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The best vegetarian dishes I know

Chapter 33: CELERY PIE
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About This Book

A practical compendium of vegetarian recipes that omits fish and focuses on accessible, nourishing dishes organized by vegetable and method. It provides step-by-step preparations for fritters, soufflés, pies, rissoles, salads, moulds and numerous other forms, plus a selection of sauces and culinary tips. The author stresses economy and ease of execution for the average cook, highlights the dietary role of dairy, eggs, fats, cheese and nuts, and urges careful attention to technique and ingredients to achieve reliable results.

CELERY PIE

A quarter of a pound of short paste, ¹⁄₂ pint celeriac (cooked and sieved), rather more than 1¹⁄₂ gills milk, 1 slice onion, parsley, seasoning, 1¹⁄₂ ozs. butter, 1¹⁄₂ ozs. flour, grated cheese, 2 eggs.

Method.—Line a buttered pie-dish with the paste rolled out fairly thin. Let the milk simmer for a quarter of an hour with the onion, two or three pieces of parsley, and a small blade of mace, then cook the butter and flour together for a few minutes and, when quite smooth, moisten gradually with the milk (strained), and stir quickly until the sauce has boiled and thickened. Remove the pan from the stove and add the yolks of the eggs, one tablespoonful of grated cheese, the parsley, and celeriac, then whisk the whites of the eggs to a very stiff froth, stir them into the mixture, and turn it into the lined pie-dish and bake for half an hour in a well-heated oven. This dish is equally nice served hot or cold; if the latter, it should be turned out of the pie-dish intact in the pastry case.