A>>B >>C >> D >>E
F>> G >>H>> I>> J
K >>L>> M>> N>> O
P>> R >>S >> T
U >> V>> W

Favorite Dishes

C >> Carrie V. Shuman >> Favorite Dishes

Pages:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10



_Beef Olives_--Slices of beef one-half inch thick and about four
inches square, spread with a force meat of cold meat, bacon or ham,
with one cup of bread crumbs, the yolks of three eggs, one pint of
gravy or stock, a tablespoon of catsup, salt and pepper to taste. Roll
up the slices of beef and fasten with tiny skewers; brush them over
with egg and crumb and brown slightly in the oven; then put in stew
pan and stew till tender. Serve in gravy in which they were cooked,
with fried or toasted croutons of bread.


ROAST BEEF.

From MRS. MATILDA B. CARSE, of Chicago, Lady Manager,

In roasting meats of all kinds, the method adopted should be the one
that in the most perfect manner preserves the juices inside the meat.
To roast beef in the best possible manner, place the clean-cut side
of the meat upon a _very_ hot pan. Press it close to the pan
until seared and browned. Reverse and sear and brown the other side.
Then put at once in the oven, the heat of which should be firm and
steady, but not too intense, and allow 20 minutes to the pound: if it
is to be rare, less half an hour deducted from the aggregate time on
account of searing. For example, a five-lb. roast of beef will require
one and one-quarter hours, a six-lb. roast one and one-half hours, and
so on. If the oven is in not too hot, the beef requires no basting.
When it is at the proper temperature and the cooking is going all
right, the meat will keep up a gentle sputtering in the pan. A roast
of beef should never be washed but carefully wiped off with a damp
cloth. When meal is done, take it from the oven, cut off the outside
slices, then salt and pepper well. The meat, if roasted in this way,
will be sweet, juicy and tender.


YORKSHIRE PUDDING.

From MRS. HARRIET A. LUCAS of Pennsylvania, Lady Manager.

This pudding, as its name indicates is a great English dish, and to be
used as vegetables are, with _roast beef only_. When vegetables
are scarce, it adds a change to the ménu, which everybody likes but
few know how to make successfully, because _it is very simple_.

For a small family, put one pint of milk into a bowl, a small pinch of
salt: break into this (without beating) two fresh eggs. Now have a
good egg beater in your hand; dust into this one-half pint of sifted
flour; beat vigorously and rub out all the lumps of flour. Have ready
a smaller roasting pan than that in which your beef is roasting, and
put in it a good tablespoonful of sweet lard, _very hot_; pour
your light batter into this, place a spit or wire frame in the
pudding, lift the roast from the pan about 20 minutes before it is
done and put it on the spit, so that the juices of the beef will drop
on to the pudding. About 20 minutes will cook it. Make gravy in the
pan from which the roast has been removed. Slide into a hot meat dish
and serve with the meat. Most cooks persistently raise it by adding
some sort of baking powder, thinking it of no importance that the meat
is over the pudding.

I never yet found a person that did not enjoy a _good_ Yorkshire
pudding. This is a small one, for four or five persons. If you
increase the pudding, also select a larger pan, as the batter should
be fully one-half to an inch in the pan; if not, it will become too
crusty.


ROULARDS.

From MRS. RALPH TRAUTMANN, of New York City, First Vice President
Board of Lady Managers.

Secure slices of beef cut very thin from the round or cross rib. Take
tomatoes, carrots, onions, celery, parsley, and hard boiled eggs, all
chopped very fine. Mix with a good sized piece of butter, cracker
crumbs, a pinch of ginger and salt and pepper to taste. Mix well and
spread on the slices of beef. Make a roll of each slice, folding in
the edges to retain the dressing, and tie up securely with cord. Have
beef suet on the fire; after rendering and straining, add a little
water to prevent scorching and bring to a boil in a flat-bottomed pot
or kettle. Drop in the roulards, rolled and tied; stir with a spoon
until well browned; then set back on the stove and let simmer gently
for two hours with pot tightly covered. Drain well on napkin or sieve,
and garnish with hard boiled eggs, parsley and slices of lemon. Serve
hot. Each roulard should be about the size of an egg.


BEEF LOAF.

From MRS. CARRINGTON MASON, of Tennessee, Alternate Lady Manager.

Three pounds lean finely chopped beef; one dozen rolled butter
crackers; four beaten eggs; one tablespoonful black pepper; one
tablespoonful salt; butter the size of an egg. Mix thoroughly, mold
into two bricks and bake like a roast. This makes a very nice dish
sliced cold for ten. A very little sage can be added if desired.


HASH.

From MRS. ANNIE L. Y. ORFF, of Missouri, Alternate Lady Manager.

Chop any kind of meat fine; to one cupful add one cup of chopped
boiled potatoes, three-fourths cup bread crumbs, put one-half cup
milk, one tablespoon butter, a little pepper and salt in a sauce pan
on the stove; when boiling stir in the hash which should be well mixed
together; take from the fire and add one well-beaten egg; heat gem
pans, and grease; put a spoonful of the hash in each, and put in the
oven till nicely browned.


MUTTON CHOPS.

From MISS MARY B. HANCOCK, of Iowa, Treasurer of State Board and
Alternate Lady Manager.

Sprinkle the chops with salt, pepper and flour; put them in the double
broiler; broil over or before the fire for eight minutes. Serve on a
_hot_ dish with butter, salt, and pepper, or tomato sauce. The
fire for chops should not be as hot as for steak. Chops can be
seasoned with salt and pepper, wrapped in buttered paper, and broiled
ten minutes over a hot fire.


ROAST LAMB.

From MRS. ROBT. B. MITCHELL, of Kansas, Lady Manager.

Brush three ounces of melted butter over the inner part of a well
trimmed quarter of lamb, and strew thick with finely grated bread
crumbs, seasoned with salt, pepper and parsley; roll and skewer four
or five slices of bacon to the outer side; put in rather quick oven.
When thoroughly done (not over cooked) remove the bacon and baste the
meat with well beaten yolk of egg and gravy; cover thick with bread
crumbs and brown nicely. Garnish the platter on which it is served
with sprays of mint. Mint sauce should be an accompaniment. This makes
not only an attractive looking, but delicious roast of lamb.


LAMB CHOPS.

From MRS. HESTER A. HANBACK, of Kansas, Lady Manager.

Trim neatly and hack with sharp knife until tender; dip each piece in
beaten egg and roll in cracker crumbs; place in pan equal quantities
of butter and lard very hot; fry until nicely browned and serve with
green peas.


POTTED TONGUE.

From MRS. FRANK H. DANIELL, of New Hampshire, Alternate Lady Manager.

Take the remains of a cold boiled tongue, remove all the hard parts,
cut the meat into small pieces and afterwards pound it to a smooth
paste. Season with cayenne, and beat with it one-fourth of its weight
in clarified butter. Press it into small jars, cover it one-fourth
inch deep with clarified butter, melted drippings or melted suet. A
smaller proportion of butter will be required if a little of the fat
of the tongue is used instead of the lean only, but the butter must
not be entirely dispensed with. It can be seasoned by the addition of
one teaspoonful of mixed mustard, one saltspoonful of white pepper, a
pinch of cayenne, and as much grated nutmeg as will cover a three-cent
piece to each pound of tongue. Potted tongue is excellent when pounded
with its weight in well dressed cold chicken, cold veal, or partridge.
The tongue must be pounded to a perfectly smooth paste.


VEAL CROQUETTES.

From MRS. ISABELLA BEECHER HOOKER, of Connecticut, Lady Manager.

Mince cold roast or boiled veal; add one-fourth as much of minced
oysters scalded in their own liquor. Season with a dusting of red
pepper, salt, a flavor of onion (two fine cut rounds of onion is
sufficient), a tablespoonful of lemon juice. Stir this into a half
pint of drawn butter made thick with flour; mould the croquettes; roll
them in egg, then in cracker crumbs, salted and peppered; put them
where they will be cold; when chilled put them in a frying basket into
hot fat; two minutes will brown them.


VEAL CROQUETTES.

From MISS KATHARINE L. MIKOR, of Louisiana, Fourth Vice President
Board of Lady Managers.

Two pounds of veal, boiled until done; remove skin and hone and chop
very fine; crumb a half loaf of bread and mix with the veal broth; add
three eggs, two tablespoons of butter, salt, pepper, parsley, etc.
Then form into egg-shaped balls and fry brown in boiling lard. It is
necessary to dust the balls with cracker-dust or flour.


VEAL POT PIE

From MISS SUSAN W. BALL, of Indiana, Alternate Lady Manager.

Take two pounds of veal--a rib piece is good; cut it in small pieces;
put it into a pot, having placed a small plate in the bottom to keep
the meat from burning. Put in two quarts of water, either hot or cold.
Keep it boiling for about an hour and a half. Then make a quart of
flour into biscuit dough; drop in small lumps; cover closely. Twenty
or twenty--five minutes will generally cook them. Be sure that there
is water sufficient to cover the meat entirely when the dumplings are
put in.


CASSELETTES DE VEAU.

From MRS. JAMES R. DEANE, of California, Lady Manager.

This is a very simple, attractive and palatable dish for a luncheon
table and may be used either warm or cold. Yours, cordially,
Ingredients for one dozen: One-quarter pound macaroni; one pound filet
of veal; one ounce butter; one ounce flour; one gill of white stock or
milk; three eggs; pepper; salt, and a little cayenne to taste. Chop
the veal and then pass it twice through a sausage cutter or mincing
machine. Cook the butter and flour together for about ten minutes;
then add the milk or stock; then turn on a plate to cool; then add the
minced veal; then add the seasoning; break the eggs in one by one;
stir well. Boil the macaroni in salt and water until soft; drain it
well and cut into rings about one-quarter inch long; have some small
cups shaped like egg-cups; grease the sides slightly and place in the
bottom of each cup a circular piece of cold boiled ham, fitting
closely. Then arrange the macaroni on the sides, the open part to the
side of the cup; then fill each cup with the chopped veal; cover with
a greased paper and steam for twenty minutes. If eaten warm, use any
gravy that may be used with veal. Will keep for two or three days.


VEAL FRICASSEE.

From MRS. T. J. BUTLER, of Arizona, Lady Manager.

Take a knuckle of veal; boil two hours in sufficient water to cover
it; when thoroughly cooked, remove the meat and thicken the gravy
with one tablespoonful of flour; add a little salt and one egg, well
beaten; pour over the meat and serve hot with slices of lemon.


VEAL LOAF

From MRS. WHITING S. CLARK, of Iowa, Lady Manager.

Three pounds raw veal, chopped fine; two-thirds cup butter or its
equivalent of salt pork, chopped; three eggs, well beaten with
tablespoon milk; four Boston crackers, pounded fine; two even
teaspoons pepper; one teaspoon sage; one tablespoon salt. Mix well in
a loaf and bake two-hours. Baste often with butter and water.




SWEETBREADS


SWEET-BREAD CROQUETTES.

From MRS. SCHUYLER COLFAX, of Indiana, Alternate Lady Manager-at-
Large.

_It gives me great pleasure to send you the recipes you request, and
thus further, in this small way, your unique and most generous
project. The recipe for sweetbread croquettes is from Mrs. Henderson's
Practical Cooking and Dinner Giving, but as it is the best one that I
have ever tried, I send it. Cordially yours,_

Two pair of sweetbreads blanched and cut into dice. Half a box of
mushrooms also cut into dice. Make a sauce by putting into a sauce pan
one and a half ounces of butter, and when it bubbles, sprinkle in two
ounces of flour, mix the butter and flour well together and cook
thoroughly; then put in a gill of strong stock; stock for this is best
made of chicken with some pieces of beef and veal added, or a gill of
cream may be used instead of the stock. When the flour, butter and
stock are well mixed, put in the sweetbreads and mushrooms and stir
over the fire until they are thoroughly heated. Now take them off the
fire, add the beaten yolks of two eggs, return to the fire long enough
to set the eggs but do not allow them to boil. When cool, form into
croquettes, roll first in cracker or bread crumbs, then in egg, and
again in crumbs and fry in boiling lard.


SWEETBREADS AND OYSTERS.

From SEÑORA TERESA ARMIJO DE SYMINGTON, of New Mexico.

Soak and blanch your sweetbreads, cut them into equal sizes and remove
the skins and little pipes. Take about three dozen fine oysters,
strain off the liquor. Put the sweetbreads into a stew pan and cover
them with the oyster liquor; add also, if you have it, three large
spoonfuls of gravy of roast veal and a quarter of a pound of fresh
butter cut into bits and each bit rolled in flour. When the
sweetbreads are done put in the oysters and let them cook for about
five minutes and take them out again; add at the last two wineglasses
of sweet cream; stir up well for a few minutes and serve in a hot
dish.


SWEETBREADS AND MUSHROOMS,

From MRS. P. B. WINSTON, of Minnesota, Alternate Lady Manager.

Take all the fat off sweetbreads; throw into boiling water; add one
teaspoonful of salt and let stand on fire for twenty minutes; take
from fire, remove all skin and pick to pieces. Put a tablespoonful of
butter in a pan and let melt, add tablespoonful flour and one-half
pint of cream; stir until it boils, add sweetbreads and five mushrooms
chopped fine, one-half teaspoonful of salt and a little pepper. Serve
in patties or paper cases.


SWEETBREADS EN COQUILLE.

From MISS JENNIE TORREYSON, of Nevada, Alternate Lady Manager.

One pound sweetbreads. Soak them one hour in salt water; boil till
tender in salt water in which an onion has been put. One can mushrooms
("champignons") cut into small pieces, stew a bit till tender and mix
with sweetbreads after they are boiled till tender and cut into small
pieces. One pint cream, one tablespoonful butter, one tablespoonful
flour. Cream the butter, mixing with the flour till smooth; stir with
the cream, add one tablespoonful of Worcestershire sauce and stir
together over the fire until it boils, then pour it over the
sweetbreads and mushrooms. Serve in shells or cases. Can be used also
without mushrooms if desired.


SWEETBREAD PATTIES.

From MISS WILHELMINE REITZ, of Indiana, Lady Manager.

Wash one pair of sweetbreads; throw them into boiling water and simmer
gently twenty minutes; then throw them into cold water to blanch and
cool. When cool pick them into small pieces, rejecting all the fine
membrane. Chop fine a half can of mushrooms. Put a large tablespoonful
of butter in a sauce pan to melt without browning; add an even
tablespoonful of flour, mix until smooth; add a half pint of cream,
stir continually until it boils; add a half teaspoonful of salt, a
dash of white pepper; the mushrooms and sweetbreads mix and stand over
boiling water for five minutes. Serve in paper cases, silver shells or
in puff-paste cases.




POULTRY


BOILED CHICKEN.

From MRS. GOVERNOR EDWIN C. BURLEIGH, of Maine, Second Vice President
Board of Lady Managers.

Joint the chicken; cut in small pieces; remove the skin; put into
tepid water. Have ready a frying pan with hot melted butter; put the
chicken into the pan and fry to a delicate brown; then put into a
kettle, cover with water and boil very slowly for an hour. Season.
Remove chicken and thicken gravy with flour.


JAMBOLAYA. (A Spanish Creole Dish)

From MISS KATHARINE L. MINOR, of Louisiana, Fourth Vice President
Board of Lady Managers.

Cut up the remains of a chicken or turkey, cover with water, and stew
until the substance is extracted; then shred the meat. Wash one pound
of rice carefully and set aside. Put one tablespoon of lard into a
porcelain-lined saucepan; add a small spoon of finely chopped onion
and a tomato; then put in the shredded fowl and liquid in which it was
boiled, adding the rice, red pepper and salt; sufficient water must be
added to cover the rice, which must cook and steam until soft, but not
wet or like mush.


CHICKEN LIVERS, EN BROCHETTE, WITH BACON.

From MRS. COL. JAMES A. MULLIGAN, of Chicago, Lady Manager.

Take eighteen fresh chicken livers; dry well; season with pepper and
salt; cut each liver in two pieces. Prepare six slices of lean bacon,
broil one minute; cut each slice into six pieces. Take six silver
skewers; run the skewer through the centre of the piece of chicken
liver, then through a slice of bacon, until each skewer is filled with
alternate slices of chicken liver and bacon. Roll each one in olive
oil, then in bread crumbs, and broil five minutes on each side over
moderate fire. Arrange on hot dish, pour Maître d'Hotel butter over
them. Garnish with watercress and serve.


POLLO CON ARROZ.

From SEÑORA DON MANUEL CHAVES, of New Mexico.

Primeramente se pone a herbir el pollo hasta que este bien cosido y
despues so frie una poca de cobolla en manteca junto con el arroz y se
le hecha pimienta entera y se le anade el caldo, colado, en que se
cosio el pollo. Despues se anade el pollo cortado en pedazos pequeños
y se le hecha sal.


POLLO CON TOMATES.

Lomismo que con arroz, con la excepcion que en lugar de arroz se le
echan tomates.


TAMALES DE CHILE.

Lomismo, con la excepcion que en lugar de echarles azucar, canela y
pasas se les echa en el medio carne con chile y sal.


COQUILLES DE VOLAILLE.

From MISS JOSEPHINE SHAKSPEARE, of Louisiana, Lady Manager.

Boil the chicken until very tender; pull the meat from the bones in
flakes; remove all the skin and cut the meat into very small pieces.
Take one-half pint of the chicken broth, one teaspoonful of minced
onion, the same of minced parsley, two tablespoons of butter rubbed
into same quantity of flour, let this cook for a few moments and add
one-half pint of cream or rich milk. Season the meat with a little
cayenne pepper and some salt; add to this a small box of truffles, cut
fine, also a box of mushrooms thinly sliced; stir all this into the
sauce. If there should not be enough to cover the meat, add more
broth, cream, butter and pepper, little by little, until you have
enough sauce and of the right consistency. It should be as thick as
rich cream. When cold add a claret glass of sherry wine. Before taking
from the fire, add to it two more tablespoons of butter, a little at a
time, never add all at once, it may oil it. Fill the shells, sprinkle
bread crumbs on top and about twenty minutes before ready to serve
them, place in a very hot oven to brown. Must not _stand after
cooked_.


CROQUETTES.

From MRS. L. C. GILLESPIE, of Tennessee, Lady Manager.

Breast of a large turkey; five sweetbreads; one and one-half pint of
milk; one-half pound butter; five tablespoonfuls of flour; two eggs.
Chop the turkey and sweetbreads very fine, using a silver knife for
chopping the sweetbreads. Beat the whites and yolks of the eggs
separately as you would for a cake. Mix the eggs, butter, flour and
milk in a porcelain vessel and cook until the mixture comes to the
consistency of cream sauce; and that it may cook smoothly, it will be
necessary to make first a thick paste of the flour by stirring into it
a very small quantity of the milk, gradually thinning it with more of
the milk. While cooking it must be stirred constantly, and as soon as
it is sufficiently thick add to the mixture the chopped turkey and
sweetbreads and cook the whole for two minutes longer. Use no
seasoning but pepper (white or cayenne) and salt to the taste. This
quantity will make twenty-two large croquettes, which are prettiest
moulded in a pear-shaped wine glass. With a little practice you can
mould them in your hand. Have ready some cracker crumbs rolled very
fine and dust like. Fry the croquettes in boiling lard and enough to
cover them. When a rich brown take them out and place on sieve or
brown paper to rid them of the surplus grease. Run them into a well
heated oven for a few minutes before serving. Put a teaspoonful of
cream sauce on the top of each croquette.


CHICKEN CROQUETTES.

From MRS. SARAH H. BIXBY, of Maine, Alternate Lady Manager.

Chop one-half pound chicken quite fine; add one teaspoonful salt; one
saltspoonful pepper; one saltspoonful celery salt; one teaspoon lemon
juice; one tablespoon chopped parsley and a few drops of onion juice;
moisten with the thick cream sauce.

_Thick Cream Sauce_--Melt two tablespoons butter; add two heaping
tablespoons cornstarch; one teaspoon salt and one saltspoon pepper;
add slowly one pint hot cream and beat well.


CURRY OF CHICKEN IN PUFFS.

From SEÑORA TERESA ARMIJO DE SYMINGTON, of New Mexico.

First prepare your puffs by the following recipe. Ingredients: Two
cupfuls of milk, two of flour, two eggs and a piece of butter the size
of an egg melted; a little salt; heat the eggs separately and well;
add the milk to the yolks, then the flour and so on, the whites last;
beat all well together. They may be baked in teacups. This quantity
will make about a dozen puffs.


_Curry of Chicken_--Buy a young chicken, cut it into pieces,
leaving out all the bones; season with pepper and salt to taste; fry
them in butter until well done; cut an onion fine, which fry in the
same butter until brown; add a teacupful of clear stock, a teaspoonful
of sugar. Take about a tablespoonful of curry powder and a little
flour, mix and rub together with a little of the stock until quite
smooth; add to the sauce pan; put in the chicken and let it boil for a
few minutes; just before taking out add the juice of half a lemon.
When this is all ready proceed to fill puffs while hot and serve
immediately. Garnish puffs with parsley and serve a dish of cold slaw
with it.


PILAUF.

From MISS FLORIDE CUNINGHAM, of South Carolina, Lady Manager.

Select a good fat hen, one pound of bacon strip, and one dozen whole
black peppers, and boil together until quite done. Take them out of
the pot, and put into the liquid left a pint and a half of rice,
seasoned with a dessertspoonful of salt, boil twenty minutes, drain
from it any of the juice that may remain, and place the pot again on
the range, where the rice cannot burn, but where it will have the
opportunity to dry thoroughly--each grain remaining apart. Keep the
chicken hot and brown the bacon in the oven. When the rice is ready
serve in an open dish, place the chicken on the top and pour over it a
rich sauce of melted butter and hard boiled eggs chopped fine. The
bacon can be sliced very thin and served with lettuce as a course.


FRICASSEE CHICKEN.

From MRS. HELEN C. BRAYTON, of South Carolina, Vice-President of State
Board and Lady Manager.

Cut the chicken in pieces and stew in as much water as will cover it.
Add a bunch of sweet herbs, white pepper and onions. When cooked, add
the yolks of six eggs, glass of white wine, chopped parsley, butter,
and tablespoonful of cream, all beaten together.


A GOOD ROAST TURKEY.

From MRS. HELEN A. PECK, OF MISSOURI, Alternate Lady Manager-at-
Large.

An ordinary turkey weighing eight to ten pounds requires at least two
hours for proper and thorough cooking. Prepare your fowl and rub dry
with a clean towel; then mix a little pepper and salt and rub both
inside and outside of the turkey before putting in the dressing. Grate
stale bread, about three cups; then add a small teaspoon of pepper and
the same amount of powdered sage or sweet marjoram, salt and a little
salt fat pork chopped very fine or a piece of butter the size of an
egg; use warm water to mix the whole to the consistency of thick
batter; beat an egg and stir into it the last thing; stuff the breast
with half of the dressing, then sew up with coarse white thread and
put the remaining dressing into the body and sew up. Take skewers of
wood or iron and pin the wings closely to the sides, then turn the
neck back and pin that firmly. One can use twine and tie them if they
haven't the skewers. Force the legs down and tie tightly to the body
before placing the turkey in the dripping pan with nearly a pint of
water. Have a brisk fire and baste the turkey at least every fifteen
minutes with these drippings. This frequent basting is of great
importance as it keeps in the juices and allows thorough cooking. Turn
the turkey two or three times during the cooking. During the last half
hour dredge with flour and butter freely. The crisp pasty look so
desirable and appetizing comes from this. Cook gizzard and liver in a
sauce pan on the stove until thoroughly tender, then chop very fine
and put them in the gravy to boil thoroughly in the dripping pan in
the gravy which is delicious, and to be served from a tureen.


DRESSING FOR TURKEY.

From MRS. W. H. FELTON, OF GEORGIA, Lady Manager.

Bread crumbs and cold rice, equal quantities; season with pepper,
onion and salt to taste, mixing well with cup of butter and yolks of
three hard boiled eggs; dress the outside with circles of white hard
boiled eggs and sprigs of parsley or celery.

Pages:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10

Books of The Times: A Media Mogul With Relentless Moxie
Michael Wolff has written a supercilious yet star-struck portrait of Rupert Murdoch, the planet’s most notorious press baron.

Original Sins
In this novel of the 17th century, Morrison performs her deepest excavation yet into America’s history and exhumes our twin original sins: the enslavement of Africans and the near extermination of Native Americans.

Chance and Circumstance
Malcolm Gladwell says success depends not only on brains and drive, but on where we come from — and what we do about it.

Copyright (c) 2007. fullbooks.net. All rights reserved.