton pats Sweetbread German chicken puff Chicken souffle Ceylon chicken Minced chicken on toast Eggs, except fried Milk and milk preparations Junket; egg junket Cocoa junket; frozen junket Koumys ; leban ; kefir Kefir, with egg Buttermilk Blancmange Milk jelly Occasionally gruels Occasionally ice cream Peanut wafers Peanut soup Pinon butter Mock candy Fruits and fruit juices Baked apples Apples in all ways, except fried Orange juice Ambrosia Baked bananas Fruit toasts Ceylon pudding Caramel custards Cocoanut custards Rice potato Baked potato Creamed potatoes Potato puff; potato puree Boiled rice ; steamed rice Rice pudding , Hominy grits A little green corn Carefully-stewed spaghetti Occasionally baked sweet potato Stewed pumpkin Pumpkin custard Young peas Stewed cucumbers ; stewed squash Occasionally tomato, if admissible Cauliflower Kohl-rabi Grated carrots, stewed Stewed celery Tender lettuce and cress, with French dressing A little fruit jelly Toast Whole wheat bread Pulled bread Rusk Swedish sheets Peptic bread Nut loaf Oatmeal gems Rice gems ; cornmeal gems Crisp crackers Cereals Coffee, tea and chocolate between meals MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK 519 AVOID Pork Veal Pink-fleshed fish Rich sauces Meat soups Strong tea and coffee Thick chocolate, except at night, taken alone All coarse vegetables Boiled cabbage Baked beans Pea pudding Parsnips Greens boiled with meat Preserves Pies Cakes Heavy puddings Pickles Vinegar, except very little Candies Tomatoes in general Eggplant Stuffed peppers Entrees Soft breads Hot breads, except those men- tioned Mashed potatoes and gravy Fruits and cream All fried foods Breads with lard Such dishes as pepper mangoes Sweet pickles Spiced foods Oysters Clams Crustacea Stimulating meat soups 520 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK FEEDING IN FEVER MAY EAT Milk Milk and barley or rice water Strained milk gruels Strained plum porridge Koumys Matzoon Leban Zoolak Junket Frozen cream Milk and albumin Nut milk, strained Fruit juices, strained Beef tea Beef essence Restorative beef tea Nutritive beef tea Beef tea congealed with vegetable gelatin Vegetable gelatin in fruit juices Chicken tea, solidified with vegetable gelatin When Convalescing, Add Eggs and milk Beef panada Cream soups Soup a la Reine Broiled sweetbread Creamed sweetbread Baked potato Milk toast Eggs, coddled or poached AVOID All solid foods, unless ordered by a physician MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 521 TYPHOID FEVER MAY Milk ; milk and barley water Milk and rice water Modified milk Peptonized milk Koumys ; Zoolak White of egg and water Beef teas Beef extract ; beef essence Carefully-strained broth Fruit juices, strained EAT White of egg, served on orange juice Beef tea and nutritive beef tea, solidified with vegetable gela- tin Chicken broth, strained, solidi- fied with vegetable gelatin Lemon and orange vegetable gelatin Tamarind and lemon whey If Vomiting Occurs Add lime water to the milk Increase the fruit juices Stop beef tea If Diarrhoea Appears Use ground rice gruel and milk, Ground rice gruel and milk, pep- strained tonized Toast water, strained, to allay thirst Milk toast Beef panada Beef juice on French bread Yolk of hard boiled egg, grated over milk toast Baked mashed banana, with cream Broiled bird Carefully-made cream soups Potato timbale Pumpkin timbale Convalescing Potato souffle ; stuffed potato Broiled sweetbread Coddled or poached eggs Broiled chop Scraped beef cake Soup a la Reine Floating island ; cup custard Cocoa ; racahout Well-cooked farina and cream Golden nog; egg cordial AVOID, in the Early Stages All solid foods, unless ordered by a physician AVOID, During Convalescence Coarse vegetables Cereals with husk Whole wheat and brown bread Hot breads Complicated soups and sauces Raw fruits, unless ripe and soft Sweets Pickles Sea foods, except white-fleshed fish 522 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK DENGUE FEVER List of foods the same as for ordinary fever cases MALARIAL FEVER MAY EAT, the First Two Days Yolk of egg, shaken in a half pint of barley water, every two hours Next Three Days White of egg in a half pint of water, a^ernated every two hours with milk and lime water Later Milk, koumys, zoolak, matzoon, buttermilk, nut milks, and fruit juices, at alternate feedings Later Gruels White meat of chicken Green peas Eggs, softly cooked Spinach Whole wheat bread Dandelions Brown bread Cooked cauliflower Pilot bread Stewed cucumbers Gluten gems Summer squash Aleuronat gems Baked potato Well-cooked oatmeal, with milk Boiled rice Farina White-fleshed fish Barley Chops Rye mush Scraped meat cake AVOID All coarse vegetables Preserves Fatty foods Pies Sweets Cakes Tea Puddings Coffee Mixtures of egg and milk, as des- Chocolate serts Fried foods Tomatoes Hot breads MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 523 SCARLET FEVER MAY EAT, in the First Stages of the Disease Peptonized milk Junket Milk and barley water Junket with cream Milk gruels Frozen orange juice Koumys Frozen grape juice Matzoon Fruit juices Zoolak Later Milk toast Carefully-stewed macaroni Well-cooked cereals, with milk "Ye perfect food" Baked potato Meiggs' gruel Boiled rice Lentil flour soup Orangeade, orange juice and lemonade throughout the disease AVOID Meats, meat soups and meat ex- Coarse vegetable foods tracts Sweets Sea foods Pickles White of egg Rich soups and sauces Old peas, beans and lentils YELLOW FEVER May Try Albuminized water Bicarbonate of soda and milk Lime water and milk Whey Bicarbonate of soda and water Whey in white of egg AVOID All meat preparations in hot Sweets of every kind climates All solid foods until the patient Sugar is on the road to recovery 524: MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK SMALLPOX MAY EAT, When the Appetite Appears Milk and milk preparations Well-cooked Cream of Wheat Milk soups , and farina, with milk Nut milks Zoolak Egg and milk Matzoon Egg flip Koumys Water gruels, strained Later, When the Fever Subsides A baked potato Pilot bread Milk toast An occasional cup custard Yolk of egg grated over milk Tapioca puddings toast Tapioca with fruit Milk preparations Vegetable gelatin with fruit juices Lightly-cooked eggs Lemon and orangeade, between White bread feedings During Convalescence Broiled chop Junkets White meat of chicken Whole wheat bread in the place Broiled sweetbreads of white Well-cooked cereals, with milk Baked potato and cream Boiled rice Rice puddings Carefully-stewed macaroni Cup custards Carefully-cooked hominy grits AVOID Meats All complicated dishes, as pies Meat soups and cakes Coarse vegetables Bread made with sugar and lard Brown bread All fried foods Rich sauces All made- over dishes MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 525 ECZEMA IN CHILDREN MAY EAT Soups made from milk and green vegetables Ladies' cabbage Spinach Carefully-cooked peas Stewed cucumbers Summer squash Carrots, carefully cooked Whole wheat bread, without lard Unleavened bread Zweiback Crackers Occasionally brown bread Modified milk Cream of Wheat Farina Shredded wheat Toasted corn flakes Butter, in moderation Baked apples Stewed apples, with very little sugar Grapes Fruit juices Skimmed milk Buttermilk Koumys Leban Clabber Schmierkase Eggs, occasionally Lettuce, cress, and light green vegetables, with a little olive oil and lemon juice AVOID Tea, coffee, chocolate and cocoa Fats in excess Sweets Pastries, cakes and puddings Starchy foods Pickles Fried foods Food containing lard Salt foods Liquors, both malt and alcoholic Cambric tea All highly-seasoned foods Underground and coarse vegeta- bles Cereals All fish, the crustacea, oysters and clams Pork Veal Small fruits, with the exception of blackberries Pears Cantaloupes 526 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK NETTLE RASH MAY EAT Mutton Chicken Cream soups Fruits, except strawberries, pears and plums Orange juice Fruit desserts, with tapioca or arrowroot An occasional baked potato Boiled rice Topground green vegetables Green salads, with French dress- ing Orange salad Grape fruit salad Whole wheat bread, well buttered Pilot bread Swedish bread Toast Brown bread Graham bread Gluten bread, occasionally Puree of lentils Puree of peas Nut foods Vegetable gelatin desserts Milk toast Light egg dishes, especially those made from hard-boiled yolks AVOID All coarse vegetables Mashed and fried potatoes Boiled cabbage Kale Pork Veal Lobsters Crabs Fish Oysters and clams Pickles and foods in vinegar Rich sauces Mayonnaise All meat soups Fried foods in general Pies Puddings Cakes Candies Sugar Tea Coffee Chocolate Cocoa and cocoa preparations Entrees Strawberries, pears, plums MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 527 ACNE MAY EAT Broiled lamb Carefully-cooked chicken Beef occasionally Eggs Skimmed milk Buttermilk Leban Koumys Matzoon Whole wheat bread Brown bread Unleavened bread Boiled rice Cream of Wheat Farina, with milk Stewed macaroni A little cheese Eggs, except fried Fruits and fruit juices Gelose with fruits and skimmed milk Lemon, orange and grape gelatin, with very little sugar Game, carefully cooked Mutton broth Chicken broth Noodle soup Occasionally nut loaf Zweiback Virginia wafers Maryland biscuit All fruits, except strawberries and currants Prune dishes AVOID Sea foods Fried foods and fats Pies, cakes and puddings Hot breakfast breads Syrup Pork Veal Smoked and salted meats Tea, coffee and chocolate Fish, Crustacea, mollusks Fresh American cheese Cream Gravies Rich soups White bread Coarse vegetables, as turnips, beets, sweet potatoes, pumpkin White potatoes, except occasionally Fruits stewed with sugar Jellies and preserves Bacon All alcoholic and malt beverages 528 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK ALCOHOLISM May eat, from four to eight days : Predigested foods, if necessary, followed by orange juice, beef tea with a drop of tabasco, and the following list: Clam broth Almond milk Beef tea Cocoanut milk Egg broth Cocoanut cream Vegetable broth Tiger's broth Koumys Egg flip Buttermilk Gruels with dry toast Leban Milk toast Matzoon Pulled bread Zoolak Hard dry bread Eggnog Whole wheat bread, toasted Albuminized milk Pilot bread Fresh fruits Crisp wafers, without sugar Orange juice Twice a day six almonds, Grape juice blanched, not toasted Grape fruit Nut milks AVOID Meats in general, pork and veal Cheese, both new and old in particular Fruits stewed with sugar Fish Hot breads Oysters Sweets in general ; pastry and Lobsters cake in particular Crabs Pickles of all kinds Fried foods Tea and coffee with foods All highly-seasoned foods Chocolate After Eight Days, May Eat Scraped beef cake Tender lettuce, with French dress- Carefully-stewed mutton ing, lemon juice always in place Broiled chicken of vinegar Beef broths Fresh fruits Cream soups Fruit juices Boiled rice Carefully-prepared nut dishes in All forms of dry, hard bread place of meat Stewed macaroni Eggs and milk Young green peas MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 529 AVOID, for All Time All highly-seasoned dishes Cold dishes Iced water Tea and coffee with foods Chocolate Pickles Underground vegetables Coarse topground vegetables Clear soups DELIRIUM TREMENS Diet list is the same as in Alcoholism CANCER MAY EAT Farina Cream of Wheat An occasional shredded wheat biscuit Puffed rice Boiled rice Baked potato Stewed macaroni Spinach Green peas, pressed through a sieve Very young string beans Boiled cucumber, with cream sauce Boiled squash, with sauce Hollan- daise Cauliflower Kohl-rabi, with cream sauce Artichokes Globe artichokes Very tender celery Hearts of lettuce ; corn salad (Valerianella olitoria, Poll.); imported endive ; native endive ; chicory; all with French dress- ing Desserts : Fruit tapiocas Tapioca with fruit juices Sago Rice pudding Cup custard Soft custard Mock charlotte Blancmange Vegetable gelatin desserts Any of the various nut prepara- tions in small quantities Junket whey, once or twice a week All red meats Oatmeal Rolled wheat Barley Baked beans Coarse vegetables 34 AVOID All underground vegetables, ex- cept carrots and potatoes All fried foods All made dishes Sweets Strong tea, coffee and chocolate 530 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK EXOPHTHALMIC GOITER MAY EAT Modified milk Eskay's food Leban Koumys Matzoon Kefir Buttermilk Milk Plum porridge Milk soups Junket Almond milk with isinglass Milk and lime water Gelatinized milk Arrowroot and milk Meiggs' food Lentil milk gruel "Ye perfect food" Cornmeal gruel, with milk Schmierkase Prunes, dates, figs ; alone in the morning, or at night Sweetbreads, broiled, boiled or stewed White meat of chicken Light topground vegetables An occasional baked potato Unleavened bread Whole wheat bread Crackers Pilot bread Eggs, if they agree Puree of lentils Revalenta Arabica Oranges and grape fruit Cream, butter and olive oil AVOID Tea Coffee All red meats Pickles Spices Salt foods Fish Lobsters Crabs Underground and coarse vege- tables Oatmeal Mashed potatoes Fried foods Sweets Chocolate Cocoa Pears Raw apples White breads Soft breads Alcoholic and malt liquors Lemonade Effervescing waters Mineral waters of all kinds MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 531 LOCOMOTOR ATAXIA MAY EAT Poached eggS on bacon Boiled eggs, with well-buttered bread Broiled bacon, with whole wheat bread Wheat germ cereal, well cooked, with cream Farina and cream Cream of Wheat, with cream Two broiled chops, with one corn gem Broiled young chicken, with pulled bread Puree of lentils, baked potato, and well-buttered bread, fol- lowed by cup custard Boiled, baked or broiled mutton or lamb Stewed chicken Plain omelets Omelets, garnished with oysters, peas, or with tomato sauce Nut roll Beef cakes, broiled Baked potatoes Boiled rice Spaghetti stewed in stock Cucumbers or squash, stuffed with meat Young green peas Young tender lima beans Artichokes Very young carrots Spinach Cauliflower Cress Lettuce Tender celery Fresh fruits Bread and milk Toasted rusk and milk Eggs and milk, with pulled bread Cream soups and bread Broth with rice or barley Well-cooked cereals Milk toast Any of the milk preparations Buttermilk and brown bread Leban, with a little honey and toast 533 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK EPILEPSY MAY EAT Chicken occasionally Broiled white-fleshed fish Eggs and egg dishes Milk and milk preparations Dishes made from old peas, beans and lentils Baked and boiled potatoes Boiled rice Macaroni or spaghetti Boiled chestnuts in chestnut season New green peas New green corn, pressed from the cob Stewed squash Stewed pumpkin Spinach Cauliflower Celery Grated carrots, cooked in water, cream added, as a puree Stewed onions Lettuce Cress Endive Fresh fruits, with the exception of pears and cantaloupes Prunes Prune dishes Well-cooked cereals Tapioca and fruit Tapioca custards Whole wheat bread Stale bread Crackers Wafers Toast Milk toast Toasted rusks and milk Mush bread Corn bread occasionally AVOID Red meats Salt foods Coarse vegetables Pork Veal Goose Duck Rabbit Watermelon Hot breads Tea Coffee Chocolate Pickles MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 533 ERYSIPELAS MAY EAT Arrowroot gruel Milk and vichy water Barley and rice water, with milk Orange juice All kinds of infants' foods Grape juice Milk and white of egg Apple juice Nut milks Followed by Carefully-cooked farina Coddled eggs Cream of Wheat Junket Well-baked whole wheat bread Koumys Milk toast Leban Egg toast Matzoon Later Broiled chop Cress Broiled chicken Lettuce Boiled rice Grape fruit Baked potato Baked apple Carefully-cooked spinach Sliced orange AVOID All sweets Red meats Fried foods Fish Excessive fatty foods Oysters Butter, except in moderation Clams Thick cream Crustacea Devonshire cream Desserts in general 534 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK INSOMNIA MAY EAT BREAKFAST, IN BED Carefully-cooked cereals, with Toast and butter, or milk or cream Toast and milk 10.30 Buttermilk Plain milk Zoolak DINNER, 12.30 Boiled, baked or broiled beef, Rorer beef cake mutton, chicken Broiled white-fleshed fish Sweetbreads Baked potato Tripe Boiled rice Boudins Spinach Clopps Cauliflower Mutton en casserole Asparagus Mutton pats . Tender celery Mutton cakes Lettuce Almond mutton or beef cake Endive, with French dressing SUPPER, 6 O'CLOCK A half pint of chocolate or cocoa, Cream of Wheat with a piece of toast Gluten mush and milk Buttermilk Well-made cornmeal mush Koumys Poached eggs Zoolak Milk toast Junket Dry toast and milk Milk gruels AT BED-TIME Six ounces of hot milk, sipped slowly AVOID All fried foods Pears Sweets Fruits stewed with sugar Coarse vegetables Preserves Hot breads Cake Irregular eating between meals Hot toast with butter Heavy foods after the dinner Spiritous and malt liquors, un- All sea foods, except white-fleshed less ordered by a physician fish and oysters Tea, coffee and chocolate MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 535 ACUTE MENINGITIS MAY EAT, Following Rectal Feeding Milk, diluted one-third water Brazilian nut milk Junket whey Cocoanut milk and white of egg Lemon whey Eskay's food Nut milks Arrowroot gruel and milk Orange juice Rennet whey Grape juice Predigested foods Orange juice and white of egg Peptonized milk Meiggs' food Peptonized milk lemonade Vegetable gelatin water Peptonized milk with cereals Vegetable gelatin milk Panopepton jelly with orange INDEX PART ONE DISEASES Acne, 150 Acute Dysentery, 69 Gastritis 54 Intestinal Catarrh, 61 Nephritis, 99 Addison's Disease, 168 A Few Golden Rules for Mothers of Bottle-fed Babies, 114 A Few Golden Rules for the Ordinary Dyspeptic, 46 After the Weaning, 122 Age, Diet Changes With, 137 Diet in Relation to, 137 Aged, Diet Suited to, 139 Albuminuria, 95 Functional, in Children, 96 Alcoholic Liquors in Urinary Diseases, 92 Alcoholism, 154 Chronic, 156 Complications in, 154 Delirium Tremens, 159 Vomiting in, 154 Anzmia (Chlorosis), 40 Pernicious, 39 Anaemic Girl, Directions for Feeding, 40 Anesthetics, Diet After, 169 Aneurism, 36 Flatulency in, 36 Angina Pectoris, 34 Flatulency in, 34 Apoplexy, 37 Appendicitis, 66 Constipation in, 66 Appetite, 13 Perverted in Pregnancy, 110 Artificial Feeding of Infants, 116 Asthma, 21 Menu for, 22 Ataxia, Locomotor, 164 Atonic Dyspepsia, 50 A Word to the Wise, 9 B Babies, Bottle-fed, Rules for Feeding, 114 (637) Bath, The, 13 Biliousness, 85 Bottle-fed Babies. Rules for Feeding, 114 Bright's Disease, Chronic, 97 Calculi, 102 Cancer, 161 Catarrh, Acute Intestinal, 61 Chronic Intestinal, 62 Catarrhal Jaundice, 87 Fasting in, 87 Children, Diet for Older, 126 Eczema in, 153 Chlorosis, 40 Chorea, 133 Chronic Alcoholism, 156 Bright's Disease, 97 Constipation, 63 Constipation, Causes of, 63 Diarrhoea, 68 Gastritis, 55 Intestinal Catarrh, 62 Intestinal Diarrhaa, Constipation in, 68 Rheumatism, 84 Cirrhosis, 88 of Liver, 88 Coffee in Obesity, Use of, 74 Combinations Suited to the Aged, 139 Complications in Alcoholism, 154 Constipation, Chronic, 63 Chronic, Causes of, 63 Dont's for, 64 in Appendicitis, 66 in Chronic Diarrhoea, 68 in Heart Disease, 31 in Nephritis, 99 in Pregnancy, 110 Things to Do for Recovery, 64 Contents, 3 Convalescent Diabetics, Menu for, 107 Convalescing Typhoid, 144 Cutaneous Disorders, 149 538 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Delirium Tremens, 159 Dengue Fever, 145 Diabetes, 103 Menu for Convalescents, 107 Menu in, 104 Diarrhoea, Chronic, 68 in Nephritis, 99 in Typhoid Fever, 143 Diet After Anesthetic, 169 for Leanness, 77 for Older Children, 126 for the Aged, 139 in Hemorrhoids, 71 in Relation to Age, 137 Dilatation of Stomach in Dyspepsia, 49 Diphtheria, 134 Diseases of the Heart, 30 of the Skin, 149 of the Stomach, 45 of Urinary System, 91 Duodenum, Ulcer of, 62 Dysentery, Acute, 69 Dyspepsia, Atonic, 50 Classes of, 45 Dilatation of Stomach in, 49 Fasting in, 45 Hunger in, 51 Morbid Conditions in, 52 Nervous, 52 With Flatulency, 49 Dyspeptics, Golden Rules for, 46 E Eczema, 152 in Children, 153 F.dema in Heart Disease, 31 Enuresis, 136 Epilepsy, 165 Erysipelas, 166 Exercise and Fresh air in Anaemia, 42 Exophthalmic Goiter, 163 Fads, in Pregnancy, 111 Fasting in Catarrhal Jaundice, 87 in Dyspepsia, 45 Fatty Liver, 87 Feeding After Weaning, ,122 Bottle-fed Babies, Rules for, 114 in Fever, 141 of Infants, 116 the Anaemic Girl, Directions for, 40 the Insane, 160 the Sick, Rules for, 15 Fever, Dengue, 145 Feeding in, 141 Malarial, 145 Scarlet, 145 Typhoid, 142 Yellow, 147 Flatulency in Aneurism, 36 in Angina Pectoris, 34 in Dyspepsia, 49 in Typhoid Fever, 142 Foreword, 7 Fresh Air and Exercise in Anaemia, 41 Functional Albuminuria in Children, 96 Gall Stones, 88 Gastric Ulcer, Rectal Feeding in, 57 Gastritis, Acute, 54 Chronic, 55 Goiter, Exophthalmic, 163 Golden Rules for Dyspeptics, 46 Gout, 79 Use of Wine in, 80 Gymnastics in Obesity, 74 H Hsmorrhagica Purpura, 147 Heart, Constipation in Disease of, 31 Diseases of, 30 Edema in Disease of, 31 Palpitation of, 30 Senile, 32 Hemorrhoids, Diet in, 71 Hungry Dyspepsia, 51 Hydrochloric Acid, Excess of, in Dyspepsia, 48 Lack of, in Dyspepsia, 46 Hysteria in Pregnancy, 110 Indigestion, 59 Intestinal, 59 in Typhoid Fever, 142 Infant Feeding, Gordon Walker Table for, 119 Infants, Artificial Feeding of, 116 Feeding of, 116 Insane, Diet for the, 160 Insomnia, 167 Intestinal Catarrh, Acute, 61 Chronic, 62 Jaundice, Catarrhal, 87 Fasting in Catarrhal, 87 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 539 Leanness, Diet for, 77 Liver, Cirrhosis of, 88 Troubles, 85 Locomotor Ataxia, 164 Lunches for School Children, 127 M Malarial Fever, 145 Malnutrition in Marasmus, 132. Marasmus, 132 Causes' of, 132 Measles, 133 Menus for Diabetics, 104 Milk Feeding, Partial, 121 Milk, how to Modify, 117 Modified Milk, 117 Morbid Conditions in Dyspepsia, 52 Mumps, 135 N Nephritis, 99 Acute, 99 Constipation in, 99 Diarrhoea in, 99 Nervous Dyspepsia, 52 Nettle Rash, Urticaria, 149 Obesity, 73 Gymnastics in, 74 Use of Coffee in, 74 Older Children, Diet for, 126 Oxaluria, 101 Palpitation of Heart, 30 Partial Milk Feeding, 121 Peritonitis, 72 Pernicious Anaemia, 39 Perverted Appetite in Pregnancy, 110 Pneumonia, 29 Pregnancy, 110 Constipation in, 110 Fads in, 111 Hysteria in, 110 Perverted Appetite in, 110 Vomiting in, 110 Puerperal, 113 Purpura Haemorrhagica, 147 Quinzy, 30 R Rectal Feeding in Gastric Ulcer, 57 Relation of Diet to Age, 137 Rheumatism, 81 Chronic, 84 Classes of, 81 Rules for Dyspeptics, 46 for Feeding Sick, 15 Scarlet Fever, 145 School Children, Lunches for, 127 Senile Heart, 32 Sick Headache, 90 Sick, Rules for Feeding, 15 Skin, Diseases of the, 149 Sleeplessness (Insomnia), 167 Smallpox, 148 Starch Liver, 87 Stomach, Dilatation of, in Dyspepsia, 49 Ulcer of, 57 Stones, Gall, 88 T Table for Infant Feeding, Gordon Walker, 119 The Insane, 160 To Modify Milk, 117 Tonsilitis, 29 Top Milk in Infant Feeding, 118 Tuberculosis, 25 Typhoid Fever, 142 Feeding in Convalescence, 144 u Ulcer, Gastric, 57 of the Duodenum, 62 of the Stomach, 57 Uric Acid Diathesis, 92 in Children, 93 Urinary System, Diseases of, 91 Urticaria, Nettle Rash, 149 Use of Coffee in Obesity, 74 Vomiting, after Anesthetics, 169 in Addison's Disease, 168 in Alcoholism, 154 in Pregnancy, 110 in Whooping Cough, 135 in Yellow Fever, 147 w Walker, Gordon, Table for Infant Feeding, 119 Weaning, Food After, 122 Whooping Cough, 135 Wine, Use of in Gout, 80 Yellow Fever, 147 Vomiting in, 147 540 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK PART TWO RECIPES A Few Desserts, 434 A Group of Green or Succulent Vegetables, 315 Starchy Vegetables, 287 Also Containing Sugar, 301 Succulent Vegetables containing a little Starch and Sugar, 304 Succulent Vegetables for Salads, 341 Vegetables Containing Nitrogenous Matter Without Sugar, 314 Vegetables Containing Sugar and no Starch or Nitrogen, 306 Akoll, Biscuits, 175 A la Colbert Bouillon, 192 A la Creme Potatoes, 290 Spinach, 332 A la Imperatrice, Peaches, 400 Rice, 293 A la Martin Eggs, 276 A la Poulette, Celery, 324 Chestnuts, 415 Cucumbers, 325 Sauce, 236 A la Reine, Soup, 197 A la Royal, Soup, 184 A la Zouave, Apple, 366 Albuminized Milk, 248 Whey, 256 Albumin Pineapple Dessert, 438 Aleuronat, 175 Gems, 354 Muffins, 354 Mush, 354 Alimentation, Colonic, Enemose for, 267 Almond and Fig Toast, 385 Biscuits, 413 Bitter, Junket, 273 Butter, 413 Cake, 413 Croquettes, 414 Meat Cake, 218 Milk, 414 Milk with Isinglass, 247 Pudding, 413 Wafers, 412 Almonds, 412 and Milk, 414 Bitter, 412 Blanched, 412 Salted, 413 Ambrosia, 417 Analysis, Comparative of Grains, 355 Analysis of Whey, 270 Animal Foods, 208 Apple a la Zouave, 366 and Cranberry Sauce, 378 Fluff, 367 Juice, 366 Lemon, 367 Omelet, 368 Salad, 370 Sauce, 236, 367 Marlborough, 367 Scalloped, 368 Snow, 367 Sponge, 368 Tapioca, 365 Water, 444 with Quince Jelly, 369 Apples, 364 Baked, 364 Coddled, 365 Frosted, 369 Grilled, 368 Pan Baked, 365 Smothered, 365 Stewed, 366 Yorkshire, 369 Apricot Puree, 370 Souffle, 371 Toast, 371 Apricots, 370 Arrowroot, 297 Gruel, 255 Jelly, 249 Milk, 249 Milk Gruel, 250 Artichokes, Boiled, 316 Globe or French, 316 Jerusalem, 317 Mock, 333 with Cream, 317 Artificial Milk, 244 Asthma, Onions in Treatment of, 329 A Soup Crecy, 197 Asparagus, 317 Boiled, 318 Soup, Cream of, 203 Asses' Milk, 247 B Baked Apples, 364 Bananas, 372 Beef, 219 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 541 Baked Beef Tea, 187 Cranberries, 378 Macaroni,. 299 Meats, 180 Onions No. 1 and No. 2, 328 Panned Apples, 365 Peaches, 399 Pear, 403 Potatoes, 290 Prunes, 407 Sweetbreads, 226 Sweet Potato, 301 Balls, Potato, 291 Banana Charlotte, 373 Cream, 437 Mush, 372 Puff, 373 Souffle, 372 Bananas, 371 Baked, 372 Scalloped, 372 Stewed, 373 Barley, 358 Gruel, 251 in Beef Broth, 190 Jelly, 251 Water, 443 Bartholow's Food, 189 Restorative Soup for Invalids, 188 Bean Flour Soup, 201 Lima, Souffle, 312 Rolls, Soy, 312 Souffle, 311 Soup, Dried, 200 Soy, 312 Beans, Lima, 311 Puree of Dried, 310 String, Boiled, 305 Beauregard Eggs, 280 Beech Nuts, 414 Beef, 215 and Oats, 192 Boiled, 219 Broth, 190 with Barley, 190 with Sago, 190 Cooked in Tomato, 216 Essence, 188 Extract, Homemade, 188 Gruel, 192 How to Roast, 219 Jelly, Quick, 425 Juice, 189 Meal, 176 Panada, 190 Beef, Peptonized, 264 Pudding, 220 Semi-solid, 192 Turkish, 220 Beefsteak, Broiled, 215 Broiled on a Gas Stove, 216 in a Paper Bag, 217 Pan Broiled, 216 Beef Tea, 185 Baked, 187 Nutritive, 186 Quick, 185 Restorative, 187 Savory, 185 Stimulating, 186 Bellevue Bouillon, 214 Beverages and Water Gruels, 443 Bilberries, 391 Birds, Broiled, 229 Biscuits, Almond, 413 Bran, 348 Maryland, 353 Purgative, 349 Quick, 351 Bisque of Oyster, 207 Bitter Almond Junket, 273 Bitter Almonds, 412 Blackberryade, 376 Blackberry Bounce, 377 Brandy, 376 Cordial No. 1 and No. 2, 375' Fluff, 374 Gruel, 252 Jelly, 374 Juice, 376 Mush, 374 Shrub, 374 Syrup, 374 Vinegar, 375 Blackberries, 373 Black Currant Gruel, 252 Jelly Water, 448 Black Currants, 380 Blanched Almonds, 412 Blancmange, 249 Racahout, 458 Blueberries, 391 Boiled Artichokes, 316 Asparagus, 318 Beef, 219 Brussels Sprouts, 321 Cauliflower, 320 Chestnuts, 415 Coffee, 453 Corn in Husks, 307 Fish, 210 Kohl-Rabi, 322 Okra, 327 542 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Boiled Onions, 328 for Asthmatics, 329 Oysters, 213 Peas in Turnip Cups, 307 Pigeon, 235 Rice, Composition of, 292 Spinach, 332 String Beans, 305 Turnips, 331 Boned Squabs, 235 Botanical Classification of our Common Vegetables, 283 Boudins, 220 Bouillon, 191 a la Colbert, 192 Bellevue, 214 Clam, 213 Double, 191 Hot Panopepton, 269 Jelly, 191 Oyster, No. 1 and No. 2, 212 Bounce, Blackberry, 377 Bran Biscuits, 348 Broth, 196 Cakes, 349 Flour, to Make, 347 Loaf or Gems, 348 Sheet, 348 Sticks, 348 Water, 447 Brandy, Apple, 369 Blackberry, 376 Peach, 402 with Milk and Eggs, 246 Bread, Bran Loaf, 348 Gluten, 353 Graham, 344 Making, 342 Passover, 347 Peptic, 350 Pulled, 345 School Luncheon, 350 Sticks, 345 Twentieth Century, 342 Unleavened, 346 White, 343 with Homemade Yeast, 344 Breakfast Cakes, Soy, 313 Spaghetti, 299 Broiled Beefsteak, 215 Birds, 229 Canvasback Duck, 234 Chicken, 229 Chicken in Oven, 229 Chops, 222 Fish, 211 Mutton Chops, 222 Oysters, Plain, 212 Broiled Sweetbreads, 226 Tripe, 222 Broiling in Oven, 229 on Gas Stove, 216 Broth, Beef, 190 Beef with Sago, 190 Bran, 196 Celery, 202 Chicken, 196 Chicken with Green Peas, 197 Clam, 214 Clam, with Whipped Cream, 214 Combination, 197 Mutton, 194 Mutton and Cornmeal,. 195 Mutton and Oatmeal, 194 Mutton with Zweiback, 194 Oatmeal, 202 Tomato, 200 Veal, No. 1 and No. 2, 195 Veal, with Egg, 195 Vegetable, 200 Broths, 190 Browned Rice Flour Gruel, 254 Brown Sauce, 236 Brussels Sprouts, 321 Butter, Almond, 413 Peanut, 418 Pifion, 419 Buttermilk, Mulled, 258 Cabbage, 318 German, 319 Ladies', 319 Raw, 319 Rolls, 319 Cake, Almond, 413 Cakes, Bran, 349 Mutton, 223 Mutton with Mushrooms, 224 Soy Breakfast, 313 Calves' Foot Jelly, 425 Candy, Mock, 421 Canned Peas, 606 Canvasback Duck, Broiled, 234 Caramel Custard, No. 1, 435 Caramel Custard, No. 2, 436 Milk, 242 Caramels, Fig, 385 Carbonated Water with Peptonized Milk, 260 Cardinal Soup, 198 Cardoon, 322 Cardose Eggs, 281 Carrots, 322 a la Poulette, 322 in Turnip Cups, 322 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 543 Carrots, Old, 323 Pickled, 323 Soup, Cream of, 204 Stewed, 323 Cassava, 297 Casserole, Mutton, 224 Caudle, 279 Cauliflower, 320 Boiled, 320 Celeriac, 325 Celery, 323 a la Poule,tte, 324 Broth, 202 Creamed, 324 Fringed, 324 Preparation of, 324 Sauce, 239 Soup, Cream of, 203 Stewed, 324 Cereal Foods, 355 Cereals, Comparative Analysis of, 355 with Peptonized Milk, 263 Cooked, Ready for Serving, 360 Ceylon Chicken, 233 Pudding, 434 Changing Taste of Milk, 242 Charlotte, Banana, 373 Cheese, Nut, 420 Cherry Cordial, Wild, 449 Juice, 377 Cherries, 377 Chestnut Soup, 198 Chestnuts, 414 a la Poulette, 415 Boiled, 415 Water, 421 with Whipped Cream, 415 Chicken Broth, 196 with Green Peas, 197 Ceylon, 233 Cooked in Paper Bag, 230 Egg Soup, 198 Fricassee, 231 Golden, 232 in Potato Cases, 232 Jelly, 426 Jugged, 234 Minced on Toast, 232 Panned, 230 Puff, German, 231 Souffle, 231 Timbale, 233 Chickens, Broiled, 229 How to Draw, 228 How to Select, 228 Chickory, 336 Chocolate, 455 Mexican, 457 Chocolate Syrup, 456 to Make, 456 Chopped Meat, Panned, 218 Chops in a Paper Bag, 223 Mutton, Broiled, 222 Christophines, 326 Cider, Pineapple, 404 Cinnamon Milk, 243 Tea, 447 Clam Bouillon, 213 Broth, 214 with Whipped Cream, 214 Classes of Nuts, 411 Classification of Vegetables Botanical, 283 Clear Soup with Bread Blocks, 184 Clotted Cream, 257 Cocktail, Orange, 395 Cocoa, 457 from the Nibs, 457 Iced, 457 Junket, 272 Cocoanut, 415 Ambrosia, 417 and Tomato, 416 Cream, 416 Cream Sauce, 439 Custard, 416, 434 Milk, 416 Sauce, 439 Souffle, 434 Coddled Apple, 365 Eggs, 274 Coffee, 451 as Flavoring, 453 Boiled, 453 Frozen, 454 Ice Cream, 441, 454 Iced, 455 Jelly, 428, 454 Junket, 272 Mousse, 454 Perfect Cup, 452 Sherbet, 454 Velvet Cream, 454 Cold Peach Souffle, 399 Cold Process, 259 for Peptonizing Milk, 259 Collards, 321 Colonic Alimentation, Enemose for, 267 Combination Broth, 197 Combinations for Mayonnaise, 341 Common Pumpkin, 302 Common Vegetables, Botanical Classification of, 283 Comparative Analysis of Grains, 355 Comparative Tables of Fruit Juices, 363 Composition of Shelled Peanuts, 417 544 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Composition of Skimmed Milk, 242 Compote of Orange, 395 Pear, 404 Condiments, 240 Consomme, 193 Italian, 193 Cookery, Methods of, 180 Cordial, Blackberry, No. 1 and No. 2, 375 Egg, 277 Elderberry, 382 Panopepton, 269 to Serve, 375 Wild Cherry, 449 Corn Boiled in the Husks, 307 Dodgers, 352 Cornmeal and Mutton Broth, 195 Gruel, 254 Corn Salad or Lambs' Lettuce, 336 Soup, Cream of, 204 Sweet, 307 Sweet, Stewed, 308 Cottage Cheese with Noodles, 300 Crackers, Fruit and Nut, 420 Cranberryade, Frozen, 379 Cranberry and Apple Sauce, 378 Gelatin, 427 Jelly, 378 Sauce, 238, 378 Cranberries, 378 Baked, 378 Cream, Banana, 437 Clotted, 257 Cocoanut, 416 Eggs and Beef, 207 Jelly for Diabetics, 429 Jelly, Spanish, 430 Peach, 437 Pineapple, 437 Sauce No. 1, 236 Sauce No. 2, 237 Sauce, Cocoanut, 439 Sauce, Nut, 440 to Whip, 257 Velvet, 257 Whipped, with Clam Broth, 214 of Asparagus, 203 Carrot, 204 Celery, 203 Corn, 204 Green Peas, 204 Oyster, 206 Potato, 205 Split Peas, 205 Turnip, 206 Creamed Celery, 324 Potatoes, 289 Prunes, 408 Creamed Rice, 295 Spaghetti, 299 Sweetbreads, 226 Crecy Soup, 197 Crescent Soup, 203 Cress, Garden, 337 Water, 338 Croquettes, Almond, 414 Crustacea, The, 209 Cucumbers, 325 a la Poulette, 325 Raw, 325 Cure, Grape, 386 Currant Shrub, 380 Currants, 379 and Raspberries, 380 Black, 380 Frosted, 379 Custard, Caramel, 435 Cocoanut, 434 Pumpkin, 303 Sauce, Soft, 439 Custards, Marlborough, 437 Dandelion, 335 Date Gems for Children, 382 Muffin, 381 Mush, 381 Sandwiches, 381 Dates, 380 Stuffed, 381 Desserts, 434 Diabetics, Jellies for, 424 Diazyme Essence, 264 Dicotyledons, 283 Digestibility of Eggs, 274 Foods, 178 Milk, 241 Digestion, Partial, of Farinaceous Foods "at Table, 264 Directions for the Use of Laibose, 261 Dishes Flavored with Coffee, 453 Dodgers, Corn, 352 Double Bouillon, 191 Soup, 192 Dressing, French, 340 Mayonnaise, 340 Dried Bean Soup, 200 Beans, Puree of, 310 Figs, 384 Fruit Juices, 363 Nuttrose, 176 Pea Soup, 201 Peas, Puree of, 309 Peas, Meat Substitute, 310 Drink, Gelose, 433 > MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 545 Drinks, Fruit, 395 Dry Panned Oysters, 212 Rice, Composition of, 292 Duck, Canvasback, Broiled, 234 Dumplings, Peach, 401 Rice, 294 E Edible Weeds, 334 Effervescing Water, With Peptonized Milk, 260 Egg Albumin, Dried, 176 and Chicken Soup, 198 and Mulled Wine, 279 and Sherry, 279 and Whey, 278 Beau regard, 280 Cordial, 277 Egyptian, 280 Flip, 277 Hard-boiled, 279 Junket, 272 Lemonade, 279, 444 Eggnog, 278 French, 278 Golden, 278 Eggplant (Aubergines), 326 Egg Punch, 278 Sauce, 237 with Kefir, 246 with Veal Broth, 195 Eggs, 274 a la Martin, 276 and Beef, Creamed, 207 and Milk with Brandy, 246 Cardoze, 281 Coddled, 274 Digestibility of, 274 Egyptian, 280 Fluffed, 276 French Poached, 276 Hungary, 275 Poached, 275 Shirred, 275 Snow, 277 To Ascertain Freshness, 274 Uses of, 274 Virginia, 275 Egyptian Eggs, 280 Rice, 294 Elderberry Cordial, 382 Juice, 383 Toast, 382 Wine, 383 Elderberries, 382 Endive, 336 Imported, 337 35 Enemose, for Colonic Alimentation, 267 English Orange Squash, 396 Essence, Beef, 188 Diazyme, 264 of Pepsin, 269 Evans's Tea Gruel, 448 Extractum Pancreatis, 264 Fairchild's Peptonizing Tubes, 260 Fairy Toast, 385 Farina, 359 Blancmange, 250 Milk Gruel, 250 Porridge, 359 Souffle, 360 Farinacious Foods, Partial Digestion, 264 Fever Drink, Old-fashioned, 446 Fig Caramels, 385 Sandwiches, 386 Toast, 385 Figs, 383 and Almonds on Toast, 385 Dry, 384 Fresh, 384 Steamed, 384 Stewed, 384 File Powder, Gumbo, 286 Fingers, Whole Wheat, 347 Fish, 210 Boiled, 210 Broiled, 211 Gelatin, 423 in a Paper Bag, 212 Planked, 211 Flavorings, Plants Used for, 285 Flaxseed Tea, 446 Flip, Egg, 277 Floating Island, French, 435 Float, Orange, 398 Flour, Aleuronat, 175 Bran, How to Make, 347 Gluten, 173 Gruel, German, 250 Rice, Browned Gruel, 254 Fluff, Apple, 367 Blackberry, 374 Fluffed Eggs, 276 Flummery, Huckleberry, 392 Food, Bartholow's, 189 Meiggs', 251 Panopepton, 267 "Ye Perfect," 253 Foods, 267 Animal, 208 Cereal, 355 Digestibility of, 178 546 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Foods, Farinaceous, Partial Digestion of, 264 Proprietary, 173 French Artichokes, 316 Dressing, 340 Eggnog, 278 Floating Island, 43S Poached Eggs, 276 Fresh Figs, 384 Fruit Juices, 363 Grape Drink, 448 Grape Jelly, 388 Grape Juice No. 1, 387 Grape Juice No. 2, 388 Strawberry Juice, 410 Freshness of Eggs, How to Ascertain, 274 Fricassee, Chicken, 231 Fringed Celery, 324 Frosted Apple, 369 Currants, 379 Frozen Coffee, 454 Cranberryade, 379 Junket, 273 Orange Juice, 396 Peach, 400 Fruit Crackers, 420 Drinks, 395 Gelose, 432 Gems, 352 Jelly, Plain, 429 Juice Sauce, 440 Juices, 363 Meringue with Oatmeal, 357 Fruits, 361 for Salads, 341 Garden Cress or Pepper Grass, 337 Gelatin, 423 Commercial, 423 Cranberry, 427 Jellies, 423 Vegetable, 423 Water, 446 Gelatinized Milk, 248 Gelose, 431 Drink, 433 Fruit, 432 How to Prepare, 431 Orange, No. 1 and No. 2, 432 Pineapple, 432 Restorative, 433 Gems, 351 Aleuronat, 354 Bran, 348 Date, 382 Fruit, 352 Gems, Oatmeal, 352 Rice, 351 Soy Bean, 312 Whole Wheat, Unleavened, 347 German Cabbage, 319 Chicken Puff, 231 Flour Gruel, 250 Puffs or Popovers, 352 Germ, Wheat, 356 Wheat Cereals, 358 Wheat Porridge, 358 Globe or French Artichokes, 316 Gluten Bread from Moist Gluten, 353 Flour, 173 Loaf, 353 Moist, Bread Made From, 353 Mush, 360 Golden Chicken, 232 Nog, 278 Toast, 280 Gooseberry Sauce, 238 Graham Bread, 344 Grains, Comparative Analysis of, 355 Grape Cure, 386 Drink, Fresh, 448 Grape Fruit and Shaddock, 390 for Luncheon, 391 How to Serve, 390 in the Half Shell, 390 Salad, 391 Grape Jam, 388 Jelly, 388 Jelly, Quick, 428 Juice, 387 Juice with Sugar, 387 Juice with Whey, 272 Sorbet, 442 Squash, 448 Toast, 389 Water Ice, 389 Grapes, 386 Raw, to Serve, 387 Grass, Pepper, 337 Grated Pineapple, 405 Green or Succulent Vegetables, List of, 315 Green Pea Soup, Cream of, 204 Peas with Chicken Broth, 197 Peas, Young, 306 Vegetables, Boiled, 180 Griddled Oysters, 213 Grilled Apples, 368 Gruel, Arrowroot, 255 Arrowroot Milk, 250 Barley, 251 Beef, 192 Blackberry, 252 Black Currant, 252 Cornmeal, 254 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 547 Gruel, Evans's Tea, 448 Farina Milk, 250 German Flour, 250 Gum and Milk, 254 Lentil Milk, 253 Meiggs', 255 Milk, Peptonized, 263 Peptonized, 260 Rice, 252 Rice Flour, Browned, 254 Scorched Rice, 253 Gruels, Water, 443 Gum and Milk Gruel, 254 Gum Arabic Water, 447 Gumbo File Powder, 286 H Hard-boiled Eggs, 279 Homemade Beef Extract, 188 Pemmican, 218 Yeast, 343 Hominy, 295 Grits, How to Cook, 295 Jelly, 295 Honey and Peaches, 402 Pear, 403 Horseradish, 326 Hot Milk, Peptonized, 263 Panopepton, 268 Panopepton Bouillon, 269 Peach Toddy, 402 Peptonized Milk, 263 Toddy, Peach, 402 Huckleberry Flummery, 392 Juice, 392 Huckleberries, Blueberries, Whortleberries or Bilberries, 391 Hungary Eggs, 275 Ice Cream, 441 Coffee, 441, 454 Peach, 401 Ice Creams and Sorbets, 441 Iced Cocoa, 457 Coffee, 455 Panopepton, 267 / Peach on Toast, 400 Tea, 450 Imperial Water, 448 Imported Endive, 337 Individual Recipes for Sauces, 236 In Place of Meat for Children, 310 Irish Moss Jelly No. 1 and No. 2, 427 Water, 445 Isinglass and Almond Milk, 247 Jelly, 428 Rum and Milk, 246 Italian Consomme, 193 Pastes, 298 Spaghetti, 299 Jam, Grape, 388 Jefferson Eggs, 281 Jellies, Gelatin, 423 Gelose, 431 Meat, 423 Jelly, Apple and Quince, 369 Arrowroot, 249 Barley,, 251 Blackberry, 374 Bouillon, 191 Calves' Foot, 425 Chicken, 426 Coffee, 428, 454 Cranberry, 378 Cream, for Diabetics, 429 For Diabetics arid Obese, 424 Fresh Grape, 388 Hominy, 295 Irish Moss, 427 Isinglass, 428 Lemon, 423 Milk, 249 Orange, 397,424 Panopepton, 268 Peptonized Milk, 262 Plain with Fruit, 429 Port Wine, 429 Prune, 408 Quick Beef, 425 Quick Grape, 428 Quince, 409 Quince and Apple, 369 Spanish Cream, 430 Tapioca, 438 Water, 447 Water, Black Currant, 448 White Wine, 425 Wine, 424 Wine and Orange, 428 Jerusalem Artichokes, 317 With Cream, 317 Jugged Chicken, 234 Juice, Apple, 366 Beef, 189 Blackberry, 376 Cherry, 377 Elderberry, 383 Fresh Grape, 387 Fresh Strawberry, 410 Fruit, Sauce, 440 Grape, 387 548 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Juice, Huckleberry, 392 Lemon, 393 Orange, Frozen, 396 Plum, 406 Junket, 271 and Whey, 270 Bitter Almond, 273 Cocoa, 272 Coffee, 272 Egg, 272 Semi-solid Milk, Frozen, 273 Strawberry, 273 Vanilla, 273 K Kale, 321 Kefir, 245 With Egg, 246 Klopps, 224 Kohl-Rabi, 321 Koumys, 245 Ladies' Cabbage, 319 Laibose, 260 A Food, 267 Formulas for, 261 Uses of, 261 Lamb's Lettuce, 336 Quarters, 334 Larded Quail, 234 Leban, 245 Leeks, 329 Leguminosae, 309 Lemonade No. 1 and No. 2, 444 Egg, 279,444 Peptonized Milk, 263 Lemon Apple, 367 Jelly, 423 Jelly for Diabetic and Obese, 424 Sorbet, 441 Squash, 445 Whey, 256 Lemons and Limes, 392 Lentil Milk Gruel, 253 Soup, 201 Soup, Quick, 311 Lentils, Puree of, 198, 310 Lettuce, 337 Lamb's, 336 Stewed, 337 Limeade, 445 Lima Beans, 311 Lima Bean Souffle, 312 Lime Water, 447 and Milk, 248 Limes and Lemons, 392 Linseed or Flaxseed Tea, 446 Liver, 227 Loaf, Bran, 348 Gluten, 353 Nut, 350 Luncheon Bread, School, 350 Grape Fruit for, 391 M Macaroni, Baked, 299 Maigre Soups, 200 Maitre d'Hotel, 237 Making Bread, 342 Maltose, 173 Malt with Rice Pudding, 437 Mangoes, 393 How to Serve, 393 Marlborough Apple Sauce, 367 Custards, 437 Marrow, Vegetable, 326 Maryland Biscuits, 353 Mashed Potatoes, 288 Turnips, 333 Mate, 458 Mayonnaise Combinations, 341 Dressing, 340 Dressing, White, 340 Measurements, 178 Meat Cake, Almond, 218 The Rorer, 218 Meat Substitute, Dried Peas, 310 Meats, 208,215 for Salalds, 341 Salt, 221 The Second Cooking of, 220 Meiggs' Food, 251 Gruel, 255 Modified Milk, 244 Melted Butter Sauce, 237 Meringue, Fruit, with Oatmeal, 357 Rice, 294 Methods of Cookery, 180 Mexican Chocolate, 457 Milk, 241 Albuminized, 248 Almond, 414 Almond, with Isinglass, 247 and Almonds, 414 and Lime Water, 248 Arrowroot, 249 Artificial, 244 Asses' 247 Caramel, 242 Cinnamon, 243 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 549 Milk, Cocoanut, 416 Composition of Skimmed, 242 Digestibility of, 241 Eggs and Brandy, 246 Gelatinized, 248 Gruel, Peptonized, 260 and Gum Gruel, 254 Jelly, 249 Jelly, Peptonized, 262 Lemonade, Peptonized, 263 Mixed Nut, 420 Modified (Meiggs'), 244 Pasteurization of, 243 Peptonized, Cold Process, 259 Peptonized, Quick Process, 259 Peptonized, Partially, 259 Peptonized, Recipes for Preparation, 259 Peptonized, with Carbonated Water, 260 Peptonized, with Cereals, 263 Peptonized, with Effervescing Water, 260 Pine Nut, 419 Punch, 248 Punch, Peptonized, 262 Rasin, 242 Rum and Isinglass, 246 Semi-solid Junket, 270 Soup, 207 Soups, 203 Specially Peptonized, 261 Sterilization of, 243 Tiger's, 247 to Change Taste of, 242 Minced Chicken on Toast, 232 Mint, 335 Sorbet, 442 Mixed Nut Milk, 420 Mock Artichokes, 333 Candy, 421 Modifications of Milk and Whey, 271 Modified Milk (Meiggs'), 244 Monocotyledons, 284 Moss, Irish, Jelly, 427 Mousse, Coffee, 454 Muffins, Aleuronat, 354 Date, 381 Mulled Buttermilk, 258 Port Wine, 256 Wine and Egg, 279 Mush, Aleuronat, 354 Banana, 372 Blackberry, 374 Date, 381 Gluten, 360 Rye, 358 Mushrooms with Mutton Cakes, 224 Mustard, 338 Mutton, 222 and Cornmeal Broth, 195 and Oatmeal Broth, 194 Broth, 194 with Zweiback, 194 Cakes, 223 Cake with Mushrooms, 224 Casserole, 224 Pats, 223 Tea, 194 N Nectarines and Peaches, 398 Nectar, Welsh, 449 Nitrogenous Vegetables, 314 Noodles, 300 with Cottage Cheese, 300 Nut and Fruit Crackers, 420 Cheese, 420 Cream Sauces, 440 Loaf, 350 Milk, Pine, 419 Souffle, 420 Nuts, 411 Classes of, 411 Uses for, 422 Nutritive Value of Fruit Juices, 363 Beef Tea, 186 Nuttrose, Dried, 176 Oatmeal and Mutton Broth, 194 Broth, 202 Gems, 352 Rolled, 357 Scotch, 356 Water, 443 with Fruit Meringue, 357 Oats, 356 and Beef, 192 Obese, Jellies for, 424 Okra, 327 and Tomatoes, 327 Boiled, 327 Soup, 198 Old Carrots, 323 Old-fashioned Fever Drink, 446 Omelet, Apple, 368 Souffle, 436 Onions, 327 Baked, No. 1 and No. 2, 328 Boiled, 328 in Asthma, 329 Spanish, Stuffed, 329 Spring Scullions, 329 Orangeade, 395 550 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Orange and Wine Jelly, 428 Cocktail, 395 Compote, 395 Float, 398 Gelose No. 1 and No. 2, 432 Jelly, 397, 424 Juice, Frozen, 396 Peel Tea, 446 Salad, 398 Sauce and Venison, 235 Sorbet, 396, 442 Souffle, 397, 430 Souffle Pudding, 397,436 Sponge, 396 Squash, 395 Squash, English, 396 Whip, 398 with Panopepton Jelly, 268 Oranges, 394 To Serve in Glass Dish, 394 in Half Shell, 394 in Skin, 394 Orgeat, 247 Oyster, Bisque of, 207 Bouillon No. 1 and No. 2, 212 Soup, Cream of, 206 Oysters, Boiled, 213 Dry Panned, 212 Griddled, 213 Peptonized, 265 Plain Broiled, 212 and Tripe, 222 Panada, Beef, 190 Tous-les-Mois, 298 Pan Broiling, 216 Pancreatis Extractum, 264 Panned Baked Apples, 365 Chicken, 230 Chopped Meat, 218 Oysters, Dry, 212 Panopepton Bouillon Hot, 269 Cordial, 269 Food for the Sick, 267 Hot, 268 Iced, 267 in Various Ways, 267 Jelly, 268 Jelly with Orange, 268 with Whey, 269 Parsley, 335 Parsnips, 304 Partial Digestion of Farinaceous Foods at the Table, 264 Partially Peptonized Milk, 259 Passover Bread, 347 Pastes, Italian, 298 Pasteurizing Milk, 243 Pats, Mutton, 223 Peach Brandy, 402 Cream, 437 Dumpling, 401 Ice Cream, 401 Pudding, 401 Puff, 401 Puree, 399 Souffle, Cold, 399 Syllabub, 402 Tapioca, 400 Toast, 401 Peaches a la Imperatrice, 400 and Honey, 402 and Nectarines, 398 Baked, 399 Frozen, 400 Iced on Toast, 400 Raw, 399 Sliced, 399 Stewed, 400 Peanut Butter, 418 Soup, 418 Wafers, 417 Peanuts, 417 Composition of, 417 Pear Honey, 403 Pears, 403 Baked, 403 Compote of, 404 Stewed, 403 Pea Soup, Dried, 201 Peas, Boiled, in Turnip Cups, 307 Canned, 306 Dried, as Meat Substitute, 310 Green, 306 Puree of Dried, 309 Pemmican, Homemade, 218 Pepper Grass, 337 Peppers, 329 Stuffed, No. 1 and No. 2, 330 Pepsin, Essence of, 269 Peptic Bread, 350 Peptonized, Beef, 264 Gruel, 26fr Milk, 260 Hot, 263 Cold Process, 259 Gruel, 263 Jelly, 262 Lemonade, 263 Punch, 262 Recipes for Preparation, 259 Warm Process, 260 with Carbonated or Ef- fervescing Waters, 260 with Cereals, 263 Oysters, 265 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 551 Peptonizing Tubes, Fairchild's, 260 Perfect Cup of Coffee, 452 Pernicious Vomiting, 214 Pickled Carrots, 323 Pigeon, Boiled, 235 Pineapple, 404 Pineappleade, 404 Pineapple Albumin Dessert, 438 Cider, 404 Cream, 437 Gelose, 432 Grated, 405 Shrub, 405 Sorbet, 442 Pine Nut Milk, 419 Pine Nuts, 418 Pinon Butter, 419 Pinons or Pine Nuts, 418 Pistachio Nut, 419 Plain Broiled Oysters, 212 Jelly with Fruit, 429 Pudding Sauce, 439 Planked Fish, 211 Planking, 181 Plants Used as Flavorings, 285 Plum Juice, 406 Porridge, 248 Plums, 405 Poached Eggs, 275 French, 276 Poke Shoots, 334 Popovers, German, 352 Porridge, Farina, 359 Germ Wheat, 358 Plum, 248 Portuguese Soup, 185 Port Wine Jelly, 429 Mulled, 256 Posset, 256 Potato Balls, 291 Cases, with Chicken, 232 Puff, 289 Puree, 291 Roses, 289 Souffle, 290 Soup, Cream of, 205 Timbale, 289 Potatoes, 287 a la Creme, 290 Baked, 290 Boiled, 288 Composition of, 287 Creamed, 289 Mashed, 288 Riced, 288 Stuffed, 291 Poultry and Game, 228 Powder, Racahout, 457 Preparation of Celery, 324 of Junket and Whey, 270 of Peptonized Milk, 259 of Whey and Junket, 270 Preparing Sweetbreads, 225 Proprietary Foods, 173 Proteins, Soluble, 270 Prune Cream, 408 Jelly, 408 i Pulp, 407 Souffle, 407 Prunelles, 408 Prunes, 406 and Rice, 407 Baked, 407 Puffed, 407 Queen, 408 Stewed, 407 Pudding, Almond, 413 Beef, 220 Ceylon, 434 Orange Souffle, 397,436 Peach, 401 Rice, 293 Rice with Malt, 437 Sauce, 439 Sauce, Plain, 439 Snow, 429 Puff, Banana, 373 German Chicken, 231 Peach, 401 Puffed Potatoes, 289 Prunes, 407 Puffs, German, 352 Rennet, 258 Pulled Bread, 345 Pulp, Prune, 407 Pumpkin, Boiled, 302 Custard, 303 Timbale, 302 Punch, Egg, 278 Milk, 248 Puree of Apricots, 370 Dried Beans, 310 Dried Peas, 309 Lentils, 198, 310 Peaches, 399 Potato, 291 Rice, 199 Purgative Biscuits, 349 Purse, Shepherds', 335 Purslane, 334 Quail, Larded, 233 Queen Prunes, 408 Quick Beef Jelly, 425 Tea, 185 552 MRS. RORER S DIET FOR THE SICK Quick Biscuits, 351 Grape Jelly, 428 Lentil Soup, 311 Process for Peptonizing Milk, 259 Quince Jelly, 409 with Apples, 369 Quinces, 408 Rabbit Soup, 199 Racahout Blancmange, 458 How to Make, 458 Powder, 457 Radishes, 330 Raisin Milk, 242 Raisins, 389 and Rice, 390 Stewed, 389 Raspberries and Currants, 380 Raw Blackberries, 373 Blueberries, 391 Cabbage, 319 Cucumbers, 325 Grapes, How to Serve, 387 Peaches, 399 Plums, 406 Tomatoes, 331 Recipes for Sauces, Individual, 236 for the Preparation of Peptonized Milk, 259 Rennet Puffs, 258 Whey, 255 Restorative Beef Tea, 187 Gelose, 433 Soup, Bartholow's for Invalids, 188 Rhubarb, 409 Rice, 291 a la Imperatrice, 293 and Prunes, 407 Raisins, 390 Boiled, Composition of, 292 Composition of, 292 Cream, 295 Dry, Composition of, 292 Dumpling, 294 Egyptian, 294 Flour Gruel, Browned, 254 Gems, 351 Gruel, 252 How to Boil, 293 Meringue, 294 Potato, 288 Pudding, 293 Pudding with Malt, 437 Puree of, 199 Steamed, 293 Water, 443 Roast Beef, How to, 219 Roborat, 176 Rolled Oatmeal, 357 Wheat, 357 Rolls, Cabbage, 319 Soy Bean, 312 Roman Meal, 175 Rorer Meat Cake, 218 Roses, Potato, 289 Rum, Milk and Isinglass, 246 Rusks, 345 Rye, 358 Mush, 358 Sabayon Sauce, 439 Saccharin, 175 Sago, 297 in Beef Broth, 190 Salad, Apple, 370 Corn, 336 Dressing, French, 340 Dressing, Mayonnaise, 340 Grape Fruit, 391 Orange, 398 Plants, 336 Salads, 339 Fruits for, 341 Meats for, 341 Vegetables for, 341 Salisbury Steak, 217 Salsify, 304 with Cream Sauce, 304 Salted Almonds, 413 Salt Meats, 221 Sandwiches, Date, 381 Fig, 386 Sauce a la Poulette, 236 Apple, 238, 367 Brown, 236 Celery, 239 Cocoanut, 439 Cocoanut Cream, 439 Cranberry, 238, 378 Cream, No. 1 and No. 2, 236 Egg, 237 Fruit Juice, 440 Gooseberry, 238 Marlborough Apple, 367 Melted Butter, 237 Nut Cream, 440 Plain Pudding, 439 Sabayon, 439 Soft Custard, 439 Tomato, 238 Sauces, 236 Pudding, 439 Savory Beef Tea, 185 Savoy, 320 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 553 Scalloped Apple, 368 Banana, 372 Schmierkase, 258 School Luncheon Bread, 350 Scorched Rice Gruel, 253 Scotch Oatmeal, 356 Scullions or Spring Onions, 329 Second Cooking of Meats, 220 Selecting Chickens, 228 Semi-solid Beef, 192 Milk Junket, 270 Shaddock, to Serve, 391 Shaddocks with Grape Fruit, 390 Sheet, Bran, 348 Sheets, Swedish, 349 Shepherds' Purse, 335 Sherbet, Coffee, 454 Sherry and Egg, 279 Shirred Eggs, 275 Shoots, Poke, 334 Shrub, Blackberry, 374 Currant, 380 Pineapple, 405 Skimmed Milk, 242 Slaw, Cold, 320 Sliced Peaches, 399 Slippery Elm Tea, 445 Smothered Apples, 365 Snow, Apple, 367 Eggs, 277 Pudding, 429 Soft Custard Sauce, 439 Soluble Proteins, 270 Somatose, 176 Sorbet, Grape, 442 Lemon, 441 Mint, 442 Orange, 396, 442 Pineapple, 442 Sorbets, 441 Sorrel, 334 Souari Nut, 419 Souffle, Apricot, 371 Banana, 372 Bean, 311 Chicken, 231 Cocoanut, 434 Cold Peach, 399 Farina, 360 Nut, 420 Omelet, 436 Orange, 397, 430 Potato, 290 Prune, 407 Pudding, Orange, 397 Wheat Germ, 359 Soup a la Reine, 197 a la Royal, 184 Bartholow's Restorative, 188 Soup, Bean, Dried, 200 Bean Flour, 201 Cardinal, 198 Chestnut, 198 Chicken Egg, 198 Clear with Bread Blocks, 184 Crecy, 197 Crescent, 203 Double, 192 Dried Bean, 200 Dried Pea, 201 Lentil, 201 Milk, 207 Okra, 198 Peanut, 418 . Portuguese, 185 Quick Lentil, 311 Rabbit, 199 Spinach, 206 Stock, 183 Velvet, 204 Soups, 182 Maigre, 200 Milk, 203 Sourdock, 334 Soy Bean, The, 312 Gems, 312 Rolls, 312 Wafers, 313 Soy Breakfast Cakes, 313 Gems, 312 Spaghetti, Breakfast, 299 Creamed, 299 Italian Fashion, 299 with Tomato, 299 Spanish Cream, 430 Onions, Stuffed, 329 Specially Peptonized Milk, 261 Spinach, 332 a la Creme, 332 Boiled, 332 Soup, 206 Split Pea Soup, Cream of, 205 Sponge, Apple, 368 Orange, 396 Spring Onions, Scullions, 329 Sprouts, Brussels, 321 Squabs, Boned, 235 Squash, Grape, 448 Lemon, 445 Orange, 395 Orange, English, 396 Summer, 326 Winter, 302 Stachys, 332 Steak, Beef, Blroiled, 215 Pan Broiled, 216 in Paper Bag, 217 Salisbury, 217 554 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK Steamed Figs, 384 Rice, 293 Sterilizing Milk, 243 Stewed Apples, 366 Bananas, 373 Celery, 324 Figs, 384 Lettuce, 337 Old Carrots, 323 Peach, 400 Pears, 403 Prunes, 407 Raisins, 389 Sweet Corn, 308 Tripe, 221 Sticks, Bran, 348 Bread, 345 Stimulating Beef Tea, 186 Stock (Soup), 183 Strawberry Juice, Fresh, 410 Junket, 273 Strawberries, 409 in Orange Juice, 410 String Beans, 305 Stuffed Dates, 381 Peppers, No. 1 and No. 2, 330 Potatoes, 291 Spanish Onions, 329 Succulent Vegetables, 304 Sugar in Starchy Vegetables, 301 Summer Squash, 326 Swedish Sheets, 349 Sweetbreads, 225 Baked, 226 Broiled, 226 Creamed, 226 in Jelly, 226 Sweet Corn, 307 Stewed, 308 Sweet Potato, 301 Baked, 301 Twice Baked, 301 Syllabub, Peach, 402 Syrup, Blackberry, 374 Chocolate, 456 Table of Grain Analysts, 355 Tamarind Water, 444 Whey, 256 Tapioca, 297 Apple, 365 Jelly, 438 Peach, 400 Taro, 296 Taste of Milk, How to Change, 242 Tea, 449 Cinnamon, 447 Tea, Flaxseed, 446 Gruel, Evans's, 448 Iced, 450 Linseed, 446 Mutton, 194 Orange Peel, 446 Slippery Elm, 445 Tiger's Milk, 247 Timbale, Chicken, 233 Potato, 289 Pumpkin, 302 Wheat Germ, 359 Toast, Almond and Fig. 385 Apricot, 371 Elderberry, 382 Fairy, 385 Fig, 385 Fig and Almond, 385 Golden, 280 Grape, 389 Iced Peach, 400 Peach, 401 Water, 443 Toddy, Hot Peach, 402 Tomato Broth, 200 Sauce, 238 With Cocoanut, 416 Tomatoes, 331 Raw, 331 With Okra, 327 Tous-Les-Mois, 298 Panada, 298 Tripe, 221 Broiled, 222 and Oysters, 222 Stewed, 221 Turkish Beef, 220 Turnip Cups with Peas, 307 Soup, Cream of, 206 Turnips, 331 Boiled, 331 Mashed, 333 Twentieth Century Bread, 342 Twice Baked Sweet Potato, 301 u Unleavened Bread, 346 Gems, Whole Wheat, 347 Whole Wheat Gems, 347 Use of Laibose, 261 Plants for Flavorings, 285 Uses of Eggs, 274 Nuts, 422 Vanilla Junket, 273 Various Ways of Preparing Panopepton, 267 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 555 Veal, 225 Broth No. 1 and No. 2, 195 With Egg, 195 Vegetable Broth, 200 Gelatin (Gelose) Jellies, 431 Marrow, 326 Vegetables, 282 Classes of, 282 for Salads, 341 Green, Boiled, 180 Starchy, 287 Starchy, Containing Sugar, 301 Succulent, 304 Without Starch, 306 Velvet Cream, 257 Coffee, 454 Soup, 204 Venison with Orange Sauce, 235 Vinegar, Blackberry, 375 Virginia Eggs, 275 Wafers, 352 Vomiting, Pernicious, to Allay, 214 w Wafers, Almond, 412 Peanut, 417 Soy Bean, 313 Virginia, 352 Warm Process for Peptonizing Milk, 260 Water Chestnuts, 421 Cress, 338 Water Ice, Grape, 389 Weeds, Edible, 334 Welsh Nectar, 449 Wheat Fingers, Whole, 347 Germ, 356 Cereals, 358 Porridge, 358 Souffle, 359 Timbale, 359 Rolled, 357 Whey, 271 Albuminized, 256 Analysis of, 270 Whey and Milk Modifications, 271 and Egg, 278 and Junket, 270 and Junket, How to Make, 271 Lemon, 256 Modifications, 271 Rennet, 255 Tamarind, 256 Wine, 255 With Grape Juice, 272 Panopepton, 269 Whip, Orange, 398 Whipped Cream with Chestnuts, 41S With Clam Broth, 214 White Bread, 343 Mayonnaise, 340 Wine Jelly, 425 Whole Wheat Fingers, 347 Gems, Unleavened, 347 Whortleberries, 391 Wild Cherry Cordial, 449 Wine and Orange, Jelly, 428 Elderberry, 383 Jelly, 424 Port, 429 Port, Mulled, 256 Whey, 255 White, 425 Winter Squash, 302 Yams, 296 Yeast, Bread With Homemade, 344 Homemade, 343 "Ye Perfect Food," 253 Yorkshire Apple, 369 Young Green Peas, 306 Lima Beans, 311 Sweet Corn, 307 Zouave, Apple a la, 366 Zweiback, 346 Slices, 346 With Mutton Broth, 194 556 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK PART THREE PHYSICIANS' READY REFERENCE LIST Acid, Excess of Hydrochloric, 472 Acne, 527 Acute Dysentery, 487 Gastritis, 478 Intestinal Catarrh, 482 Meningitis, 535 Nephritis, 505 Aged, Foods for, 518 Albuminuria, 502 Functional, in Children, 503 Alcoholism, 528 Anaemia, 469 Pernicious, 469 in Rheumatism, 493 Angina Pectoris, 466 Aneurism, 467 Apoplexy, 468 Appendicitis, 485 Asthma, 461 Ataxia, Locomotor, 531 Atonic Dyspepsia, 475 Biliousness, 496 Bright's Disease, Chronic, 504 Calculi, Renal, 508 Cancer, 529 Catarrh, Acute Intestinal, 482 Catarrhal Jaundice, 497 Chlorosis, 469 Children, Eczema in, 525 Foods for, 511 Chorea, 515 Chronic Bright's Disease, 504 Constipation, 483 Diarrhoea, 486 Gastritis, 479 Nephritis, 506 Rheumatism, 495 Cirrhosis, 498 Constipation, Chronic, 483 Consumption, 462 Cough, Whooping, 516 D Delirium Tremens, 529 Dengue Fever, 522 Diabetes, 509 Diarrhoea, Chronic, 486 Diathesis, Uric Acid, 501 Dilatation of Stomach, 473 Diphtheria, 516 Duodenal Ulcer, 482 Dysentery, Acute, 487 Dyspepsia, Atonic, 475 Hungry, 476 Nervous, 477 With Flatulency, 474 E Eczema in Children, 525 Enuresis, 517 Epilepsy, 532 Erysipelas, 533 Exophthalmic Goiter, 530 Feeding in Fever, 520 Fever, Dengue, 522 Feeding in, 520 Malarial, 522 Scarlet, 523 Typhoid, 521 Yellow, 523 Flatulency in Dyspepsia, 474 Foods, for Children, 511 for the Aged, 518 Functional Albuminuria in Children, 503 Gall Stones, 499 Gastric Disturbances, 471 Gastritis, Acute, 478 Chronic, 479 Goiter, Exophthalmic, 530 Gout, 492 H Headache, Sick, 500 Heart, Senile, 465 Hemorrhoids, 488 Hungry Dyspepsia, 476 Hydrochloric Acid, Excess of, 472 too Little, 471 MRS. RORER'S DIET FOR THE SICK 557 Indigestion, Intestinal, 481 Insomnia, 534 Intestinal Catarrh, Acute, 482 Indigestion, 481 Jaundice, Catarrhal, 497 L Leanness, 491 Locomotor Ataxia, 531 M Malarial Fever, 522 Marasmus, 513 Measles, 514 Meningitis, Acute, 535 Mumps, 516 N Nephritis, Acute, 505 Chronic, 506 Nervous Dyspepsia, 477 Nettle Rash, 526 Obesity, 490 Oxaluria, 507 Pectoris, Angina, 466 Pernicious Anaemia, 469 Peritonitis, 489 Pneumonia, 463 Pulmonary Consumption, 462 Purpura Haemorrhagica, 470 Quinzy, 465 R Rash, Nettle, 526 Renal Calculi, 508 Rheumatism, 494 Anaemic, 493 Chronic, 495 Scarlet Fever, 523 Senile Heart, 465 Sick Headache, 500 Smallpox, 524 Stomach, Dilatation of, 473 Ulcer of, 480 Stones, Gall, 499 Tonsilitis, 464 Tremens, Delirium, 529 Tuberculosis, 462 Typhoid Fever, 521 u Ulcer of Duodenum, 482 of Stomach, 480 Uric Acid Diathesis, 501 w Whooping Cough, 516 Yellow Fever, 523 THE LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Santa Barbara THIS BOOK IS DUE ON THE LAST DATE STAMPED BELOW. 30w-9,'66 (G6338s8) 9-182 A 000 809 757 8