Chicken and Sago Soup.
Take the top from your chicken pot-liquor; add the cracked bones of the chickens, from which you cut the meat for “breakfast, luncheon, or tea;” boil gently one hour. Strain, and season to taste; add a cup of soaked sago, and simmer until it is soft and clear.
Beefsteak Pudding.
3 lbs. of rump steak; 3 eggs; 2 cups of milk; 5 tablespoonfuls of prepared flour; pepper and salt; melted butter; parsley; French mustard.
Cut the steaks into pieces rather more than an inch wide and long. Beat with a rolling-pin; pepper and salt, and dip each in a mixture of melted butter and minced parsley, with a little French mustard. Lay in the bottom of a greased bake-dish; pour over them a batter made of the eggs, flour, and milk, bake an hour and a quarter. Serve in the bake-dish.
Boiled Onions.
Cook and boil in salted water fifteen minutes; throw this off, and cover with milk and water. Cook tender; drain; pepper and salt, and pour in a cupful of drawn butter. Simmer five minutes, and turn out.
Mashed Potatoes.
Prepare in the usual manner, taking care not to get them too stiff.
Fried Hominy.
Boil hominy—the fine-grained—the day before you want to use it. When perfectly cold and stiff, remove the skin from the top, and cut the hominy into neat squares. Flour and salt these, and fry to a nice brown in hot lard or dripping. Drain well, and eat hot.
Sweet Potato Pie.
Parboil; skin; cool, and slice crosswise firm sweet potatoes. Line a pie-dish with a good crust; put in a layer of sliced potatoes; sprinkle abundantly with sugar; scatter in four or five whole cloves, and cover with more slices. Fill the dish thus: put in a liberal tablespoonful of melted butter; pour in a little water and a teaspoonful of lemon-juice; cover with puff-paste, and bake. Eat cold. This is a Virginia dish, and very nice.