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A friend in the kitchen

Chapter 417: A WEEK’S MENU
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About This Book

The collection offers roughly 400 tested, plainly described recipes and practical guidance for healthful household cookery, favoring simple, economical, and nutritious meals. Material is arranged by category—soups, cereals, breads, fruits, vegetables, salads, eggs, puddings, sauces, pies, cakes, and wholesome drinks—and also presents meat substitutes, specially prepared health foods, and simple dishes for the sick and infants. Supplemental sections provide a week’s menu and Sabbath dinners, advice on food combinations and vegetarian transition, tables of nutritive values and digestion times, rules for dyspeptics, canning directions, and weights, measures, and household hints to assist inexperienced cooks in preparing digestible, varied fare.

A WEEK’S MENU

FIRST DAY
Breakfast
Fresh Fruit
Oatmeal Mush Breakfast Rolls
Zwieback Stewed Fruit
Cereal Coffee
Dinner
Split Pea Soup
Mashed Potatoes with Brown Sauce
Scalloped Tomatoes Brown Bread
French Rolls Baked Apples
Rice Custard
SECOND DAY
Breakfast
Fresh Fruit
Corn Flakes
Graham Gems Whole Wheat Crisps
Egg Toast Cereal Coffee
Dinner
Potato Soup
Boiled Potatoes Baked Beans
Stewed Cauliflower
Brown and White Bread Rusks
Bananas Pumpkin Pie
THIRD DAY
Breakfast
Boiled Rice
Baked Potatoes Plain Omelet
Cream Toast Sticks
Hot Milk
Dinner
Bean Soup
Mashed Potatoes Stewed Turnips
Brown and White Bread
Peach Pie Fruit Biscuit
FOURTH DAY
Breakfast
Fresh Apples Cream of Wheat
Toast with Cream
Rice Waffles Stewed Pears
Cereal Coffee
Dinner
Lentil Soup
Baked Sweet Potatoes, Cream Sauce
Tomato Salad
Boiled Beans with Rice
Corn-meal Gems Sago Pudding
FIFTH DAY
Breakfast
Fresh Fruit
Graham Mush with Dates
Oatmeal Gems Baked Sweet Apples
Berry Toast Cambric Tea
Dinner
Vegetable Soup
Potatoes with Cream Stewed Asparagus
Boiled Sweet Corn
Brown and White Bread
Stewed Prunes Cream Pie
SIXTH DAY
Breakfast
Corn-meal Mush
Rice Cakes Stewed Fruit
Whole Wheat Bread Egg Toast
Cereal Coffee or Hot Milk
Dinner
Rice Soup
Mashed Potatoes Green Peas
Succotash
Brown and White Bread
Apple Float Raised Biscuits
SABBATH
Breakfast
Oranges and Bananas
Graham Mush with Dates
Stewed Prunes
Parker House Rolls
Brown and White Bread
Cereal Coffee
Dinner
Split Pea and Vermicelli Soup
Baked Beans
Warmed-up Potatoes Fruit Buns
Brown and White Bread
Lemon or Prune Pie Orangeade
Fresh Fruit and Nuts

Note.—The above is simply suggestive, and may be simplified, enlarged, or varied as desired. It is not supposed that every person shall necessarily eat everything indicated for each meal. Some will prefer the grain and vegetable dishes; others the grain and fruit. If a third meal is eaten, either at middle or close of day, it should be light and simple,—a mere lunch.

SABBATH DINNERS

The Sabbath is the day of rest. In order that it may be devoted by all to religious exercises, holy meditation, and spiritual delight, it should be as free as possible from the ordinary duties and cares of life. To make it thus, preparation on the day before is necessary. The Lord calls the day before the Sabbath “the preparation” day. Luke 23:54. Of the work to be done on this day he says: “To-morrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord: bake that which ye will bake to-day, and seethe [boil] that ye will seethe; and that which remaineth over lay up for you to be kept until the morning.” Ex. 16:23.

The Sabbath should not be made a day of feasting. The labor of the week being laid aside, a moderate amount of plain, wholesome food is all that is necessary. To gormandize on this day, as is the custom with many, causes the mind to become dull and stupid, and unfits it for spiritual devotion.

With proper planning, very little, if any, cooking need ever be done on the Sabbath, aside from simply warming over some of the foods prepared the previous day.

Brown bread, fruit bread-sticks, or French rolls; warmed up potatoes, or potatoes with cream; baked or boiled beans; split pea or lentil soup, with croutons; sago, tapioca, or some other simple pudding or pie; canned or stewed fruit; and fresh fruits and nuts, make an excellent Sabbath dinner. All these may be prepared on the previous day. The potatoes may be boiled ready to warm up, the beans baked or boiled, the peas or lentils cooked and rubbed through a colander ready to add the seasoning and necessary water for soup, the croutons prepared, the fruit stewed, the pudding or pie baked, and the nuts cracked. Then the dinner may be made ready quickly, and with but little effort.

FOOD COMBINATIONS

Because of their chemical nature, the time required to digest them, and the place where, and the juices with which, they are digested, some foods do not combine as well as others. While the young and those with sound stomachs and vigorous digestion may experience little or no inconvenience from improper and more varied combinations, to continue their use is likely in time seriously to impair the digestion. Dyspeptics and those troubled with slow digestion will find it to their advantage to avoid such combinations as fruits and vegetables, milk and vegetables, sugar and milk, milk and fruits; and, when fruits are taken, to eat them at the close of the meal. The following are good combinations: Grains and fruits; fruits and nuts; grains, fruits, and nuts; grains, legumes, and vegetables; grains and milk. An excellent rule to follow is to avoid a large variety at any meal, and let natural cravings indicate largely the kinds of food eaten. Above all, use common sense, and relish what you eat.

TIME REQUIRED TO DIGEST VARIOUS FOODS

Hrs. Mins.
Rice 1 00
Apples, sweet, mellow, raw 1 00
Granola 1 00
Eggs, whipped 1 30
Trout, boiled 1 30
Venison, broiled 1 35
Sago 1 45
Tapioca 2 00
Barley 2 00
Eggs raw 2 00
Apples, sour, mellow, raw 2 00
Milk, boiled 2 00
Milk, raw 2 15
Turkey, boiled 2 25
Parsnips, boiled 2 30
Potatoes, baked 2 30
Beans, string, boiled 2 30
Cabbage, raw 2 30
Turkey, roasted 2 30
Goose, roasted 2 30
Lamb, boiled 2 30
Oysters, raw 2 55
Eggs, soft boiled 3 00
Beef, lean, raw, roasted 3 00
Beefsteak, broiled 3 00
Chicken soup, boiled 3 00
Mutton, broiled 3 00
Bean soup 3 00
Mutton, roasted 3 15
Bread, corn-meal 3 15
Mutton soup 3 30
Bread, white 3 30
Potatoes, boiled 3 30
Turnips, boiled 3 30
Eggs, hard boiled 3 00
Eggs, fried 3 30
Oysters, stewed 3 30
Butter, melted 3 30
Cheese 3 30
Beets, boiled 3 45
Corn and Beans, green 3 45
Veal, broiled 4 00
Fowl, broiled 4 00
Beef, lean, fried 4 00
Salmon, salted, boiled 4 00
Beef, salted, boiled 4 15
Soup, marrow-bone 4 15
Pork, salted, fried 4 15
Veal, fried 4 30
Duck, roasted 4 30
Cabbage, boiled 4 30
Pork, roasted 5 15