Trifle.
Put into a deep china or glass dish
half a pound of spunge biscuits, two
ounces of ratafias, two ounces of jordan
almonds blanched and pounded, citron
and candied orange peel an ounce of each
cut into small slices, some currant jelly
and raspberry jam, a small quantity of
grated nutmeg and lemon peel, half a
pint of sweet wine, and a little of the
liquor of the syllabub. Then make the
same kind of cream as for pies, and when
cold put it over the ingredients. When
it is to be served up put plenty of the
stiff froth of a syllabub raised high on
the cream, and garnish with coloured
comfits or rose leaves, which are recommended
for elegance.
Tarts or Tartlets.
Sheet tart or tartlet pans with puff
paste a quarter of an inch thick, trim
round the edge with a sharp knife; then
fill with raspberry or apricot jam, or
orange marmalade or stewed apple, and
put fine strings of paste across in what
form you please. Bake them in a brisk
oven, and be careful not to let the top
colour too much.
Paste for stringing Tartlets.
Cut a bit of puff paste into pieces,
mix with it half a handful of flour, a
little cold water, and let it be of a moderate
stiffness, and mould it with the
hands till it draws into fine threads.
Roll a piece out three inches long and
two inches broad; then cut it into slips,
draw them out singly, and put them
across the tarts in any form, which may
be repeated two or three times over each
other, as it will add much to their appearance
when baked.
To stew Apples for Tarts.
Pare, cut into quarters, and core, some
apples; put them into a stewpan, add to
them a piece of lemon peel, a little water,
and a stick of cinnamon. Cover the
pan close, put it over a fire till the apples
are dissolved, sweeten to the palate with
sifted sugar, add a table spoonful of syrup
of cloves, and rub them through a hair
sieve. Let it stand till cold before it is
put into the paste.
N. B. To make a very fine flavoured
tart, stew golden pippins in the same manner,
and when they are rubbed through
the sieve add only half a table spoonful
of syrup of cloves, and mix well with it
a quarter of a pound of pine-apple jam.
This mixture will keep a month if close
covered.
Fried Puffs with Sweetmeats.
Roll out puff paste half an inch
thick, cut it into slips of three inches
wide, the slips into square pieces, and
put on each some sweetmeat of any
kind. Fold the paste, and run a jagger
iron round to form it, or cut it with a
sharp knife. Have ready boiling lard,
fry them of a light colour, drain them
dry, and serve them up with sifted sugar
over.
Pyramid Paste.
Take a sheet of puff paste rolled of
half an inch thick; cut or stamp it into
oval forms, the first to be the size of the
bottom of the dish in which it is to be
served up, the second smaller, and so on
till it becomes a pyramid; then put each
piece separately on paper laid on a baking
plate, and when the oven is ready, egg
the top part of the pieces and bake them
of a light colour. When they are done
take them off the paper, lay them on a
large dish till quite cold, and when to be
served up set the largest piece in the
dish for which it was formed, and put
on it raspberry or apricot jams or currant
jelly, the next size on that and more
sweetmeats, proceeding in the same manner
till all the pieces are placed on each
other. Put dried fruits round the pyramid,
such as green gages, barberries, or
cherries.
N. B. Instead of stamping the pieces
it is thought better to cut them with a
sharp knife; then to cut out small pieces
round the edges to make them appear like
spires, as, being done in this manner, it
causes the paste to appear lighter.
Iceing for a Cake.
Whisk the whites of four eggs to a
solid froth, and put to it as much treble
refined sifted sugar as you can; then add
the juice of a lemon, mix all well together
with a spoon, and spread it over the cake
when warm.
Cherries in Brandy for Desserts.
On a dry day gather the largest ripe
morella cherries, and be careful they are
not bruised; then cut off the stalk half
way, prick each cherry with a needle
four times, put them into glasses, add
strong best brandy enough to cover them,
and sweeten with clarified sugar. Tie
over them a bladder washed and wiped
dry, some white leather over that bound
tight, and turn the glasses bottom upwards.
N. B. Grapes or apricots may be done
in the same manner.
To make Buns.
Put five pounds of best flour into a
wooden bowl, set a spunge of it with a
gill of yeast and a pint of warm milk;
then mix with it one pound of sifted
sugar, one pound of oiled fresh butter,
coriander seeds, cinnamon, and mace, a
small quantity of each pounded fine.
Roll the paste into buns, set them on a
baking plate rubbed over with a little
butter, put them in a moderate oven to
prove, then wash them with a paste brush
dipped in warm milk, and bake them of
a good colour.
Orgeat.
Blanch a pound of jordan and one
ounce of bitter almonds, pound them in
a marble mortar till very fine; then put
to them a pint of pump water, rub them
through a tamis cloth till the almonds
are quite dry, and add to the liquor more
water to make it of a proper consistence
for drinking; after which sweeten with
clarified sugar, or sugarcandy, or capillaire;
then put it into a decanter, and
when it is to be used shake it together.
Orange Marmalade.
Take seville oranges when in season,
which is generally at the beginning of
March; cut them into halves, and the
halves again into thin slices, which put
with the juice, but not too much of the
core, and take away the pips. To every
pound weight of orange add two pounds
of sifted sugar and a gill of water; then
put them into a preserving pan, set the
pan over a quick fire, and when the
mixture boils keep stirring and skimming
till it becomes of a proper stiffness,
which may be known by putting a little
into a saucer and setting it in cold water.
Then fill the pots with the marmalade,
and when cold put over white paper
dipped in brandy; after which cover the
pots with paper and white leather, and
preserve them in a dry place for use.
N. B. In the same way try the proper
stiffness of other jellies or jams, and cover
them in like manner.
Raspberry Jam.
To every pound weight of ripe picked
raspberries, add fourteen ounces of sifted
sugar and half a gill of currant juice; put
them into a preserving pan, set them over
a brisk fire, and when it boils skim it well
and let it simmer till it becomes of a good
consistence.
N. B. The raspberries may be mashed
with a spoon previous to adding the sugar,
or rubbed through a wicker sieve.
Quince Jam.
Pare ripe quinces, cut them into thin
slices, put them into a stewpan with a
sufficient quantity of water to cover
them, let them boil gently till tender
close covered, and rub them through
a large hair sieve; add to a pound of the
pulp a pound and a half of sifted sugar
and half a gill of syrup of cloves; then
put them into a preserving pan, and
let them simmer together till of a good
strength.
N. B. A little of this jam mixed with
apples in a pie will make it very good.
Green Gage Jam.
Rub ripe gages through a large hair
sieve, and put them into a preserving
pan; then, to a pound of pulp add a
pound of sifted sugar; after which boil
to a proper thickness, skim it clean, and
put it into small pots.
Apricot Jam.
Take apricots when nearly ripe, pare
and cut them into halves, break the
stones, blanch the kernels, and add them
to the halves. To a pound of fruit put
a pound of sifted sugar and a gill of the
water in which the parings have been
boiled. Then set it over a brisk fire,
stir the mixture well together till it becomes
of a good strength, but let it not
be very stiff.
Preserved Apricots for Tarts or Desserts.
Cut ripe apricots in halves, blanch
the kernels and add them to the fruit.
Have ready clarified sugar boiling hot,
put the apricots into it, and let them
stand till cold. Then boil the syrup
again, add the apricots as before, and
when they are cold put the halves into
small pots or glasses, and if the syrup
is too thin boil it again, and when it is
cold put it to the fruit, and cover it
with paper dipped in brandy.
N. B. Green gages may be done whole
in the same manner, or green gooseberries
with the seeds taken out. These
fruits may be served up with the syrup;
or they may be dried on tin plates, in a
moderately heated oven, and when almost
cold put sifted sugar over.
Currant Jelly.
Take two thirds of ripe red currants
and one third of white, pick them, put
them into a preserving pan over a good
fire, and when they are dissolved run
their liquor through a flannel bag. To
a pint of juice add fourteen ounces of
sifted sugar. Set it over a brisk fire, let
it boil quick, skim it clean, and reduce
it to a good stiffness, which may
be known as before directed in orange
marmalade.
N. B. In the same manner may be
made black currant jelly, but allowing
sixteen ounces of sugar to a pint of
juice.
Crisp Tart Paste.
Take half a pound of sifted flour, a
quarter of a pound of fresh butter, two
ounces of sifted sugar, and two eggs
beaten; mix them with pump water,
and knead the paste well.
Eggs and Bacon another way.
Boil six eggs for five minutes, then
peel and cut them into halves; after
which take out the yolks, put them into
a marble mortar with a small quantity
of the white meat of dressed fowl, lean
ham, a little chopped parsley, one eschallot,
a table spoonful of cream, a dessert
spoonful of ketchup, a little cayenne,
some breadcrumbs, and sifted mace, a
very small quantity of each. Pound all
well together, fill the halves of the whites
with the mixture, bake them gently ten
minutes, and serve them up on rashers
of bacon or ham broiled, and put some
cullis over them.
To make Puff Paste.
Mould with the hands a pound of
fresh or good salt butter and lay it in
cold water; then sift a pound of best
white flour, rub lightly into it half the
butter, mix it with cold spring water,
roll it out, put on it (in pieces) half the
remaining butter, fold the paste, roll it
again, and add the remainder of the
butter. Strew lightly upon it a little
flour, fold it together, set it in a cold
place, and when it is wanted for use,
roll it out twice more.
N. B. In summer time the white of
an egg beat up may be added with the
water that mixes it.
To make an Almond Cake.
Take eight ounces of jordan and one
ounce of bitter almonds, blanch and
pound them very fine; then beat in with
the almonds the yolks of eight eggs, and
let the whites be whisked up to a solid
froth. Then take eight table spoonfuls
of sifted sugar, five spoonfuls of fine
flour, a small quantity of grated lemon
peel and pounded cinnamon, and mix
all the ingredients. Rub the inside of
a mould with fresh butter, fill it with
the mixture, and bake it of a light
colour.
Almond Custards.
Add to a pint and a half of cream a
small stick of cinnamon, a blade of mace,
a bit of lemon peel, some nutmeg, and
sugar to the palate. Boil the ingredients
together ten minutes, and strain it;
then blanch and pound (quite fine) three
ounces of jordan and eight single bitter
almonds; after which rub through a hair
sieve, add the fine pulp to the cream,
likewise a little syrup of roses, and the
yolks of six eggs beat up, and put the
mixture into small cups; or it may be
baked in a dish with a rim of puff paste
round it.
N. B. Plain custards may be made in
the same manner, but instead of almonds
add a little orange flower water.
Rhubarb Tart.
Take slips of green rhubarb, wash it,
and cut it into small pieces the bigness
of young gooseberries; put them into a
dish, sweeten with sifted sugar, add the
juice of a lemon, cover it with puff paste,
and bake it. Serve it up either plain or
with cream, the same as for an apple pie.
Orange Pudding.
Peel four seville oranges thin, boil
them till tender, rub them through a
hair sieve, and preserve the fine pulp.
Take a pound of naples biscuits, a little
grated nutmeg, two ounces of fresh butter,
and pour over them a quart of boiling
milk or cream in which a stick of
cinnamon has been boiled. When the
ingredients are cold mix with them the
pulp and eight eggs well beaten, sweeten
to the palate, and (if approved) add half
a gill of brandy. Edge a dish with puff
paste, put in the mixture, garnish the
top with strings of paste as for tartlets,
and bake it in a moderately heated oven.
N. B. A lemon pudding may be made
in the same manner.
Rice Pudding.
To a pint and a half of cream or new
milk add a few coriander seeds, a bit of
lemon peel, a stick of cinnamon, and
sugar to the palate. Boil them together
ten minutes, and strain it to two ounces
of ground rice, which boil for ten minutes
more. Let it stand till cold, and
then put to it two ounces of oiled
fresh butter, a little brandy, grated nutmeg,
six eggs well beaten, and a gill of
syrup of pippins. Mix all together, put
it into a dish with puff paste round it,
and bake it, taking care it is not done
too much. Should the pudding be made
with whole rice it should be boiled till
nearly done before the cream is strained
to it, and if approved a few currants may
be added.
N. B. Millet or sago (whole or ground)
may be done in the same manner.
Tansey Pudding.
Blanch and pound very fine a quarter
of a pound of jordan almonds; then put
them into a stewpan, add a gill of the
syrup of roses, the crumb of a french
roll, a little grated nutmeg, half a gill
of brandy, two table spoonfuls of tansey
juice, three ounces of fresh butter, and
some slices of citron. Pour over it a
pint and a half of boiling cream or milk,
sweeten to the palate, and when it is
cold mix it well, add the juice of a lemon
and eight eggs beaten. It may be
either boiled or baked.
Almond Pudding.
To be made as a tansey pudding, only
omitting the french bread and tansey
juice, and adding as substitutes a quarter
of a pound of naples biscuits and a
spoonful of orange flower water.
Marrow Pudding.
Boil with a quart of new milk cinnamon
and lemon peel, and strain it to
half a pound of beef marrow finely chopped,
a few currants washed and picked,
some slices of citron and orange peel
candied, a little grated nutmeg, brandy,
syrup of cloves, a table spoonful of each,
and half a pound of naples biscuits.
When the mixture is cold add eight eggs
beat up, omitting five of the whites,
and bake it in a dish with puff paste
round it.
Bread Pudding.
To be made as a marrow pudding,
only omitting the naples biscuits and a
quarter of a pound of the beef marrow,
adding as a substitute the crumb of french
bread.
A rich Plum Pudding.
Take one pound of raisins stoned, one
pound of currants washed and picked,
one pound of beef suet chopped, two
ounces of jordan almonds blanched and
pounded, citron, candied orange and
lemon peel pounded, two ounces of each,
a little salt, some grated nutmeg and
sugar, one pound of sifted flour, a gill
of brandy, and eight eggs well beaten.
Mix all together with cream or milk,
and let it be of a good thickness; then
tie it in a cloth, boil it five hours, and
serve it up with melted butter over.
Batter Pudding.
To a pound of flour sifted add a little
salt and a gill of milk, mix them till
smooth, beat well six eggs, and add
them together with more milk till the
batter is of a proper thickness; then put
the mixture into a bason rubbed with
fresh butter, tie a cloth over, boil it an
hour and a quarter, turn it out of the
bason, and serve it up with melted butter,
sugar, and grated nutmeg, in a sauce
boat; to which may be added also (if
approved) a table spoonful of white wine,
or a dessert spoonful of vinegar.
N. B. When puddings are put into
the pot the water in general should boil.
Boiled Apple Pudding.
Make a paste with flour, chopped
beef suet, or marrow, a little salt and
water; then knead it well, roll it out
thin, sheet a bowl or bason with it, fill
it with good baking apples pared, cut
into quarters and cored; add lemon peel
grated, cloves, nutmeg, and cinnamon
pounded fine, a small quantity of each.
Lay a thin paste on the top, tie the bason
in a cloth, and let the pudding boil till
well done. When it is to be served up
cut a piece out of the top and mix with
the apples, sugar to the palate, and add
a bit of fresh butter and a little syrup of
quinces.
Apple Dumplings.
Pare large baking apples, core them
with a scoop, fill the cavities with quince
marmalade, roll out (a quarter of an inch
thick) the same kind of paste as for an
apple pudding, mould over each apple a
piece of paste, and boil them separately
in a cloth, or wash them with whites of
eggs with a paste brush, and bake them.
Serve them up with grated nutmeg,
sifted sugar, and fresh butter, in different
saucers.
Baked Apple Pudding.
Stew the apples as for a tourte or
tartlets, and when they are cold add to
them six eggs well beaten; put the mixture
into a dish with puff paste round
the rim, and bake it.
Damson Pudding.
Make paste and sheet a bason in the
same manner as for an apple pudding;
then fill it with ripe or bottled damsons,
cover it with paste, boil it, and when it
is to be served up cut a piece out of the
top, mix with the fruit, sifted sugar to
the palate, and a small quantity of pounded
cinnamon or grated nutmeg.
N. B. Puddings made with gooseberries,
currants, or bullies, may be done
in the same manner.
Damson Pudding another way.
To a pint of cream or milk add six
eggs, four table spoonfuls of sifted flour,
a very little salt, a small quantity of
pounded cinnamon, and whisk them well
together. Have ready ripe or bottled
damsons, rub them through a hair sieve,
add to the mixture a sufficient quantity
of the fine pulp to make it in substance
a little thicker than batter, sweeten it to
the palate, put it into a buttered bason,
flour a cloth and tie over, boil it an hour
and a quarter, and when it is to be
served up turn it out of the bason and
put melted butter over.
N. B. In the same manner may be
done ripe peaches, nectarines, gooseberries,
apricots, green gages, or egg plums;
or instead of boiling may be baked in a
tart pan, sheeted with puff paste.
Baked Fruit Pudding another way.
Rub gooseberries or other ripe fruit
through a hair sieve; and to half a pint
of the fine pulp add a quarter of a pound
of naples biscuits, three ounces of oiled
fresh butter, half a pint of cream, grated
nutmeg, sugar to the palate, and six
eggs. Beat all the ingredients together
for ten minutes; then add slices of citron,
and bake the mixture in a dish with puff
paste round the rim.
Muffin Pudding with dried Cherries.
To a pint and a half of milk add a few
coriander seeds, a bit of lemon peel,
sugar to the palate, and boil them together
ten minutes. Then put four muffins
into a pan, strain the milk over
them, and, when they are cold, mash
them with a wooden spoon; add half a
gill of brandy, half a pound of dried
cherries, a little grated nutmeg, two
ounces of jordan almonds blanched and
pounded very fine, and six eggs well beaten.
Mix all together and boil in a bason,
or bake it in a dish with paste round it.
Potatoe Pudding.
Peel potatoes, steam them, and rub
them through a fine sieve. To half a
pound of pulp add a quarter of a pound
of fresh butter oiled, sifted sugar to the
palate, half a gill of brandy, a little
pounded cinnamon, half a pint of cream,
a quarter of a pound of currants washed
and picked, and eight eggs well beaten.
Mix all together, bake (or boil) the pudding,
and serve it up with melted butter
in a sauceboat.
Carrot Pudding.
Take red carrots, boil them, cut off
the red part, and rub them through a
sieve or tamis cloth. To a quarter of a
pound of pulp add half a pound of crumb
of french bread, sifted sugar, a spoonful
of orange flower water, half a pint of
cream, some slices of candied citron, some
grated nutmeg, a quarter of a pound of
oiled fresh butter, eight eggs well beaten,
and bake it in a dish with a paste round
the rim.
Ice Cream.
Take a pint and a half of good cream,
add to it half a pound of raspberry or
other jams, or ripe fruits, and sifted sugar;
mix them well together and rub through
a fine sieve. Then put it into a freezing
mould, set it in ice and salt, and stir it
till it begins to congeal. After which put
at the bottom of a mould white paper,
fill with the cream, put more paper over,
cover close, set it in ice till well frozen,
and when it is to be turned out for table
dip the mould in cold water. Or it may
be served up in glasses, taking the cream
out of the freezing mould.
Observation on Stores.
As frequent mention is made of syrups,
jams, pounded spices, sugar sifted, grated
nutmeg, and orange flower water, to be
used in puddings and pies; and as a very
small quantity of each is wanted at a
time; it is therefore recommended (as a
saving of trouble and expence) that the
syrups, &c. be made when the fruits are
in season, and preserved in small bottles
with the different stores. But should any
of the receipts be thought too expensive
or rich, it is recommended, likewise, that
a curtailment be made in some of the
articles, pursuing nearly the same process,
they being written in that state only to
shew their first and best manner. The
same observation may be borne in remembrance
with respect to made dishes,
roasting, pastry, or sauces.
Partridge Soup.
Cut to pieces two or three picked and
drawn partridges or pheasants, an old
fowl, a knuckle of veal, some lean ham,
celeri, onions, turnips, a carrot, and a
blade of mace. Put them into a stewpot
with half a pint of water, set them
over a fire close covered, and steam them
till three parts done. Then add three
quarts of beef stock, simmer till the ingredients
are tender, strain the liquor
through a fine sieve, and when cold take
the fat clean off, add a little liquid of
colour, a small quantity of salt and cayenne
pepper, whisk with it two eggs and their
shells, clear it over a good fire, and strain
it through a tamis cloth; then cut half
a middling-sized white cabbage into small
slices, scald it, add to the soup, and boil
it gently till tender.
Collared Eels.
Skin and bone two large eels, lay them
flat, and season with plenty of parsley,
an eschallot chopped very fine, pepper,
salt, beaten spices, and mushroom powder,
a small quantity of each. Then roll
and bind them tight with tape, put them
into a stewpan with a pint of veal stock
and a little lemon juice, simmer them
over a fire till done, put them on a dish,
skim the liquor free from fat, season with
salt to the palate, clear it with two eggs,
strain it through a tamis cloth, boil it
down gently till of a strong jelly, and
put it into a bason. When the eels are
cold, take off the tape, trim the ends,
wipe them dry, serve them up with the
chopped jelly round them, a few bunches
of pickled barberries on their tops, and
slices of lemon round the rim of the dish.
N. B. Should the liquor be pale at the
time it is cleared, add a few drops of
liquid of colour.
White Puddings.
To half a pound of beef marrow chopped
fine, add six ounces of jordan almonds
blanched and pounded quite fine, with
a dessert spoonful of orange flower water,
half a pound of the crumb of french
bread, half a pound of currants washed
and picked, a quarter of a pound of sifted
sugar, a little mace, cloves, and cinnamon
pounded, a gill of mountain wine, and
the yolks of four eggs beaten. Mix all
well together, fill the entrails of a pig
three parts full, tie each end, and boil
them half an hour.
Sausage Meat.
Take the lean meat of young pork
chopped small, and to a pound of it add
a pound of the flay and fat chopped,
some breadcrumbs, nutmeg, allspice and
mace pounded, a small quantity of each,
a little grated lemon peel, sage, parsley,
thyme, and two eschallots, chopped very
fine, an egg beaten, and season with
pepper and salt. Mix all well together,
with the hands, or pound it in a marble
mortar; then make it into cakes and
broil it, or put it into the entrails of a
pig nicely cleaned.
Calf's Liver roasted.
Make an incision in the under part of
a calf's liver, fill it with a stuffing made
with beef marrow, breadcrumbs, grated
nutmeg, one eschallot, two mushrooms,
parsley and thyme chopped fine, and one
egg beaten. Then sew it up, lard it with
small slips of fat bacon, put a piece of veal
caul over, and roast it gently. When it
is to be served up take off the caul, glaize
the top, put under it some good cullis
sauce, and plenty of fried parsley round.
To dry Herbs.
Gather marjoram, savory, thyme,
basil, parsley, &c. on a dry day, when in
season, and not blown. Divide them separately
into small bunches, as in that
state they will dry best. Then hang
them on a line in a dry room or place
where the air has free admission, but no
direct rays of the sun. When they are
perfectly dry (which will require two or
three weeks to accomplish) put them in
rows in boxes close covered, and set them
in a dry place.
To make Anchovie Liquor to be used in Fish
Sauces.
Put into a stewpan one pound of best
anchovies, two quarts of water, two bay
leaves, some whole pepper, a little scraped
horseradish, a sprig of thyme, two blades
of mace, six eschallots chopped small, a
gill of red port, half the rind of a lemon,
a gill of ketchup; boil all together
twenty minutes, and rub them through
a tamis cloth with a wooden spoon.
When the essence is cold put it into pint
bottles, cork them close, and set them in
a dry place.
Potted Lobster.
Boil two live hen lobsters in strong
salt and water till half done; then take the
meat and spawn out of the shells, put it
into a stewpan, add a little beaten and
sifted mace, cloves, nutmeg, pepper, salt,
a small quantity of lemon juice, a spoonful
of essence of ham, a dessert spoonful
of anchovie liquor, the same as for fish
sauce, and simmer them over a fire for
ten minutes. Then pound the meat in
a marble mortar, reduce the liquor almost
to a glaize, put it to the meat with a
quarter of a pound of fresh butter, mix
them well together, press the mixture
down into small flat preserving pots, cover
with clarified butter, and when cold
put white paper over the pots, and set
them in a dry place.
N. B. Prawns, shrimps, crayfish, and
crabs, may be done in the same manner.
To clarify Butter for Potting.
Put fresh butter into a stewpan with
a spoonful of cold water, set it over a
gentle fire till oiled, skim it, and let it
stand till the sediment is settled; then
pour off the oil, and when it begins to
congeal put it over the different ingredients.
Potted Cheese.
To a pound of grated parmezan or
cheshire cheese add three ounces of cold
fresh butter, a little sifted mace, and a
tea spoonful of mustard. Mix all well
in a marble mortar, put it into small pots,
cover with clarified butter, and set the
pots in a cold dry place.
Potted Veal.
Cut small a pound of lean white veal,
put it into a stewpan, with two ounces
of fresh butter, the juice of a lemon,
pepper, salt, sifted mace, a bay leaf, allspice,
cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon, and
mushroom powder, a small quantity of
each, a little parsley, thyme, savory, and
two eschallots chopped fine. Put them
over a fire and stew them ten minutes;
then pound them, and add a pound of
the mellow part of a boiled pickle tongue
and half a pound of cold fresh butter.
Mix them well together with two eggs
beaten; then press the mixture down
tight into small pots, cover them with
paper, put them into a moderate oven,
bake them twenty minutes, and when
the meat is cold put clarified butter over.
Potted Larks or Small Birds.
Pass them with the same ingredients
as for veal, and when they are half done
take them out and put the lean veal in.
When the forcemeat is made put the
birds into the pots with it, bake them,
and proceed in the same manner as with
potted veal.
N. B. Pheasants, partridges, chickens,
&c. may be done in the same way, but
will take a longer time baking.
To dry Morells, Mushrooms, and Champignons.
Take morells and champignons of the
largest size, forced mushrooms of the
size of a shilling, and let them be gathered
fresh; then take off the stalk,
wash them free from grit, drain them
dry with a cloth, run a fine twine through
them with a large needle, hang them up
in a warm dry place, and when they are
perfectly dry put them into paper bags in
boxes close covered. When they are
wanted for use lay them in warm water
for half an hour, and prepare them as if
they were fresh.
Mushroom Powder.
After the mushrooms or champignons
are dried whole they may be set
before a fire till crisp; then grind and
sift them through a fine sieve, and preserve
the powder in small bottles close
corked.
Potted Beef.
Take two pounds of the fillet out of
the inside of a rump of beef and two
pounds of best fat bacon. Cut them
small, put them into a marble mortar,
add to them a small quantity of parsley,
thyme, savory, four eschallots chopped
fine, some pepper, salt, two spoonsful of
essence of ham, a spoonful of mushroom
powder, sifted mace, cloves, and allspice,
a little of each, two eggs beaten, and a
gill of rhenish wine. Pound all well together
till quite fine; then fill small pots
with the mixture, cover with paper, bake
it very gently for forty minutes, and when
cold cover with clarified butter.
Tarragon Vinegar.
Put into a stone jar half a pound of
fresh gathered tarragon leaves and two
quarts of best common vinegar, and let
them ferment a fortnight; then run it
through a flannel bag, and add to it a
quarter of an ounce of isinglass dissolved
in cyder. Put it into a clean jar, let it
stand till fine, pour it off, put it into
small bottles, cork them close, and set
them in a dry place.
N. B. In the same manner may be
done elder flowers, &c. &c.
Walnut Ketchup for Fish Sauces.
To a quart of walnut pickle add a
quarter of a pound of anchovies and
three gills of red port; boil them till reduced
one third, strain it, and when cold
preserve it in small bottles close corked.
To pickle Tongues, &c.
Take large tongues perfectly fresh, cut
some of the root away, make an incision
in the under part, rub them well with
common salt, and lay them in a tub or
pan close covered for four days. Then
pound together two parts of saltpetre,
one part of common salt, one part of
bay salt, and one part of moist sugar.
Rub the tongues well with the mixture,
put all into the pan, and turn them every
two days till pickled enough, which will
be in ten days.
N. B. Pigs faces and hams to be done
in the same manner, but according to
their size let them lay in the different
pickles for longer periods, and when well
coloured smoke them. If it be wished
to have the hams or tongues of a westphalia
flavour add some socho to the
pickle.
India Pickle.
Take large fresh cauliflowers in the
month of July, pick them into small
pieces, wash them clean, put them into
a pan with plenty of salt over them for
three days; then drain and lay them separately
to dry in the sun, repeatedly turning
them till they are almost of a brown
colour, which will require several days.
Then put plenty of whole ginger, slices
of horseradish, peeled garlick, whole long
pepper, peeled eschallots and onions, into
salt and water for one night; drain and
dry them also; and when the ingredients
are ready, boil more than a sufficient
quantity of vinegar to cover them, and to
two quarts of it add an ounce of the best
pale turmeric, and put the flowers and
the other ingredients into stone jars, pour
the vinegar boiling hot over, cover them
till the next day, then boil the pickle
again, and the same on the third day;
after which fill the jars with liquor, cover
them over close with bladder and
white leather, and set them in a dry
place.
N. B. In the same manner may be done
white cabbages cut into half quarters,
whole french beans, heads of celery,
heads of asparagus, onions whole or sliced,
or pickling melons peeled thin, cut into
halves, and formed like an indian mango.
To dry Artichoke Bottoms.
Gather the largest firm artichokes
when in season, cut off the stalks, and
boil them till the leaves and choke can
be taken away. Afterwards put them on
a baking plate and set them in a very slow
heated oven, or hang them up in a warm
place to dry, and when perfectly so put
them into paper bags. When they are
wanted for use lay them in warm water
and salt, and when pliable trim them
neat, braise them in stock and lemon
juice, which will preserve them white,
and when they are done enough, if for
ragout, cut them into pieces; if for
dishes, serve them whole with good
cullis sauce over them.
To pickle Cucumbers, &c.
Gather jerkins not too large, lay them
in a strong brine of salt and water for
three days, then wipe them dry, and put
them into stone jars. Then put a sufficient
quantity of vinegar to cover them
into a preserving pan, add plenty of whole
ginger and black pepper, a middling quantity
of mace, allspice and cloves, some
slices of horseradish, peeled onions, eschallots,
and a small quantity of garlick. Let
the ingredients boil for ten minutes, and
pour them with the liquor over the cucumbers;
cover the jars with cabbage
leaves and a plate, set them in a warm
place, the next day drain the liquor from
them, boil it, and pour over them again,
and if on the third day they are not
green enough, boil the vinegar again,
pour it over, and when cold tie bladder
and white leather over the jars, and set
them in a dry place.
N. B. In the same manner may be done
walnuts, love apples, barberries, capsicums,
french beans, nasturtiums, and
small pickling melons peeled very thin
and cut into quarters.
Rules to be observed in Pickling.
It is recommended that the best common
vinegar be in general used for pickling,
and that it be put into a well-cleaned
copper or brass-preserving pan
just before it is to be put over the fire,
and when it boils not to remain in the
pan.
There can be no occasion of the many
arts that are used in order to preserve
the ingredients green, if the vegetables
are gathered fresh, on a dry day,
when in season, and the process followed
that has been recommended.
Further directions could be given that
might be attended with greater expence,
but which would scarcely answer a better
purpose, excepting only to those who
are in the habit of extensive practice.
To pickle Onions.
Peel small button onions into milk
and water, in which put plenty of salt;
set it over a fire, and when it boils strain
the onions, wipe them dry, and put them
into glasses. Have ready cold white wine
vinegar, in which whole white pepper,
ginger, mace, and slices of horseradish
have been boiled. Pour it over the
onions, and cover them with bladder
and leather.