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The Dinner Year-Book

Chapter 1792: Tapioca Soup.
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About This Book

A practical, year‑round guide to planning family dinners, offering weekly menus arranged for four weeks each month and tailored to seasonal ingredients and the average American market. The author emphasizes variety, economy, and the tasteful reuse of leftovers, providing techniques for stretching meats and transforming cold cuts, crumbs, gravies, and other odds‑and‑ends into attractive meals. Guidance includes larder and refrigerator management, balancing thrift with hospitality, and simplifying company dinners so everyday good cooking will suffice for entertaining. The tone is instructional and focused on achieving consistent, well‑cooked meals without waste or extravagance.

Tapioca Soup.

Take the fat from the top of your stock-pot, dip out as much as you need for to-day; add a large cupful of boiling water and strain into the soup-kettle. Bring to a boil, skim, and put in half a cup of grained tapioca, which has been soaked for two hours in a little water. Simmer until clear.

Roast Saddle of Mutton.

Lay in the dripping-pan, pour a large cup of boiling water over it, and roast twelve minutes to the pound, basting often. As it begins to brown, cover with white paper, lifting this when you baste the meat. Ten minutes before serving, take off the paper, dredge the mutton with flour; baste with butter, and brown. Skim the fat from the gravy; thicken with browned flour, season, and boil once, then serve in a boat. Pass currant jelly with the mutton.

Potato Puff.

Whip boiled potatoes light with a fork; beat in butter, salt, and milk, at last, two frothed eggs. Whisk to a cream; make into a smooth mound in a greased bake-dish, and set in a quick oven to brown.

Salsify Fritters.

1 bunch of salsify; 2 beaten eggs; ½ cup of milk; flour for thin batter; salt.

Wash, scrape, and grate the salsify into the batter, made of the ingredients given above. It should be as thick when the salsify is in, as pound-cake batter. Drop by the spoonful into hot fat. Fry quickly, drain in a hot colander, and serve dry and hot.

Kidney Beans à l’Anglaise.

Soak dried white beans all night in cold water. Exchange in the morning for tepid, and finally put on to boil in cold. Heat and cook slowly, and when, after two hours, the skin begins to crack, strain off the water, adding it to your soup-stock if you like, after salting it sufficiently to warrant its keeping. Put a folded towel upon the beans left in the saucepan, and set at the side of the range, where they will keep hot, without scorching, for half an hour. Sprinkle with salt and pepper; stir in a small bit of butter, and dish. Beans thus cooked will be very mealy.

Almond Blanc-Mange.

1 quart of milk; 1 package Cooper’s gelatine, soaked one hour in a little cold water; 3 oz. of almonds, blanched, dried, and pounded in a mortar, with a little rose-water to prevent oiling; ¾ cup of sugar; extract bitter almonds.

Heat the milk to scalding; add the gelatine, the pounded almonds, and, when you have stirred these over the fire ten minutes, the sugar. Strain through thin muslin, wringing and squeezing to get out the flavor of the almonds. Flavor, and set in a wet mould to form. Do this on Saturday. On Sunday, turn it out, and eat with powdered sugar and cream.

Cream Rose Cake.

Please consult “Breakfast, Luncheon and Tea,” page 327.