4 lbs. of coarse lean beef; 3 lbs. of bones; 2 sliced onions; 2 turnips; 2 carrots; bunch of sweet herbs; 3 stalks of celery; pepper and salt; 1 tablespoonful corn-starch, wet up in cold water; 5 quarts of water.
Cut the beef in small strips and fry to a good brown, in plenty of dripping. Take out the meat and lightly fry the bones. Remove these and put with the meat into the soup-pot. Now fry in the same fat the sliced onions; add these, when brown, to the meat and bones, and pour on them the five quarts of water. Cook slowly one hour; take off the scum, and put in the sliced carrots, turnips, the celery and herbs. Boil gently four hours. Strain; pick out the meat and bones, and put, well-seasoned, into the stock-jar. Pulp the vegetables into the soup; season; pour all but two quarts into the stock-jar, and set aside. Cool that left out for to-day, skim and re-heat; add the corn-starch, boil up and serve.
Chop the remains of your stewed fillet; boil, blanch, and cool two sweetbreads, and mince very fine. Chop, also, twelve oysters. Mix all these together with a cup of fine bread-crumbs; add plenty of seasoning and two beaten eggs. Work to a paste; flour your hands and make into a roll seven or eight inches long, and three or four inches in diameter. Envelope this in a crust of good pie-paste, closing the open ends with rounds of paste. Lay in a floured baking-pan, the joined edges downward, and bake in a steady oven. Just before taking it up glaze with butter.
Boil and slice while hot. Put into a frying-pan with a large spoonful of butter, pepper, salt, and powdered parsley. Stir constantly until very hot, and dish. They must not be at all brown or even dry. Serve very hot.
Empty a can of succotash into a saucepan; cover with boiling water, a little salt, and cook half an hour. Turn off the water; pour in a cup of milk, and when this boils, stir in a tablespoonful of butter rolled in flour; season with pepper and salt; boil once, and dish.
If you have none ready made, prepare according to receipt given for Sunday of this week. It is well to make a good supply at a time, since it keeps well in cold weather.
2 cups of made mince-meat—“Atmore’s” is very good; 1½ cups prepared flour; 6 beaten eggs.
Whip the yolks and stir (with additional sugar, if needed,) into the mince-meat. Beat hard for two or three minutes. Put in whisked whites and the flour alternately. Butter a large mould; put in the mixture, leaving room for the swelling of the pudding, and boil, without the intermission of a moment, for five hours. Turn out upon a hot dish; pour brandy over it, and light just as it goes into the dining-room. Eat with rich sauce.