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The Dinner Year-Book

Chapter 1896: Macaroni Pudding.
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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.

Baked Bean Soup.

On Monday morning put a quart of beans in soak. By evening, put them to boil at the back of the range, and cook until soft. Early on Tuesday morning put them into a pudding-dish with a pound of parboiled streaked pork, and bake brown. Cut the bacon into strips; put into a soup-pot with the beans, a sliced onion, and three stalks of celery. Pour on three quarts of cold water, and boil down to two. Rub through a colander; return to the fire; season to taste; add a teaspoonful of flour into which a tablespoonful of butter has been rubbed. Simmer ten minutes, and pour upon dice of fried bread placed in the tureen.

Veal Cutlets.

Flatten with side of a hatchet; pepper, salt, dip in raw egg, then in cracker-dust; fry in a little butter, turning as they brown. Dish, and pour over them some drawn butter in which has been cooked a great spoonful of tomato catsup.

Fried Parsnips.

Boil tender in a little hot water, salted. Scrape, cut into long slices; dredge with flour and fry in hot lard or dripping. Drain off the fat, and serve.

Sausage and Cabbage.

Quarter and parboil a fine, white cabbage, and put on to boil in hot water with six or eight “link” sausages, having previously pricked these slightly. When the cabbage is tender, drain and chop, adding pepper, salt, a little butter and vinegar heated together. Pile upon a hot dish, laying the sausages about the cabbage.

Celery Salad.

Scrape and cut blanched celery into inch lengths. Put into a glass dish, and pour over it a dressing made by rubbing a teaspoonful of sugar with half as much, each, of pepper, salt, and made mustard, with two tablespoonfuls of oil, and twice the quantity of vinegar, added gradually.

Macaroni Pudding.

1 cup macaroni broken into equal lengths; 1 quart of milk; 4 eggs; ½ lemon; 2 tablespoonfuls of butter; ¾ cup of sugar, a little mace.

Simmer the macaroni in half the milk until tender. Heat and add the other pint. While hot stir in the butter, the yolks beaten up with sugar, the mace, lemon-juice and peel—finally the whisked whites. Bake half an hour in a buttered mould—covered—then brown.