Game Soup.
2 grouse or partridges, or, if you have neither, use a pair of rabbits; ½ lb. of lean ham; 2 medium-sized onions; 1 lb. of lean beef; fried bread; butter for frying; pepper, salt, and 2 stalks of white celery cut into inch lengths; 3 quarts of water.
Joint your game neatly; cut the ham and onions into small pieces, and fry all in butter to a light brown. Put into a soup-pot with the beef, cut into strips, and a little pepper. Pour on the water; heat slowly, and stew gently two hours. Take out the pieces of bird, and cover in a bowl; cook the soup an hour longer; strain; cool; drop in the celery, and simmer ten minutes. Pour upon fried bread in the tureen.
Fricassee of Grouse.
Make a cup of drawn butter by heating a cup of strained broth from your boiling soup in a saucepan; stirring into it two tablespoonfuls of butter cut up in a teaspoonful of flour; season well, and put in the pieces of grouse, or rabbit. Simmer until very hot; take out the meat and arrange upon buttered toast in a dish. Add to the gravy a couple of beaten yolks; heat one minute, and pour over the birds.
Potatoes with Vermicelli.
Mash and whip the potatoes light with butter and milk. Season with salt, and mound smoothly within a stone-china dish, or a bake-dish that has a silver stand for the table. Wash over with white of egg, and strew with vermicelli that has been broken small, boiled a few minutes in hot water, then spread out to drain upon a sieve. Brown in a quick oven.
Buttered Parsnips.
Boil tender, and scrape. Slice a quarter of an inch thick, lengthwise. Put into a saucepan with a great spoonful of melted butter, pepper and salt, and a little chopped parsley. Shake over the fire until it boils. Lay the parsnips upon a dish, and pour the sauce over them.
Stewed Tomatoes.
Empty a can of tomatoes into a saucepan. Stew twenty-five minutes; season with pepper, salt, sugar, and stir in a lump of butter rolled in flour. Simmer ten minutes, and serve.
Quaking Custard.
3 cups of milk; yolks of 3 eggs, using the whites for the méringue; ½ package Cooper’s gelatine; 6 tablespoonfuls of sugar; juice of 1 lemon for méringue; flavoring extract for custard.
Soak the gelatine two hours in a cup of the milk. Heat the rest of the milk; add that in which the gelatine is, and stir over the fire until the gelatine is melted. Take from the fire and pour upon the beaten yolks and sugar. Heat slowly, and stir until it thickens well. Cool, stirring every quarter of an hour. When cold, flavor and pour into a wet mould. Set in ice, or in a cold place. When it is firm, turn out and surround with a méringue made by whipping the whites stiff with a little powdered sugar, and the lemon-juice.