Eliza Leslie

Miss Leslie's New Cookery Book

Published by Good Press, 2019
goodpress@okpublishing.info
EAN 4057664650825

Table of Contents


PREFACE.
WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.
LIQUID MEASURE.
DRY MEASURE.
GENERAL CONTENTS.
ANIMALS
Beef.
Veal.
Mutton.
Pork.
Venison.
MISS LESLIE'S NEW COOKERY BOOK.
SOUPS.
MUSHROOM SOUP.—
SWEET CORN SOUP.—
VENISON SOUP.—
TOMATO SOUP.—
FAMILY TOMATO SOUP.—
FINE TOMATO SOUP.—
GREEN PEA SOUP.—
EXCELLENT BEAN SOUP.—
SPLIT PEA SOUP.—
ASPARAGUS SOUP.—
CABBAGE SOUP.—
RED CABBAGE SOUP.—
FINE CABBAGE SOUP.—
CAULIFLOWER SOUP.—
FINE ONION SOUP.—
TURNIP SOUP.—
PARSNIP SOUP.—
CARROT SOUP.—
POTATO SOUP.—
CHESTNUT SOUP.—
PORTABLE SOUP.—
PEPPER-POT.—
NOODLE SOUP.—
CHICKEN SOUP.—
DUCK SOUP.—
FRENCH WHITE SOUP.—
COCOA-NUT SOUP.—
ALMOND SOUP
SPRING SOUP.—
SUMMER SOUP.—
AUTUMN SOUP.—
WINTER SOUP.—
VEGETABLE SOUP—
FRENCH POT AU FEU.—
WILD DUCK SOUP.—
VENISON SOUP.—
GAME SOUP.—
SQUATTER'S SOUP.—
MOCK TURTLE SOUP.—
FISH SOUP.—
LOBSTER SOUP.—
CRAB SOUP.—
OYSTER SOUP.—
CLAM SOUP.—
FAST-DAY SOUP.—
FRIDAY SOUP.—
BAKED SOUP.—
FISH.
TO CLEAN FISH.—
TO BOIL FISH.—
FRYING FISH.—
BAKED FISH.—
STEWED FISH.—
SPICED FISH.—
FISH CAKES.—
ROCK-FISH.—
BLACK FISH AND SEA-BASS—
FRESH COD.—
TROUT.—
STEWED TROUT.—
BAKED TROUT.—
SALT COD.—
FRIED SMELTS.—
FRIED CAT-FISH.—
FINE CHOWDER.—
YANKEE CHOWDER.—
CLAM CHOWDER.—
SALMON.—
BOILED SALMON.—
ROASTED SALMON.—
BAKED SALMON.—
BROILED SALMON.—
FRIED SALMON CUTLETS.—
PICKLED SALMON.—
BROILED FRESH MACKEREL.—
FRIED MACKEREL.—
FRIED HALIBUT.—
BOILED TURBOT OR SHEEP'S-HEAD FISH.—
BAKED TURBOT OR SHEEP'S-HEAD FISH.—
SEA BASS WITH TOMATOS.—
BAKED SALMON-TROUT.—
CREAM TROUT.—
STEWED CODFISH.—
FRIED CODFISH.—
STEWED HALIBUT.—
STEWED ROCK-FISH.—
TO KEEP A SHAD FRESH.—
PLANKED SHAD.—
SHELL FISH.
TO CHOOSE OYSTERS.—
TO FEED OYSTERS.—
STEWED OYSTERS.—
FRENCH STEWED OYSTERS.—
FRIED OYSTERS.—
OYSTER FRITTERS.—
CLAM FRITTERS.—
SCOLLOPED CLAMS.—
ROASTED OYSTERS.—
SCOLLOPED OYSTERS.—
PICKLED OYSTERS.—
PICKLED OYSTERS.—
OYSTER PATTIES.—
OYSTER LOAVES.—
OYSTER OMELET.—
BROILED OYSTERS.—
OYSTER PIE.—
CLAM PIE.—
SOFT CRABS.—
TERRAPINS.—
NEW WAY OF DRESSING TERRAPINS.—
A TERRAPIN POT-PIE.—
A SEA-COAST PIE.—
TO DRESS A TURTLE.—
TURTLE PASTY.—
LOBSTERS.—
LOBSTER SALAD—
FINE LOBSTER SALAD—
LOBSTER RISSOLES.—
LOBSTER PUDDING.—
CRABS.—
SHRIMPS.—
LOBSTER SAUCE.—
BEEF.
ROASTING BEEF.—
BROILED BEEF STEAKS.—
FRIED BEEF STEAKS.—
BEEF STEAK WITH OYSTERS.—
CORNED OR SALTED BEEF.—
FRIED CORNED BEEF.—
DRIED AND SMOKED BEEF.—
TO STEW SMOKED BEEF.—
A SPICED ROUND OF BEEF.—
A-LA-MODE BEEF.—
BEEF A-LA-MODE—
BEEF BOUILLI.—
TO STEW COLD CORNED BEEF.—
TO STEW SMOKED BEEF.—
FRENCH BEEF.—
STEWED FRESH BEEF.—
STEWED BEEFSTEAKS WITH OYSTERS.—
TOMATO STEWED BEEF.—
BEEF STEWED WITH ONIONS.—
BEEF STEWED WITH OYSTERS.—
FRENCH STEW.—
POTATO BEEF.—
BEEF AND MUSHROOMS.—
BEEF'S HEART.—
BEEF PATTIES.—
A BEEF STEAK PIE.—
MEAT PIES—
A BEEF STEAK POT-PIE.—
POT-PIES.—
BEEF-STEAK PUDDING.—
TO BOIL TRIPE.—
TRIPE CURRY.—
FRIED TRIPE.—
TONGUES.—
BAKED TONGUE.—
LARDED TONGUE.—
TONGUE TOAST.—
HAM TOAST—
SANDWICHES—
MUTTON.
MUTTON.—
BOILED LOIN OF MUTTON.—
SAUCE FOR BOILED MUTTON.—
BOILED LEG OF MUTTON.—
MUTTON STEAKS STEWED.—
MUTTON CHOPS BROILED.—
MUTTON CHOPS WITH TOMATOS.—
MUTTON STEAKS FRIED.—
POTATO MUTTON CHOPS.—
KEBOBBED MUTTON.—
AN IRISH STEW.—
LAMB.—
ROAST LAMB.—
LAMB STEAKS.—
LAMB CUTLETS.—
LAMB CHOPS, STEWED.—
LARDED LAMB.—
LAMB PIE.—
VEAL.
VEAL.—
ROAST LOIN OF VEAL.—
FILLET OF VEAL.—
ROAST VEAL HASHED.—
VEAL A-LA-MODE.—
TERRAPIN VEAL.—
TO HASH COLD MEAT.—
VEAL CUTLETS IN PAPERS (en papillotes .) —
VEAL STEAKS.—
VEAL CUTLETS.—
KNUCKLE OF VEAL AND BACON.—
SOUTHERN STEW (of veal .) —
VEAL KEBOBBED, (or kibaubed .) —
VEAL FRITTERS.—
VEAL PATTIES.—
FRIED LIVER.—
LARDED LIVER.—
STEWED LIVER.—
LIVER RISSOLES.—
LIVER PIE.—
CHITTERLINGS OR CALF'S TRIPE.—
FRIED CHITTERLINGS.—
BAKED CHITTERLINGS.—
FINE VEAL PIE.—
A PLAIN VEAL PIE.—
VEAL LOAF.—
STEWED CALF'S HEAD.—
EXCELLENT MINCED VEAL.—
VEAL WITH OYSTERS.—
TERRAPIN VEAL.—
VEAL OLIVES.—
VEAL RISSOLES.—
TO PREPARE SWEETBREADS.—
SWEETBREAD CROQUETTES.—
FRICASSEED SWEETBREADS.—
TOMATO SWEETBREADS.—
SWEETBREADS AND CAULIFLOWERS.—
SWEETBREAD OMELET.—
SWEETBREADS AND OYSTERS.—
SWEETBREAD PIES.—
STEWED SWEETBREADS.—
BAKED SWEETBREADS.—
PORK.
PORK.—
TO ROAST PORK.—
SWEET POTATO PORK.—
CHESTNUT PORK.—
ROASTED SPARE-RIB.—
TO DRESS A YOUNG PIG.—
PORK STEAKS, STEWED.—
PORK AND APPLES.—
PORK STEAKS, FRIED.—
PORK APPLE POT-PIE.—
APPLE PORK PIE.—
FILLET OF PORK.—
ITALIAN PORK.—
PORK OLIVES.—
PIGS' FEET, FRIED.—
PORK AND BEANS.—
PORK WITH CORN AND BEANS.—
PORK WITH PEAS PUDDING.—
SAUSAGE-MEAT.—
SAUSAGE DUMPLING.—
VEAL AND SAUSAGE PIE.—
BOLOGNA SAUSAGES.—
HOG'S HEAD CHEESE.—
LIVER PUDDINGS.—
HAM, etc.
BRINE FOR PICKLING MEAT.—
TO CURE HAMS.—
BOILED HAM.—
BAKED HAM.—
MADEIRA HAM.—
BROILED HAM.—
FRIED HAM.—
NICE FRIED HAM.—
SLICED HAM.—
DISGUISED HAM.—
HAM CAKE.—
HAM OMELET.—
HAM TOAST.—
SANDWICHES.—
BISCUIT SANDWICHES.—
POTTED HAM.—
TO PREPARE BACON.—
TO BOIL BACON.—
BACON AND BEANS.—
BROILED HAM OR BACON.—
STEWED HAM.—
STEWED BACON.—
PREPARED LARD.—
VENISON.
HAUNCH OF VENISON.—
VENISON STEAKS, BROILED.—
STEWED VENISON STEAKS.—
HASHED VENISON.—
A FINE VENISON PIE.—
VERY PLAIN VENISON PIE.—
VENISON POT-PIE.—
VENISON HAM.—
RABBITS.—
ROASTED RABBITS.—
RABBITS WITH ONIONS.—
RABBIT POT-PIE.—
PULLED RABBITS.—
FRICASSEED RABBITS.—
A COATED HARE, OR LARGE RABBIT.—
POULTRY AND GAME.
BOILED TURKEY.—
OYSTER TURKEY.—
ROAST TURKEY.—
A BONED TURKEY.—
ROAST GOOSE.—
GOOSE PIE.—
A GIBLET PIE.—
ROAST DUCKS.—
WILD DUCKS.—
BOILED DUCK.—
DUCKS AND PEAS.—
FRICASSEED DUCKS.—
TO ROAST CANVAS-BACK DUCKS.—
CANVAS-BACK DUCKS DRESSED PLAIN.—
TO STEW CANVAS-BACK DUCKS.—
BROILED CANVAS-BACK DUCKS.—
TERRAPIN DUCKS.—
ROAST FOWLS.—
BOILED FOWLS.—
PULLED FOWL.—
FRIED CHICKENS.—
BROILED CHICKENS.—
FRICASSEED CHICKEN.—
CHICKENS STEWED WHOLE.—
FOWL AND OYSTERS.—
FRENCH CHICKEN PIE.—
CHICKEN GUMBO.—
TOMATO CHICKEN.—
TURKEY AND CHICKEN PATTIES.—
CHICKEN RICE PUDDING.—
RICE CROQUETTES.—
CHICKEN POT-PIE.—
CHICKEN CURRY.—
RICE PIE.—
COUNTRY CAPTAIN.—
CURRIED EGGS.—
PARTRIDGES PEAR FASHION—
SALMI OF PARTRIDGES—
ROASTED PARTRIDGES, PHEASANTS, AND QUAILS.—
BIRDS WITH MUSHROOMS.—
BIRDS IN A GROVE—
THATCHED HOUSE PIE—
BIRDS PREPARED FOR LARDING.—
BIRD DUMPLINGS.—
TO ROAST WOODCOCKS OR SNIPES.—
PLOVERS.—
REED BIRDS.—
ROASTED PIGEONS.—
SAUCES.
MELTED BUTTER.—
CLARIFIED BUTTER.—
COLORING FOR SAUCES.—
WHITE THICKENING—
BROWNING.—
BROWNED FLOUR.—
LOBSTER SAUCE.—
SHRIMP SAUCE.—
PICKLED SHRIMPS.—
OYSTER SAUCE.—
CLAM SAUCE.—
EGG SAUCE.—
CELERY SAUCE.—
MINT SAUCE.—
HORSE-RADISH.—
CAULIFLOWER SAUCE.—
BROCCOLI SAUCE.—
PARSLEY SAUCE.—
CRIMPED PARSLEY.—
FENNEL SAUCE.—
SAGE AND ONION SAUCE.—
FINE ONION SAUCE.—
PLAIN ONION SAUCE.—
NASTURTION SAUCE.—
MUSHROOM SAUCE.—
TOMATO SAUCE.—
TARRAGON SAUCE.—
TO MAKE GRAVY.—
MUSHROOM CATCHUP.—
WALNUT CATCHUP.—
TOMATO CATCHUP.—
LEMON CATCHUP.—
CUCUMBER CATCHUP.—
CAMP CATCHUP.—
TARRAGON VINEGAR.—
FINE FRENCH MUSTARD.—
SAUCE ROBERT.—
GREEN MAYONNAISE.—
EPICUREAN SAUCE.—
EAST INDIA SAUCE FOR FISH.—
CURRY POWDER.—
MADRAS CURRY POWDER.—
STORE SAUCES.—
FINE PINK SAUCE.—
WINE SAUCE FOR VENISON OR GAME.—
FINE PUDDING SAUCE.—
VANILLA SAUCE.—
PLAIN SAUCE FOR PUDDING.—
CRANBERRY SAUCE.—
APPLE SAUCE.—
BAKED APPLE SAUCE.—
GOOSEBERRY SAUCE.—
CURRANT SAUCE.—
RIPE PEACH SAUCE.—
DRIED PEACH SAUCE.—
DRIED APPLE SAUCE.—
DAMSON SAUCE.—
FINE PRUNE SAUCE.—
CHESTNUT SAUCE.—
PEA-NUT SAUCE.—
VEGETABLES.
BOILED POTATOS.—
ROAST POTATOS.—
BAKED POTATOS.—
TO BOIL NEW POTATOS.—
MASHED POTATOS.—
POTATO CAKES.—
COUNTRY POTATOS.—
FRIED POTATOS.—
STEWED POTATOS.—
STEWED SWEET POTATOS.—
BOILED CABBAGE.—
AN EXCELLENT WAY OF BOILING CABBAGE.—
CALE CANNON.—
FRIED CABBAGE.—
FORCED CABBAGE—
FRENCH SOUR CROUT.—
DRESSING FOR SLAW.—
SALSIFY FRITTERS.—
SALSIFY OYSTERS.—
MELONGINA OR EGG-PLANT.—
BAKED EGG-PLANTS.—
FRIED BANANAS.—
ONION CUSTARD.—
CAULIFLOWERS.—
BROCCOLI—
CAULIFLOWER OMELET.—
FRIED CAULIFLOWER.—
CAULIFLOWER MACCARONI.—
BROCCOLI AND EGGS.—
FRIED CELERY.—
FRIED ARTICHOKES.—
MUSHROOM OMELET.—
SCOLLOPED TOMATOS.—
ASPARAGUS OMELET.—
STEWED PEAS.—
LETTUCE PEAS.—
PLAIN LETTUCE PEAS.—
TO STEW CARROTS.—
SPINACH.—
TO PREPARE CUCUMBERS.—
STEWED CUCUMBERS.—
A NICE WAY OF COOKING ASPARAGUS.—
ASPARAGUS OYSTERS.—
ONION EGGS.—
EGG BALLS.—
CURRY BALLS.—
TOMATO PASTE.—
DRIED OCHRAS.—
BEEF GUMBO.—
TO BOIL OCHRAS.—
ONIONS.—
TO BOIL GREEN PEAS.—
STEWED PEAS.—
GREEN PEAS.—
GREEN OR STRING BEANS.—
LIMA BEANS.—
SWEET POTATOS.—
BOILED TURNIPS.—
SYDNEY SMITH'S SALAD-DRESSING.—
FINE CHICKEN SALAD.—
CARROTS.—
PARSNIPS.—
BEETS.—
SQUASHES OR CYMLINGS.—
STEWED PUMPKIN.—
YANKEE PUMPKIN PUDDING.—
STEWED MUSHROOMS.—
BAKED MUSHROOMS.—
TO BOIL INDIAN CORN.—
HOMINY.—
CAROLINA GRITS OR SMALL HOMINY.—
SAMP.—
HOMINY CAKES.—
CORN PORRIDGE.—
CORN OYSTERS.—
SUMMER SACCATASH.—
WINTER SACCATASH.—
CAROLINA WAY OF BOILING RICE.—
TOMATOS.—
TO KEEP TOMATO PULP.—
BROILED TOMATOS.—
BUTTON TOMATOS.—
BREAD, PLAIN CAKES, etc.
HINTS ON HEATING OVENS AND BAKING.—
DRIED CORN MEAL YEAST CAKES.—
EXCELLENT HOME-MADE YEAST.—
INDIAN BREAD OR PONE.—
INDIAN RYE BREAD.—
INDIAN WHEAT BREAD.—
BOSTON RYE AND INDIAN BREAD.—
EGG PONE.—
INDIAN MUSH.—
INDIAN HASTY PUDDING.—
INDIAN MEAL GRUEL.—
RYE MUSH.—
COMMON HOE-CAKE.—
COMMON GRIDDLE CAKE.—
PLAIN JOHNNY CAKE.—
VERY PLAIN INDIAN DUMPLINGS.—
INDIAN MUFFINS.—
CORN MEAL BREAKFAST CAKES.—
INDIAN RICE CAKES.—
PUMPKIN INDIAN CAKES.—
EXCELLENT BUCKWHEAT CAKES.—
NICE RYE BATTER CAKES.—
INDIAN CUP CAKES.—
CAROLINA RICE CAKES.—
AUNT LYDIA'S CORN CAKE.—
SHORT CAKE.—
HALF MOONS.—
SOFT MUFFINS.—
SALLY LUNN CAKE.—
DELAWARE CAKES.—
MARYLAND BISCUIT.—
HOME-MADE BREAD.—
ROLLS—
TWIST BREAD.—
BRAN BREAD—
RYE BREAD.—
BREAD BISCUITS.—
BREAD CAKES.—
MILK BISCUIT.—
RUSK.—
DRY RUSKS.—
CROSS BUNS.—
CINNAMON BREAD.—
WAFFLES.—
SOFT CRULLERS.—
DOUGH-NUTS.—
COMMON CRULLERS.—
PLAIN DESSERTS.
MOLASSES PUDDING.—
MOLASSES PIE.—
MOLASSES POT-PIE.—
BATTER PUDDING.—
FRITTERS.—
ORANGE FRITTERS.—
PEACH FRITTERS.—
APPLE OR QUINCE FRITTERS.—
PANCAKES—
JUNKET.—
MILK POTTAGE OR FARMER'S RICE.—
PLAIN RICE PUDDING.—
PLAIN BOILED RICE PUDDING.—
RICE CUPS.—
BREAD PUDDING.—
BREAD AND BUTTER PUDDING.—
A BROWN BETTY.—
SWEETENED SWEET POTATOS.—
APPLE DUMPLINGS.—
PEACH DUMPLINGS.—
APPLE PUDDINGS—
ROLLED PUDDING.—
FRUIT POT-PIES.—
PLAIN BAKED CUSTARD.—
BOILED CUSTARD.—
APPLES BAKED WHOLE.—
BAKED PEARS.—
COUNTRY CHARLOTTE.—
A PLAIN CHARLOTTE.—
GOOSEBERRY FOOL.—
POTATO PASTE.—
VERY PLAIN PIE-CRUST.—
COMMON FRUIT PIES.—
EXCELLENT PLAIN PASTE.—
LEMON BREAD PUDDING.—
PLAIN PLUM PUDDING.—
FINE DESSERTS.
THE BEST PUFF-PASTE.—
SHELLS.—
BORDERS OF PASTE.—
LEMON PUDDING.—
ALMOND PUDDING.—
COCOA-NUT PUDDING.—
SWEET POTATO PUDDING.—
PINE-APPLE TART.—
QUINCE PIES.—
FINE APPLE PIES—
A MERINGUE PUDDING.—
JELLY OR MARMALADE PUDDING.—
CHEESE PUDDING.—
FLORENDINES.—
PEACH PIES.—
A FRUIT CHARLOTTE.—
VANILLA CUSTARDS.—
FINE PLUM PUDDING.—
MINCE PIES.—
CALF'S FEET JELLY.—
CURRANT JELLY.—
WINE JELLY.—
TRIFLE.—
BLANCMANGE.—
FINEST BLANCMANGE.—
FARINA.—
FINE MARROW PUDDING.—
OMELETTE SOUFFLÉ.—
SUNDERLANDS.—
CREAM TART.—
ORANGE COCOA-NUT.—
LEMON TAFFY.—
CHARLOTTE RUSSE.—
ICE CREAM.—
WATER ICES OR SHERBET.—
FLOATING ISLAND.—
FINE CAKES.
PLUM CAKE.—
ICING.—
POUND CAKE.—
QUEEN CAKE—
ORANGE CAKES.—
LEMON CAKES—
SPONGE CAKE.—
ALMOND SPONGE CAKE.—
SPANISH BUNS.—
LADY CAKE.—
CINNAMON CAKE.—
WEST INDIA COCOA-NUT CAKE.—
GOLDEN CAKE.—
SILVER CAKE.—
APEES.—
MARMALADE MERINGUES.—
JUMBLES.—
SCOTCH CAKE.—
JELLY CAKE.—
ALMOND MACAROONS.—
KISSES.—
LAFAYETTE GINGERBREAD.—
GINGER NUTS.—
PIGEON PIE.—
CHICKEN PIE.—
SWEETMEATS.
MARMALADE OR JAMS.—
PRESERVED CITRON MELONS.—
PINE-APPLES PRESERVED.—
PRESERVED LEMONS OR ORANGES.—
PEACHES PRESERVED.—
BRANDY PEACHES.—
PRESERVED TOMATOS.—
PRESERVED QUINCES.—
PRESERVED CRAB-APPLES.—
PRESERVED CHERRIES.—
FINE PRESERVED STRAWBERRIES.—
STRAWBERRIES IN WINE.—
STRAWBERRY WINE.—
COUNTRY PLUMS.—
PICKLES.
INDIA PICKLE.—
PICKLED PEACHES.—
MELON MANGOES.—
MUSHROOMS PICKLED.—
BELL-PEPPERS PICKLED.—
PICKLED CAULIFLOWERS.—
PICKLED BEETS WITH CABBAGE.—
PICKLED CUCUMBERS.—
PICKLED ONIONS.—
WALNUTS OR BUTTERNUTS PICKLED—
PICKLED PLUMS.—
PREPARATIONS FOR THE SICK.
CHICKEN BROTH.—
MUTTON BROTH FOR THE SICK.—
HERB TEAS.—
GRUEL.—
JELLY WATER.—
CARRAGEEN BLANCMANGE.—
FARINA BLANCMANGE.—
BEEF TEA.—
BARLEY WATER.—
WHEY.—
TAPIOCA.—
SWEETBREADS FOR INVALIDS.—
STEWED SMELTS.—
MISCELLANEOUS RECEIPTS.
TEA.—
COFFEE.—
CHOCOLATE.—
MILK TOAST.—
BUTTERED TOAST.—
RASPBERRY VINEGAR.—
MACARONI.—
COMMON OMELET.—
A PLAIN POTATO PUDDING.—
ELLEN CLARK'S PUDDING.—
ARROW-ROOT BISCUIT.—
ONTARIO CAKE.—
NEW-YEAR'S CAKE.—
GOOD YEAST.—
YEAST POWDERS.—
VINEGAR.—
PINK CHAMPAGNE—
SHERRY COBBLER.—
MINT JULEP.—
CAROLINA PUNCH.—
NECTAR.—
CHOCOLATE CARAMEL.—
EGGS TO BOIL.—
POACHED EGGS.—
EGG-NOGG.—
BRAN MUFFINS.—
COTTAGE CHEESE.—
FRENCH HAM PIE.—
FIG PUDDING.—
POKE PLANT.—
RHUBARB TARTS.—
VOL-AU-VENT.—
A SOUFFLÉ PUDDING.—
ICED PLUM PUDDING.—
RENNETS.—
AN EASY WAY OF MAKING BUTTER IN WINTER.—
SWEET POTATO PONE.—
RICE BREAD.—
RICE FLOUR BREAD.—
RICE FLOUR BATTER CAKES.—
GROUND-NUT MACAROONS.—
COLUMBIAN PUDDING.—
A WASHINGTON PUDDING.—
A COTTAGE PUDDING.—
ICE-CREAM CAKES.—
WHIPPED CREAM MERINGUES.—
CHOCOLATE PUFFS.—
COCOA-NUT PUFFS.—
FIG MARMALADE.—
CARRAWAY GINGERBREAD.—
SEA-VOYAGE GINGERBREAD.—
EXCELLENT GROUND RICE PUDDING.—
CHOCOLATE MACAROONS.—
BREAD FRITTERS.—
TO KEEP FRESH BUTTER FOR FRYING STEWING, &c.—
EXCELLENT MUTTON SOUP.—
NEW ENGLAND CREAM CHEESE.—
MOLASSES CANDY.—
WORTH KNOWING.
THE BEST CEMENT FOR JARS.—
A BAIN-MARIE; OR, DOUBLE KETTLE.—
INDEX.

PREFACE.

Table of Contents
decorative chapter break

I have endeavored to render this work a complete manual of domestic cookery in all its branches. It comprises an unusual number of pages, and the receipts are all practical, and practicable—being so carefully and particularly explained as to be easily comprehended by the merest novice in the art. Also, I flatter myself that most of these preparations (if faithfully and liberally followed,) will be found very agreeable to the general taste; always, however, keeping in mind that every ingredient must be of unexceptionable quality, and that good cooking cannot be made out of bad marketing.

I hope those who consult this book will find themselves at no loss, whether required to prepare sumptuous viands "for company," or to furnish a daily supply of nice dishes for an excellent family table; or plain, yet wholesome and palatable food where economy is very expedient.

Eliza Leslie.

Philadelphia, March 28th, 1857.


WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.

Table of Contents

Tested and Arranged by Miss Leslie.

decorative chapter break
Wheat flour one pound of 16 ounces is one quart.
Indian meal one pound 2 ounces is one quart.
Butter, when soft one pound 1 ounce is one quart.
Loaf sugar, broken up, one pound is one quart.
White sugar, powdered, one pound 1 ounce is one quart.
Best brown sugar, one pound 2 ounces is one quart.
Eggs ten eggs weigh one pound.

LIQUID MEASURE.

Table of Contents
Four large table-spoonfuls are half a jill.
Eight large table-spoonfuls are one jill.
Two jills are half a pint.
A common-sized tumbler holds half a pint.
A common-sized wine-glass holds about half a jill.
Two pints are one quart.
Four quarts are one gallon.
About twenty-five drops of any thin liquid will fill a common-sized tea-spoon.
Four table-spoonfuls will generally fill a common-sized wine-glass.
Four wine-glasses will fill a half pint tumbler, or a large coffee-cup.
A quart black bottle holds in reality about a pint and a half; sometimes not so much.
A table-spoonful of salt is about one ounce.

DRY MEASURE.

Table of Contents
Half a gallon is a quarter of a peck.
One gallon is half a peck.
Two gallons are one peck.
Four gallons are half a bushel.
Eight gallons are one bushel.

Throughout this book, the pound is avoirdupois weight—sixteen ounces.


GENERAL CONTENTS.

Table of Contents
decorative chapter break
  PAGE
Soups, 33
Fish, 77
Shell-Fish, 108
Beef, 138
Mutton, 173
Veal, 188
Pork, 216
Ham and Bacon, 235
Venison, 252
Poultry and Game, 265
Sauces, 309
Vegetables, 343
Bread, Plain Cakes, etc., 401
Plain Desserts, 444
Fine Desserts, 469
Fine Cakes, 516
Sweetmeats, 543
Pickles, 568
Preparations for the Sick, 581
Miscellaneous Receipts, 595
Worth Knowing, 645


ANIMALS

Table of Contents

FIGURES EXPLANATORY OF THE PIECES INTO WHICH THE FIVE LARGE ANIMALS ARE DIVIDED BY THE BUTCHERS.

Beef.

Table of Contents
Beef.
  • 1. Sirloin.
  • 2. Rump.
  • 3. Edge Bone.
  • 4. Buttock.
  • 5. Mouse Buttock.
  • 6. Leg.
  • 7. Thick Flank.
  • 8. Veiny Piece.
  • 9. Thin Flank.
  • 10. Fore Rib: 7 Ribs.
  • 11. Middle Rib: 4 Ribs.
  • 12. Chuck Rib: 2 Ribs.
  • 13. Brisket.
  • 14. Shoulder, or Leg of Mutton Piece.
  • 15. Clod.
  • 16. Neck, or Sticking Piece.
  • 17. Shin.
  • 18. Cheek.

Veal.

Table of Contents
Veal.
  • 1. Loin, Best End.
  • 2. Fillet.
  • 3. Loin, Chump End.
  • 4. Hind Knuckle.
  • 5. Neck, Best End.
  • 6. Breast, Best End.
  • 7. Blade Bone.
  • 8. Fore Knuckle.
  • 9. Breast, Brisket End.
  • 10. Neck, Scrag End.

Mutton.

Table of Contents
Mutton.
  • 1. Leg.
  • 2. Shoulder.
  • 3. Loin, Best End.
  • 4. Loin, Chump End.
  • 5. Neck, Best End.
  • 6. Breast.
  • 7. Neck, Scrag End.
  • Note.—A Chine is two Loins; and a Saddle is two Loins and two Necks of the Best End.

Pork.

Table of Contents
Pork.
  • 1. Leg.
  • 2. Hind Loin.
  • 3. Fore Loin.
  • 4. Spare Rib.
  • 5. Hand.
  • 6. Spring.

Venison.

Table of Contents
Venison.
  • 1. Shoulder.
  • 2. Neck.
  • 3. Haunch.
  • 4. Breast.
  • 5. Scrag.


MISS LESLIE'S
NEW
COOKERY BOOK.

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SOUPS.

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It is impossible to have good soup, without a sufficiency of good meat; thoroughly boiled, carefully skimmed, and moderately seasoned. Meat that is too bad for any thing else, is too bad for soup. Cold meat recooked, adds little to its taste or nourishment, and it is in vain to attempt to give poor soup a factitious flavor by the disguise of strong spices, or other substances which are disagreeable or unpalatable to at least one half the eaters, and frequently unwholesome. Rice and barley add to the insipidity of weak soups, having no taste of their own. And even if the meat is good, too large a proportion of water, and too small a quantity of animal substance will render it flat and vapid.

Every family has, or ought to have, some personal knowledge of certain poor people—people to whom their broken victuals would be acceptable. Let then the most of their cold, fresh meat be set apart for those who can ill afford to buy meat in market. To them it will be an important acquisition; while those who indulge in fine clothes, fine furniture, &c., had best be consistent, and allow themselves the nourishment and enjoyment of freshly cooked food for each meal. Therefore where there is no absolute necessity of doing otherwise, let the soup always be made of meat bought expressly for the purpose, and of one sort only, except when the flavor is to be improved by the introduction of ham.

In plain cooking, every dish should have a distinct taste of its natural flavor predominating. Let the soup, for instance, be of beef, mutton, or veal, but not of all three; and a chicken, being overpowered by the meat, adds nothing to the general flavor.

Soup-meat that has been boiled long enough to extract the juices thoroughly, becomes too tasteless to furnish, afterwards, a good dish for the table; with the exception of mutton, which may be eaten very well after it has done duty in the soup-pot, when it is much liked by many persons of simple tastes. Few who are accustomed to living at hotels, can relish hotel soups, which (even in houses where most other things are unexceptionable), is seldom such as can be approved by persons who are familiar with good tables. Hotel soups and hotel hashes, (particularly those that are dignified with French names), are notoriously made of cold scraps, leavings, and in some houses, are the absolute refuse of the kitchen. In most cases, the sight of a hotel stock-pot would cause those who saw it, to forswear soup, &c.

If the directions are exactly followed, the soups contained in the following pages will be found palatable, nutritious, and easily made; but they require plenty of good ingredients.

We have heard French cooks boast of their soup being "delicate." The English would call it "soup meagre." In such a country as America, where good things are abundant, there is no necessity of imbibing the flatulency of weak washy soups.

All soups should be boiled slowly at first, that the essence of the meat may be thoroughly drawn forth. The lid of the pot should be kept close, unless when it is necessary to remove it for taking off the scum, which should be done frequently and carefully. If this is neglected, the scum will boil back again into the soup, spoil it, and make it impure or muddled. When no more scum arises, and the meat is all in rags, dropping from the bones, it is time to put in the vegetables, seasoning, &c., and not till then; and if it should have boiled away too much, then is the time to add a little hot water from another kettle. Add also a large crust of bread or two. It may now be made to boil faster, and the thickening must be put in. This is a table-spoonful or more of flour mixed to a smooth paste with a little water, and enriched with a tea-spoonful of good butter, or beef-dripping. This thickening is indispensable to all soups. Let it be stirred in well. If making a rich soup that requires wine or catchup, let it be added the last thing, just before the soup is taken from the fire.

When all is quite done and thoroughly boiled, cover the bottom of a tureen with small squares of bread or toast, and dip or pour the soup into it, leaving all the bones and shreds of meat in the pot. To let any of the sediment get into the tureen is slovenly and vulgar. Not a particle of this should ever be found in a soup-plate. There are cooks who, if not prevented, will put all the refuse into the tureen; so that, when helped, the plates are half full of shreds of meat and scraps of bone, while all the best of the soup is kept back for the kitchen. This should be looked to. Servants who cannot reconcile it to their conscience to steal money or any very valuable articles, have frequently no hesitation in purloining or keeping to themselves whatever they like in the way of food.

Soup may be colored yellow with grated carrots, red with tomato juice, and green with the juice of pounded spinach—the coloring to be stirred in after the skimming is over. These colorings are improvements both to its look and flavor. It may be browned with scorched flour, kept ready always for the purpose. Never put cloves or allspice into soup—they give it a blackish ashy dirt color, and their taste is so strong as to overpower every thing else. Both these coarse spices are out of use at good tables, and none are introduced in nice cookery but mace, nutmeg, ginger, and cinnamon.

The meat boiled in soup gives out more of its essence, when cut off the bone, and divided into small pieces, always removing the fat. The bones, however, should go in, as they contain much glutinous substance, adding to the strength and thickness of the soup, which cannot be palatable or wholesome unless all the grease is carefully skimmed off. Kitchen grease is used chiefly for soap-fat.

In cold weather, good soup, if carefully covered and kept in a cool place, and boiled over again for half an hour without any additional water, will be better on the second day than on the first.

It is an excellent way in winter to boil the meat and bones on the first day, without any vegetables. Then, when very thick and rich, strain the liquid into a large pan; cover it, and set it away till next morning—it should then be found a thick jelly. Cut it in pieces, having scraped off the sediment from the bottom—then add the vegetables, and boil them in the soup.

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MUSHROOM SOUP.—

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Cut a knuckle of veal, or a neck of mutton, (or both, if they are small,) into large pieces, and remove the bones. Put it into a soup-pot with sufficient water to cover the whole, and season with a little salt and cayenne. Let it boil till the meat is in rags, skimming it well; then strain off the soup into another pot. Have ready a large quart, or a quart and a pint of freshly-gathered mushrooms—cut them into quarters, having removed the stalks. Put them into the soup, adding a quarter of a pound (or more) of fresh butter, divided into bits and rolled in flour. Boil the whole about half an hour longer—try if the mushrooms are tender, and do not take them up till they are perfectly so. Keep the pot lid closely covered, except when you remove the lid to try the mushrooms. Lay at the bottom of the tureen a large slice of buttered toast, (cut into small squares,) and pour the soup upon it. This is a company soup.

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SWEET CORN SOUP.—

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Take a knuckle of veal, and a set of calf's feet. Put them into a soup-pot with some cold boiled ham cut into pieces, and season them with pepper only. Having allowed a quart of water to each pound of meat, pour it on, and let it boil till the meat falls from the bone; strain it, and pour the liquid into a clean pot. If you live in the country, or where milk is plenty, make this soup of milk without any water. All white soups are best of milk. You may boil in this, with the veal and feet, an old fowl, (cut into pieces,) that is too tough for any other purpose. When the soup is well boiled, and the shreds all strained away, have ready (cooked by themselves in another pot) some ears of sweet corn, young and tender. Cut the grains from the cob, mix the corn with fresh butter, season it with pepper, and stir it in the strained soup. Give the whole a short boil, pour it into the tureen, and send it to table.

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VENISON SOUP.—

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Is excellent, made as above, with water instead of milk, and plenty of corn. And it is very convenient for a new settlement.

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TOMATO SOUP.—

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Take a shin or leg of beef, and cut off all the meat. Put it, with the bones, in a large soup-pot, and season it slightly with salt and pepper. Pour on a gallon of water. Boil and skim it well. Have ready half a peck of ripe tomatos, that have been quartered, and pressed or strained through a sieve, so as to be reduced to a pulp. Add half a dozen onions that have been sliced, and a table-spoonful of sugar to lessen a little the acid of the tomatos. When the meat is all to rags, and the whole thoroughly done, (which will not be in less than six hours from the commencement) strain it through a cullender, and thicken it a little with grated bread crumbs.

This soup will be much improved by the addition of a half peck of ochras, peeled, sliced thin, and boiled with the tomatos till quite dissolved.

Before it goes into the tureen, see that there are no shreds of meat or bits of bone left in the soup.

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FAMILY TOMATO SOUP.—

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Take four pounds of the lean of a good piece of fresh beef. The fat is of no use for soup, as it must be skimmed off when boiling. Cut the meat in pieces, season them with a little salt and pepper, and put them into a pot with three quarts of water. The tomatos will supply abundance of liquid. Of these you should have a large quarter of a peck. They should be full-grown, and quite ripe. Cut each tomato into four pieces, and put them into the soup; after it has come to a boil and been skimmed. It will be greatly improved by adding a quarter of a peck of ochras cut into thin round slices. Both tomatos and ochras require long and steady boiling with the meat. To lessen the extreme acid of the tomatos, stir in a heaped table-spoonful of sugar. Add also one large onion, peeled and minced small; and add two or three bits of fresh butter rolled in flour. The soup must boil till the meat is all to rags and the tomatos and ochras entirely dissolved, and their forms undistinguishable. Pour it off carefully from the sediment into the tureen, in the bottom of which have ready some toasted bread, cut into small squares.

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FINE TOMATO SOUP.—

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Take some nice fresh beef, and divest it of the bone and fat. Sprinkle it with a little salt and pepper, and pour on water, allowing to each pound of meat a pint and a half (not more) of water, and boil and skim it till it is very thick and clear, and all the essence seems to be drawn out of the meat. Scald and peel a large portion of ripe tomatos—cut them in quarters, and laying them in a stew-pan, let them cook in their own juice till they are entirely dissolved. When quite done, strain the tomato liquid, and stir into it a little sugar. In a third pan stew an equal quantity of sliced ochras with a very little water; they must be stewed till their shape can no longer be discerned. Strain separately the meat liquor, the tomatos, and the ochras. Mix butter and flour together into a lump; knead it a little, and when all the liquids are done and strained put them into a clean soup-pan, stir in the flour and butter, and give the soup one boil up. Transfer it to your tureen, and stir altogether. The soup made precisely as above will be perfectly smooth and nice. Have little rolls or milk biscuits to eat with it.

This is a tomato soup for dinner company.

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GREEN PEA SOUP.—

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Make a nice soup, in the usual way, of beef, mutton, or knuckle of veal, cutting off all the fat, and using only the lean and the bones, allowing a quart of water to each pound of meat. If the meat is veal, add four or six calf's feet, which will greatly improve the soup. Boil it slowly, (having slightly seasoned it with pepper and salt,) and when it has boiled, and been well skimmed, and no more scum appears, then put in a quart or more of freshly-shelled green peas, with none among them that are old, hard, and yellow; and also a sprig or two of green mint, and a little loaf sugar. Boil the peas till they are entirely dissolved. Then (having removed all the meat and bones) strain the soup through a sieve, and return it to the soup-pot, (which, in the mean time, should have been washed clean,) and stir into it a tea-cupful of green spinach juice, (obtained by pounding some spinach.) Have ready (boiled, or rather stewed in another pot) a quart of young fresh peas, enriched with a piece of fresh butter. These last peas should be boiled tender, but not to a mash. After they are in, give the soup another boil up, and then pour it off into a tureen, in the bottom of which has been laid some toast cut into square bits, with the crust removed. This soup should be of a fine green color, and very thick.

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EXCELLENT BEAN SOUP.—

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Early in the evening of the day before you make the soup, wash clean a large quart of dried white beans in a pan of cold water, and about bedtime pour off that water, and replace it with a fresh panful. Next morning, put on the beans to boil, with only water enough to cook them well, and keep them boiling slowly till they have all bursted, stirring them up frequently from the bottom, lest they should burn. Meantime, prepare in a larger pot, a good soup made of a shin of beef cut into pieces, and the hock of a cold ham, allowing a large quart of water to each pound of meat.

Season it with pepper only, (no salt,) and put in with it a head of celery, split and cut small. Boil the soup (skimming it well) till the meat is all in rags; then take it out, leaving not a morsel in the pot, and put in the boiled beans. Let them boil in the soup till they are undistinguishable, and the soup very thick. Put some small squares of toast in the bottom of a tureen, and pour the soup upon it.

There is said to be nothing better for making soup than the camp-kettle of the army. Many of the common soldiers make their bean soup of surpassing excellence.

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SPLIT PEA SOUP.—

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In buying dried or split peas, see that they are not old and worm-eaten. Wash two quarts of them over night in two or three waters. In the morning make a rich soup of the lean of beef or mutton, and the hock of a ham. Season it with pepper, but no salt. When it has boiled, and been thoroughly skimmed, put in the split peas, with a head of celery cut into small pieces, or else two table-spoonfuls of celery seed. Let it boil till the peas are entirely dissolved and undistinguishable. When it is finished strain the soup through a sieve, divesting it of the thin shreds of meat and bits of bone. Then transfer it to a tureen, in which has been laid some square bits of toast. Stir it up to the bottom directly before it goes to table.

You may boil in the soup (instead of the ham) a good piece (a rib piece, or a fillet) of corned pork, more lean than fat. When it is done, take the pork out of the soup, put it on a dish, and have ready to eat with it a pease pudding boiled by itself, cut in thick slices and laid round the pork. This pudding is made of a quart of split peas, soaked all night, mixed with four beaten eggs and a piece of fresh butter, and tied in a cloth and boiled three or four hours, or till the peas have become a mass.

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ASPARAGUS SOUP.—

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Make in the usual way a nice rich soup of beef or mutton, seasoned with salt and pepper. After it has been well boiled and skimmed, and the meat is all to pieces, strain the soup into another pot, or wash out the same, and return to it the liquid. Have ready a large quantity of fine fresh asparagus, with the stalks cut off close to the green tops or blossoms. It should have been lying in cold water all the time the meat was boiling. Put into the soup half of the asparagus tops, and boil them in it till entirely dissolved, adding a tea-cupful of spinach juice, obtained by pounding fresh spinach in a mortar. Stir the juice well in and it will give a fine green color. Then add the remaining half of the asparagus; having previously boiled them in a small pan by themselves, till they are quite tender, but not till they lose their shape. Give the whole one boil up together. Make some nice slices of toast, (having cut off the crust.) Dip them a minute in hot water. Butter them, lay them in the bottom of the tureen, and pour the soup upon them. This (like green peas) will do for company soup.

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CABBAGE SOUP.—

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Remove the fat and bone from a good piece of fresh beef, or mutton—season it with a little salt and pepper, put it into a soup-pot, with a quart of water allowed to each pound of meat. Boil, and skim it till no more scum is seen on the surface. Then strain it, and thicken it with flour and butter mixed. Have ready a fine fresh cabbage, (a young summer one is best) and after it is well washed through two cold waters, and all the leaves examined to see if any insects have crept between, quarter the cabbage, (removing the stalk) and with a cabbage-cutter, or a strong sharp knife, cut it into shreds. Or you may begin the cabbage whole and cut it into shreds, spirally, going round and round it with the knife. Put the cabbage into the clear soup, and boil it till, upon trial, by taking up a little on a fork, you find it quite tender and perfectly well cooked. Then serve it up in the tureen. This is a family soup.

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RED CABBAGE SOUP.—

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Red cabbages for soup should either be quartered, or cut into shreds; it is made as above, of beef or mutton, and seasoned with salt, pepper, and a jill of strong tarragon vinegar, or a table-spoonful of mixed tarragon leaves, if in summer.

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FINE CABBAGE SOUP.—

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Remove the outside leaves from a fine, fresh, large cabbage. Cut the stalk short, and split it half-way down so as to divide the cabbage into quarters, but do not separate it quite to the bottom. Wash the cabbage, and lay it in cold water for half an hour or more. Then set it over the fire in a pot full of water, adding a little salt, and let it boil slowly for an hour and a half, or more—skimming it well. Then take it out, drain it, and laying it in a deep pan, pour on cold water, and let it remain till the cabbage is cold all through. Next, having drained it from the cold water, cut the cabbage in shreds, (as for cold-slaw,) and put it into a clean pot containing a quart and a pint of boiling milk into which you have stirred a quarter of a pound of nice fresh butter, divided into four bits and rolled in flour, adding a little pepper and a very little salt. Boil it in the milk till thoroughly done and quite tender. Then make some nice toast, cut it into squares, lay it in the bottom of a tureen, and pour the soup on it. This being made without meat is a good soup for Lent. It will be improved by stirring in, towards the last, two or three beaten eggs.

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CAULIFLOWER SOUP.—

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Put into a soup-pot a knuckle of veal, and allow to each pound a quart of water. Add a set of calf's feet that have been singed and scraped, but not skinned; and the hock of a cold boiled ham. Boil it till all the meat is in rags, and the soup very thick, seasoning with cayenne and a few blades of mace, and adding, towards the last, some bits of fresh butter rolled in flour. Boil in another pot, one or two fine cauliflowers. They are best boiled in milk. When quite done and very tender, drain them, cut off the largest stalks, and divide the blossoms into small pieces; put them into a deep covered dish, lay some fresh butter among them, and keep them hot till the veal soup is boiled to its utmost thickness. Then strain it into a soup-tureen, and put into it the cauliflower, grating some nutmeg upon it. This soup will be found very fine, and is an excellent white soup for company.

For Lent this soup may be made without meat, substituting milk, butter, and flour, and eggs, as in the receipt for fine cabbage soup. Season it with mace and nutmeg. If made with milk, &c., put no water on it, but boil the cauliflower in milk from the beginning. This can easily be done where milk is plenty.

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FINE ONION SOUP.—

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Take a fine fresh neck of mutton, and to make a large tureen of soup, you must have a breast of mutton also. Let the meat be divided into chops, season it with a little salt, and put it in a soup-pot—allow a quart of water to each pound of mutton. Boil, and skim it till no more scum arises, and the meat drops in rags from the bones. In a small pot boil in milk a dozen large onions, (or more,) adding pepper, mace, nutmeg, and some bits of fresh butter rolled in flour. The onions should previously be peeled and sliced. When they are quite soft, transfer them to the soup, with the milk, &c., in which they were cooked. Give them one boil in the soup. Then pour it off, or strain it into the tureen, omitting all the sediment, and bones, and shreds of meat. Make some nice slices of toast, dipping each in boiling water, and trimming off all the crust. Cut the toast into small squares, lay them in the bottom of the tureen, and pour the soup upon them. Where there is no objection to onions it will be much liked.

If milk is plenty use it instead of water for onion soup. White soups are always best when made with milk.

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TURNIP SOUP.—

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For a very small family take a neck of mutton, and divide it into steaks, omitting all the fat. For a family of moderate size, take a breast as well as a neck. Put them into a soup-pot with sufficient water to cover them, and let them stew till well browned. Skim them carefully. Then pour on more water, in the proportion of a pint to each pound of meat, and add eight or ten turnips pared and sliced thin, with a very little pepper and salt. Let the soup boil till the turnips are all dissolved, and the meat in rags. Add, towards the last, some bits of butter rolled in flour, and in five minutes afterwards the soup will be done. Carefully remove all the bits of meat and bone before you send the soup to table. It will be found very good, and highly flavored with the turnips.

Onion soup may be made in the same manner. Parsnip soup also, cutting the parsnips into small bits. Or all three—turnips, onions and parsnips, may be used together.

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PARSNIP SOUP.—

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The meat for this soup may either be fresh beef, mutton, or fresh venison. Remove the fat, cut the meat into pieces, add a little salt, and put it into a soup-pot, with an allowance of rather less than a quart of water to each pound. Prepare some fine large parsnips, by first scraping and splitting them, and cutting them into pieces; then putting them into a frying pan, and frying them brown, in fresh butter or nice drippings. When the soup has been boiled till the meat is all in rags, and well skimmed—put into it the fried parsnips and let them boil about ten minutes, but not till they break or go to pieces. Just before you put in the parsnips, stir in a table-spoonful of thickening made with butter and flour, mixed to a smooth paste. When you put it into the tureen to go to table, be sure to leave in the pot all the shreds of meat and bits of bone.

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CARROT SOUP.—

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Take a good piece of fresh beef that has not been previously cooked. Remove the fat. It is of no use in making soup; and as it must all be skimmed off when boiling, it is better to clear it away before the meat goes into the pot. Season the beef with a very little salt and pepper, and allow a small quart of water to each pound. Grate half a dozen or more large carrots on a coarse grater, and put them to boil in the soup with some other carrots; cut them into pieces about two inches long. When all the meat is boiled to rags, and has left the bone, pour off the soup from the sediment, transferring it to a tureen, and sending it to table with bread cut into it.

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POTATO SOUP.—

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Pare and slice thin half a dozen fine potatos and a small onion. Boil them in three large pints of water, till so soft that you can pulp them through a cullender. When returned to the pot add a very little salt and cayenne, and a quarter of a pound of fresh butter, divided into bits, and boil it ten minutes longer. When you put it into the tureen, stir in two table-spoonfuls or more of good cream. This is a soup for fast-days, or for invalids.

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CHESTNUT SOUP.—

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Make, in the best manner, a soup of the lean of fresh beef, mutton, or venison, (seasoned with cayenne and a little salt,) allowing rather less than a quart of water to each pound of meat, skimming and boiling it well, till the meat is all in rags, and drops from the bone. Strain it, and put it into a clean pot. Have ready a quart or more of large chestnuts, boiled and peeled. If roasted, they will be still better. They should be the large Spanish chestnuts. Put the chestnuts into the soup, with some small bits of fresh butter rolled in flour. Boil the soup ten minutes longer, before it goes to table.

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PORTABLE SOUP.—

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This is a very good and nutritious soup, made first into a jelly, and then congealed into hard cakes, resembling glue. If well made, it will keep for many months in a cool, dry place, and when dissolved in hot water or gravy, will afford a fine liquid soup, very convenient to carry in a box on a journey or sea voyage, or to use in a remote place, where fresh meat for soup is not to be had. A piece of this glue, the size of a large walnut, will, when melted in water, become a pint bowl of soup; or by using less water, you may have it much richer. If there is time and opportunity, boil with the piece of soup a seasoning of sliced onion, sweet marjoram, sweet basil, or any herbs you choose. Also, a bit of butter rolled in flour.

To make portable soup, take two shins or legs of beef, two knuckles of veal, and four unskinned calves' feet. Have the bones broken or cracked. Put the whole into a large clean pot that will hold four gallons of water. Pour in, at beginning, only as much water as will cover the meat well, and set it over the fire, to heat gradually till it almost boils. Watch and skim it carefully while any scum rises. Then pour in a quart of cold water to make it throw up all the remaining scum, and then let it come to a good boil, continuing to skim as long as the least scum appears. In this be particular. When the liquid appears perfectly clear and free from grease, pour in the remainder of the water, and let it boil very gently for eight hours. Strain it through a very clean hair sieve into a large stoneware pan, and set it where it will cool quickly. Next day, remove all the remaining grease, and pour the liquid, as quickly as possible, into a three-gallon stew-pan, taking care not to disturb the settlings at the bottom. Keep the pan uncovered, and let it boil as fast as possible over a quick fire. Next, transfer it to a three-quart stew-pan, and skim it again, if necessary. Watch it well, and see that it does not burn, as that would spoil the whole. Take out a little in a spoon, and hold it in the air, to see if it will jelly. If it will not, boil it a little longer. Till it jellies, it is not done.

Have ready some small white ware preserve pots, clean, and quite dry. Fill them with the soup, and let them stand undisturbed till next day. Set, over a slow fire, a large flat-bottomed stew-pan, one-third filled with boiling water. Place in it the pots of soup, seeing it does not reach within two inches of their rims. Let the pots stand uncovered in this water, hot, but without