NYPL RESEARCH LIBRARIES 3 3433 07897557 4 \ \ \ J'lfl Iff M \ , / X 7 /. ) Tiri E ART OF COOKERY MADE EASY AND REFINED. THE ART OF COOKERY MADE EAST AND REFINED; COMPRISING \MPLE DIRECTIONS FOR PREPARING EVERY ARTICLE REQUISITE FOR FURNISHING THE TABLES OF THE NOBLEMAN, GENTLEMAN, AND TRADESMAN. B Y JOHN MOLLARD, COOK; Lately one of the Proprietors of Freemasons' Tavern, Great Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields ; now removed to Dover Street, Piccadilly, formerly THOMAS'S. SECOND EDITION. LONDON: PRINTED FOR THE AUTHOR, .'. NIJ SOLD BY J. NUNN, GREAT QJJEEN STREET, LINCOLN'S I.N'X FIELDS, AND ALL BOOKSELLERS IN TOWN AND COUNTRY. 1802. >T.Ben<-K-; } Bolt Court, Fleet Strex. PREFACE, J. HE mode of cookery which the author of the following sheets has pursued for a series of years having obtained the most distinguished approbation of the public, has induced him to commit his practice to paper; in doing which, a deviation has been made from the usual intro- ductory methods of other treatises of the kind, in omitting to give particular directions for the choice of fish, meats, poultry, and vegetables, and at what times they respectively might be in sea- son, &c. &c. the author conceiving the simpler method to be the most accep- VI table : and, therefore, as actual know- ledge must ever supersede written forms, he would advise a frequent attendance at the different markets, fully assured that experience will convey greater instruction in marketing than all the theories which could be advanced. There are, never- theless, some useful observations inter- spersed in the course of the work for that purpose, the author having confined himself chiefly to the practical part of cookerv ; h has also given some direc- / v^-' tions in a anch of the confectionary business : in both of hich it has been his constant endeavour that they might be rendered as simpL and easy as pos- sible, and :nat econc ;y might pervade the whole. The rect pts are written for the least possible quantities in the different made- Vll dishes and sauces^ it being a frequent error in most of the books that they are too expensive and too long ; by which means the art has been rendered intri- cate in the extreme, both in theory and practice. > Independent, also, of a close adherence to any given rules, there are other qua- lities essential to the completion of a thorough cook ; such as, an acute taste, a fertile invention, and a rigid attention to cleanliness. The preceding hints and subsequent directions, it is hoped, will prove fully adequate to perfection in cookery ; the work being entirely divested of the many useless receipts from other pro- fessions, (which have been uniformly introduced in books of the like nature,) VI 1 1 and nothing inserted but what has an immediate reference to the art itself. There is prefixed a Bill of Fare for each month in the year, as a specimen of the seasons, which may be altered as judg- ment directs. There is annexed, also, at the end of the volume, an Index, by which, from the first letter or word of the different articles, will be found their respective, receipts. February 2d, 1S02, CONTENTS. I* ACE BEEF stock , I Veal stock, for soups ib. Consume, or the essence of meat 3 Cullis, or a thick gravy ib. Liquid of colour for sauces, &c 3 Benshamelle 4 To make a passing of flour and butter for cullis or benshamelle ib, Soup a la reine 5 Crayfish soup . ib. Vermicelli soup (white) 6 To make a leason ib. Cleared brown stock for gravy soups ib. Rice soup 7 Celery soup , 8 Turnip soup '. ib. Cressey soup ib. Sante, or spring soup 9 Onion soup 10 Green peas soup ib. Old peas soup i r Peas soup another way 12 Giblet soup 1 3 b X CONTENTS. FAGF Fishmeagre soup 14 Mock turtle of calf s head ib. Mutton broth 15 Real turtle 16 Callipee 19 Giaize for hams, larding, roasted poultry, &c. 20 tish plain boiled, how to be prepared 21 Fish generally fried 22 to prepare for frying, 3cc t 23 Broiled fish, how prepared ib. salmon ditto 24 mackarel, common way 25 To stew fish ib. Water souchee of perch, flounders, soles, eels, &c. 26 Roasted pike or sturgeon ib. Bacquillio with herbs 27 Entree of eels 28 of soles ib. of whitings, &c 29 of salmon ib. of smelts, ckc 30 of mackarel 31 Mackarel the german way ib. Olios, or a Spanish dish 32 The olio, how to be made 34 Hodge podge, or english olio 36 Light forcemeat for pies or fowls, &c 38 Forcemeat balls for ragouts, &c ib. Egg for balls 39 Omlets of eggs for garnishing or cutting in slips ib. Ox cheek 40 Beef tails 41 CONTENTS. XI PACE Haricot sauce , 41 Beef collops 4 2 Fillet of beef larded ib. Beef palates 43 Rump of beef a la daube, or braised ib. To make Spanish onion sauce 44 Savoy sauce ib. Ashee sauce 45 Brisket of beef with Spanish onions ib. with ashee or haricot 46 Rump of beef a-la mode ib. Baked beef 47 Marrow bones 48 Mutton rumps marinated ib. To make marinate 49 Haricot mutton cutlets ib. Fillet of mutton with cucumbers 5 Stewed cucumbers ib. Mutton cutlets with potatoes 51 a la Maintenon 52 Cutlets a la Irish stew 53 Pork cutlets with red or white cabbage ib. To stew cabbage 54 Pork cutlets with robert sauce ib. To make robert sauce 55 Pork cutlets another way ib. Fillet of pork roasted 56 Pigs feet and ears ib. To prepare pigs feet and ears 57 Compotte of pigeons , ib. Pigeons a la craupidine 58 b 2 Xli CONTENTS. *A E Pigeons glaizcd 59 Pigeons a la sousell ib. Hashed calf's head 60 Breast of vcaj en gallentine 61 Breast of veal ragout ib. Neck of veal en erison 62 Neck of veal larded 65 Veal cutlets larded ib. Loin of veal a la cream 64, Veal tendrons (brown or white) 65 Celery sauce, (white), for veal, chickens, turkies, &c 66 Celery sauce, (brown), for pullets, 6cc ib. Veal cutlets au natural . . , 67 Veal collops (brown) ib. (white) 68 Fricando veal 69 Sorrel sauce ib. Veal olives 70 Breast of veal with oysters ib. Lamb's head minced 71 JSreast of lamb with benshamelle 72 Breast or tendrons of lamb en matelote ib. of lamb with peas 73 To stew peas for sauce, for lamb, veal, chickens, &c , ib. Lamb cutlets with cucumbers 74 Neck of lamb glaized ., 75 Onion sauce , , ib. Lamb cutlets with tendrons ib. Turnip sauce 75 Lamb cutlets with tendrons another way 77 CONTENTS. X1U P A G ii Shoulder of lamb glaized 77 en epigram 7^ grilled ib. Hind quarter of lamb marinated 79 with spinach 80 Leg of lamb with oysters ib. Currie l Plain rice to be eaten with currie 82 Currie of lobster 83 - of veal ib. of mutton ib. Pig's head currie 84 Directions for roasting ib. Soup for a family 85 To prepare a haunch of venison, or mutton, tor roasting 86 To roast woodcocks or snipes 87 larks 88 To fry breadcrumbs ib. To roast turkies 89 rabbits ib. hares ib. hares another w*ay ib. - pigeons 90 . quails, or ruffs and rees ib. guinea fowls, pea fowls, pullets, chick- ens, and turkey poults 91 - wild fowl ib. ' partridges and pheasants ib. green geese and ducklings ib. other geese and tame ducks ......... 93 XIV CONTENTS. AGE To roast a pig 92 sweetbreads 93 ribs of beef ib. fillet of veal ib. Observations on meat and poultry 94 Stuffing for turkies, hnres, veal, &c ib. Gravy for roast meat, steaks, and poultry 95 Peloe of rice ib. another way 96 Timbol of rice 97 Petit patties of chicken and ham 98 Patties of lobsters or oysters 99 Forcemeat patties ib. Pulpton of chicken, rabbits, &c 100 Fishmeagre pie 101 Raised ham pie, with directions for making a raised crust 102 Raised chicken pie 103 Flat chicken pie (or tourte) ib. Pigeon pie 104 Raised turkey pie with a tongue 105 macaroni pie 106 beef steak pie ib. Veal pie , 107 Pork pie 108 Eel pie 109 Mutton pie ib. Sea pie no Rissoles ib. To fry parsley in Puffs with chicken, &c ib. Wings and legs of fowls with colours 112 CONTENTS. XY PAGE Wings and legs larded and glaized 113 Fowl a la Menehout 114 Pulled chicken (or turkey) ib. Another way 115 Pullet a la Memorancy ib. Chickens with lemon sauce 1 1 6 To make lemon sauce ib. Fricassee of chickens or rabbits (white) 117 Chickens or turkies with celery 118 Turkies, pullets, or chickens, with oyster sauce ib. To make white oyster sauce ib. Chickens with peas no,, 1 20 Fricassee of chickens or rabbits (brown) ib. To fry oysters for a dish 121 Directions for poultry, &c. plain boiled ib. Jugged hare 132 Glaized hare 123 Duck aux naves ib A duck with cucumbers j 24 a la benshamelle 125 Hashed mutton ib. venison 126 fowls 127 hare, wild fowl, pheasants, or partridges 128 Broiled beef steaks ib. Beef steak pudding 129 Oyster sauce for beefsteaks 130 To dress mutton, lamb, or pork chops in a plain manner ib. To dress veal cutlets 131 Minced veal for a dish ib. XVI CONTENTS. PAGE Minced veal another way ; 132 Partridges or pheasants au choux ib. o * __ , with truffles 133 Turkey with truffles 134 Truffle sauce for turkies, &,c ib. Turkey with chesnuts 135 with ragout 136 Rabbits with onions ib. Glaized sweetbreads 137 Matelote of rabbits ib. Sweetbreads en erison 1 38 Stewed giblets plain ib. . with peas 139 Green truffles for a dish ib. Rabbits en gallentine for a dish 140 Ham braised ib. Jerusalem artichokes stewed ........ I4 1 . another way I4 2 Mashed potatoes ib. Cauliflower with parmezan cheese 143 a la sa.sce ib. . a la cream 1 44 Stewed artichoke bottoms ib. French beans a b cream for a dish 145 Stewed cardoons J b- Vegetables in a mould J 4 Broiled mushrooms J 47 Stewed mushrooms (brown) and (white) 147, 148 Mashed turnips l " Potatoes ci earned J 49 Stewed watercresses ib. CONTENTS. XVII PACE A neat dish of vegetables 150 Vegetable pie ib. Fried potatoes 151 Fried onions with parmezan cheese 152 Pickle tongue forced 153 Stewed endive ib. Forced cucu mbers 154 To stew peas for a dish ib. Salad of asparagus 155 Asparagus peas ib. another way ' 5^ Stewed asparagus for sauce J 57 Directions for vegetables 'b- Pickled oysters 15^ Oyster atlets 159 Scollop oysters .... 160 Ovster loaves 161 Ragout of sweetbreads (brown) ib. (white) 162 Poached eggs with forrel or endive 163 Buttered eggs ib. Fried eggs, 3tc 1 64 Eggs a la trip 165 Omlet of eggs ib. Fricassee of tripe 167 LamSs tails and ears ib. Curried atlets 168 To stew maccaroni 1 69 Stewed cheese ib. To prepare a batter for frying different articles, being a sufficient quantity for one dish .... 170 Fried celery , ib. XV111 CONTENTS. JACt Fried peths ............ j 7 1 - sweetbreads .......................... ib. -- artichoke bottoms ...................... ib. - tripe and onions ...................... 172 Hard eggs fried .......................... ib. To dress a lamb's fry ..................... 173 -- --- another way ........... ib . Puffs with forcemeat of vegetables ........... ib Rammequins ........................... j 74 To dress part of a wild boar ... ....... ..... 175 Plovers eggs, to be served up different ways .... 176 Buttered lobsters ......................... ib. Meat cake ............................. 177 Collared pig ............................. 178 Red beef for slices ......................... 170 Savory jelly ............................... j8 o Aspect of fish ............................. I g I -- of meat or fowl ......... , ........... 782 Canopies ................................. 1 83 Salmagundy .............................. ib. Salad of lobster ............................ 1 84 French falacl .............................. 185 Blancmange ............................... ib. Dutch blancmange ......................... 1 86 Riband blancmange ........................ 187 Cleared calves feet jelly ..................... ib. Marbree jelly .............................. 1 88 Bagnets a Teau ............................ 1 89 Apple fritters for a dish ..................... I go Golden pippins a la cream . . ................ ipi -- another way ................. Stewed pippins another way ..... . .......... 1 03 CONTENTS. XIX PACE Cream for pies 193 Mince meat 194 Compote of oranges 195 Tea cream 196 Virgin cream 197 Coffee cream ib. Burnt cream ib. Paftry cream 198 Almond pafte ib. Cheese cakes 199 Almond nuts 200 To make fyllabub ib. Trifle 201 Tarts or tartlets 202 Paste for stringing tartlets ib. To stew apples for tarts 203 Fried puffs with sweetmeats 204 Pyramid paste ib. Icing for a cake 206 Cherries in brandy for desserts ib. To make buns 207 Orgeat ib. Orange marmalade 208 Raspberry jam 209 Qumce jam 310 Green gage jam ... ^, ..;;;;;; ib. Apricot jam 211 Preser ed apricots for tarts or desserts ib. Currant jelly 212 Crisp tart paste 213 Eggs and bacon another way ib. To make puff paste .........* 214 XX CONTENTS. PACK To make an almond cake 215 Almond custards 216 Rhubarb tart ib. Orange pudding ..., 217 Rice pudding 218 Tansey pudding 219 Almond pudding ib. Marrow pudding 22O Bread pudding ib. A rich plum pudding 221 Batter pudding ib. Boiled apple pudding 222 Apple dumplings 223 Baked apple pudding ib. Damson pudding 224 - another way ib. J Baked fruit pudding another way 225 Muffin pudding wirh dried cherries 226 Potatoe pudding 227 Carrot pudding ib. Ice cream 228 Observation on stores ib. Partridge soup , 229 Collared eels 230 White puddings . . < 231 Sausage meat ....,, 232 Calf's liver roasted -..-..- 233 To dry herbs ib. To make anchovie liquor to be used in fifh sauces 234 Potted lobster ib. To clarify butter for potting 235 Potted cheese . . * , 236 CONTENTS. XXI FACE Potted veal 236" larks or final! birds 23,7 To dry morells, mushrooms, and champignons 238 Mushroom powder ib. Potted beef 239 Tarrago n vinegar ib. Walnut ketchup for fish sauces 240 To pickle tongues, &c ib. India pickle 241 To dry artichoke bottoms 243 To pickle cucumbers, &c 244 Rules to be observed in pickling 245 To pickle onions 246 mushrooms ib. beet roots 247 artichoke bottoms 248 large cucumbers 249 red cabbage 250 currants 25 1 '- barberries ib. Sour crout 252 Peas pudding, to be eaten with boiled pork .... 253 Currie, or pepper water 254 Grills and sauce, which are generally eaten after dinner 255 Saline of woodcocks 256 To make a haggess ib. French black puddings 257 Milk punch 258 Plum pottage 259 Candied orange or lemon peels ............. 260 J-emonade or orangeade 261 XX11 CONTENTS. PACE Poivrade sauce for game, Maintenon cutlets, &c. 261 Lobster sauce for fish 262 Oyster sauce for fish 263 Shrimp sauce for fish 264 Dutch sauce for fish ih. Anchovie sauce for fish 265 Observations in respect of fish sauces, &c ib f Apple sauce, for pork, geese, ckc 267 Green sauce for ducklings or green geese 268 Fennel sauce for mackarel ib. Bread sauce, for turkies, game, 6cc 269 Melted butter ib. To make melon citron 270 Rusks, or tops and bottoms 271 Wafers ib. Cracknels 272 To bake pears 273 To clarify sugar ib. Syrup of cloves, &c 274 golden pippins 275 capillaire 276 Flowers in-sugar ib. Syrup of roses 277 To preserve cucumbers ib. currants 278 barberries j 279 Gooseberry fool 280 Sago 281 Oatmeal pottage, or gruel ib. To bottle gooseberries, &c. for tarts 282 another way . 283 Small cakes . . ib. CONTENTS. XX1U PACE Diet bread cake , 284 Sponge biscuits ib. Common seed cake 285 Cinnamon cakes ib. To make red colouring for pippin paste, &c. for garnishing twelfth cakes 286 Twelfth cakes ib. Bristol cakes 287 Hyde park corner cakes 288 Good gingerbread nuts ib. Bride cake 289 Rice cakes 290 Bath cakes 291 Pancakes ib. Shrewsbury cakes 292 Portugal cakes, or heart cakes 293 Macaroons ib. Mirangles 294 Ratafias 295 Lemon puffs ib. Chantilly basket 296 Green codlins, frosted with sugar 297 Pound cake ib. Yest cake 298 Rich plum cake 299 Dried cherries 300 Pippins with rice 301 To make English bread ib. French bread - 302 Pulpton of apples , 303 A sweet omlet of eggs 304 To keep cucumbers for winter use for sauces . . ib. XXIV CONTENTS. PAGE To preserve mushrooms for sauces 305 Pullet roasted with batter ib, Dutch beef , 306 Mushroom ketchup ib. Suet pudding 307 Savoy cake 308 Nutmeg fyrup ib. Sweetbreads with veal and ham 309 Essence of ham for sguces ' 310 Ox heart roasted ib. Slices of cod fried with oysters 311 Small crusts to be eaten with cheese or wine after dinner ib. Devilled almonds 312 Boiled tripe and onions ib. sweetbreads 313 Broiled sweetbreads ." ib. Conclusion, with remarks 314 ERRATA. Page 43, line I and 2, for beef pallets read beef palates. 6r, 19, kalf read halves. 77, 17, tarragon of vinegar read tarragon vinegar, 17-, 18, pickled read picked. 183, 19, jolomongundy read falmagundy. Course Tendlcn* Veal M In 'fir Stewif \Cardoenr Shellfish in an Ornamented, Partridges \ JRoa.tr. ))* .\~rrl,- A; .ftr,,nd FE r Ffflet Mutton Roasted Cttteri ^ to rrwt'i-c Soup- Sweetbread/ \ blind '.-//- Turtlt ,fe. r? JKrest Lamb w* ( Jcottap Jhell* J Small ('him- M/}/ j to remove the Scup Sc. Strand 2* Course PEMBER / J- ttAcf Mitt tun &-,i; TZndive Crimp'tL Ceil fltU/ l Suit If. < 2'? (\>itr.\Y ChanliUie Baskett Foule ' jRump RM w. Spanish Onions// WildHuck fioast SbA House Lamb Roast Sc. Str'tatd Water Souchee- \ to remove Soup 2. Course Wood Cocks Roast JTeete i**Course c An ('/i<>n.i- } ^^~r^-_^^ 2? Course THE ART OF COOKERY. Beef Stock. chuck beef into pieces, put it into a pot, set it on the fire, with a sufficient quantity of water to cover it. When it boils skim it clean; add a bunch of parsley and thyme, cleaned carrots, leeks, onions, turnips, celery, and a little salt. Let the meat boil till tender, skim off the fat, then strain it through a fine hair sieve. Veal Stock, for Soups. TAKE a leg of veal and some lean ham, cut them into pieces, put them into a pan with a quart of water, some peeled carrots, turnips, onions, leeks, and ce- lery; draw them down till nearly tender, B 2 but of no colour; then add a sufficient quantity of beef stock to cover the ingre- dients, boil all together one hour, skim it free from fat, and strain it. Some game drawn down with it will make it excellent. N. B. I have directed the veal stock not to be drawn down to a colour, as in that state it will answer two purposes; first, for white soups; and, secondly, as it might be coloured with a bright liquid to any height, which will be directed for gravy soups. It frequently happens, like- wise, that, if not strictly attended to, it will burn. Consume, or the Essence of Meat. REDUCE veal stock to a good consist- ence, but be careful not to let it colour. Sy or a thick Gravy. TAKE slices of ham, veal, celery, car- rots, turnips, onions, leeks, a small bunch of sweet herbs, some allspice, black pep- per, mace, a piece of lemon-peel, and two bay leaves; put them into a pan with a quart of water, and draw them down till of a light brown colour, but be care- ful not to let it burn; then discharge it with beef stock. When it boils, skim it very clean from fat, and thicken it with flour and water, or flour and butter pass- ed. Let it boil gently three quarters of an hour; season it to the palate with cayenne pepper, lemon juice, and salt; strain it through a tamis cloth or sieve, and add a little liquid of colour, which may be made as in the following receipt. Liquid of Colour for Sauces, &c. PUT a quarter of a pound of the best brown sugar into a frying pan very clean from grease, and half a gill of w r ater; set it over a gentle fire, stirring it with a wood- en spoon till it is thoroughly burnt and of a good bright colour, then discharge it with water; when it boils skim it a B 2, strain it. Put it by for use in a vessel close covered. B'enskamel/e. TAKE white veal, lean ham, turnips, celery, onions cut in pieces, a blade of mace, a little whole white pepper; sweat them down till three parts tender, then discharge it with beef stock. Let it boil, skim it clean, and thicken with flour and water, or flour and butter passed; add to it a sufficient quantity of cream to make it quite white. Let it simmer gently half an hour, and strain it through a tamis cloth. N. B. Let it be of the thickness of light batter. To make a passing of Flour and Butter for Cullis or Bensliamelle. PUT frefh butter into a stewpan over a fire, when it is melted add a sufficient quantity of sifted flour to make it into a 5 paste, and mix them together with a whisk over a very slow fire for ten minutes. Soup a la Reine. TAKE three quarts of veal stock with a blade of mace boiled in it; then strain it to the crumb of four penny french rolls, three quarters of a pound of sw r eet almonds blanched and pounded very fine, likewise the white meat of dressed fowl pounded. Let all simmer together for ten minutes, and rub them through a tamis cloth till the soup is of a proper thickness; season it to the palate with salt; make it boil, and serve it up with a gill of cream in it. Crayfish Soup. TAKE three quarts of vral stock, the crumb of four penny french rolls, the meats of a hen lobster, and half a hundred crayfish pounded, with some live lobster spawn; add all together, make it boil, B 3 skim it clean, rub it through a tamis cloth, make it of a middling thickness, and season to the palate with salt and a little cayenne pepper. Serve it up with crust of french bread cut into small round pieces. Vermicelli Soup, white. TAKE three quarts of veal stock and two ounces of vermicelli, boil them to- gether a quarter of an hour, rub it through a tamis cloth, season with salt, make it boil, skim it, and add a leason. Let it simmer for five minutes. To make the Leason. TAKE the yolks of four eggs, half a pint of cream, and a little salt, mixed well together. Cleared brown Stock for Gravy Soups. TAKE three quarts of veal stock per- fectly free from fat; add a small quantity i 7 of liquid colour to make it of a fine brown; season to the palate with salt and a little cayenne pepper; beat up together two yolks, two whites, and two shells of eggs; whisk them with the stock, set it over a fire, let it boil gently ten minutes, then strain it through a tamis cloth. This stock is required for rice, brown vermi- celli, celery, sante, or turnip soups. N. B. I have directed the brown stock, for gravy soups only, to be cleared with eggs, as that method has been most ap- proved, it being pleasant to the eye, and equally agreeable to the palate. Rice Soup. ADD to three quarts of cleared stock two ounces of rice, washed, picked, par- boiled, and drained dry. Let it boil gently till the rice is tender. B 4 8 Celery Soup. CUT celery heads two inches long then, some ot the white part into small pieces; wash, blanch, and drain it, and put to it three quarts of cleared stock. Make it boil, skim it, and let the celery simmer till tender. Turnip Soup. PARE good and firm turnips, cut them with a knife or scoop into shapes, fry them with a bit of lard till of a light brown colour, then drain and wipe them free from fat (or they may be steamed with a Tery little water, to prevent them from burning, till they are half done); then put to them cleared stock, and boil them gently till tender. Cressey Soup. f TAKE twelve large red carrots, scrape them clean, cut off only the red part in 9 thin slices, and put them in a stewpan with a quart of water; add cleaned turnips, celery, leeks, and onions, cut in pieces, and half a pint of split peas. Stew all to- gether till tender, adding some stock to prevent burning; then rub it through a tamis, and put to the pulp five pints of veal stock and some blanched water-cres- ses; make it boil for twenty minutes, skim it, season it with salt; and serve it up. N. B. To be the thickness of peas soup. Sante, or Spring Soup. PARE, and cut into shapes, turnips and carrots, likewise celery heads about two inches long; wash them, and steam them separately with a very little water till they are three parts done; then cut the white part of the celery into small pieces, like- wise leeks, cabbage, cos lettuces, endive, .and chervil, of each a small quantity; blanch and drain them dry, then put all IO the vegetables together; add to them three quarts of cleared brown stock, and boil them gently till tender. In spring add young green peas, tops of asparagus, and button onions, steamed as the above. N. B. A small piece of bouillie beef may be stewed till tender; and ten minutes before it is to be served up wipe it dry, and put it into the soup with the vege- tables. Onion Soup. TAKE eight middling-sized peeled oni- ons, cut them into very thin slices, pass them with a quarter of a pound of fresh butter and flour till tender; then add three quarts of veal stock ; make it toil twenty minutes; skim it, season it with salt, and add a leason; mix it well with a whisk, make it simmer, and serve it up. Green Peas Soup. TAKE one quart of young green peafr, four turnips pared and cut in the form of II dice, two cos lettuces cut in small slices, two middling-sized onions cut very fine; wash them, add a quarter of a pound of fresh butter, and stew them till nearly done. Then take two quarts of large fresh green peas, and boil them in three quarts of veal stock till tender; strain and pound them, preserving the liquor ; then rub the peas through a tamis, and add the pulp with the liquor to the above herbs, a little flour and water, pepper and salt, and sea- son to the palate, w T ith a bit of sugar if approved. Boil all together half an hour; skim it and when it is to be served up, add the pulp of some boiled parsley rub- bed through a tamis to make it look green. N. B. Cut pieces of bread into thin sippets, dry them before the fire, and serve up on a plate. Old Peas Soup. TAKE chuck beef cut into pieces, knuckles of ham and veal, pickle pork cut into square pieces of half a pound 12 each ; put all into a pot with peeled tur- nips, leeks, onions, carrots, and celery, cut into slices, and some old split peas, with a sufficient quantity of water; when it boils, skim it, and add a very small bunch of dried mint. Let the ingredi- ents boil till tender, then take the mint out, rub the soup through a tamis till of a good thickness; when done, add to the liquor, turnips cut in form of dice, celery and leeks cut small and washed. Make the soup boil, skim it, season with pepper and salt, and serve it up with the pork in it. Some bread cut in form of dice, and fried, to be served up on a dish. N. B. The pork to be taken out when nearly done, and added to the soup half an hour before it is served up. Peas Soup anotJ.er way. PUT the peas with the above-mentioned vegetables into a pot with some water; stew them gently till tender, then add a little dried mint, and rub them through a tamis cloth; put the pulp to some good veal stock, likewise add some turnips i pared and cut into forms like dice, some leeks and celery cut small and blanched; season to the palate with pepper and salt; then making it boil, skim it, and stew r the herbs till tender. Serve it up with pieces of pickle pork in it. N. B. The pickle pork to be cut into small square pieces and boiled till nearly done, and then added to the soup a quar- ter of an hour before it is to be served up to table. Let the soup be of a proper thickness. G'iblet Soup. LET the giblets be scalded, picked clean, and cut in pieces; which done, put them in a stewpan, season them with herbs and spice, the same as for real tur- tle; add some veal stock, stew them till nearly done, pick them free from the herbs, chop the bones down, strain, thick- en, and season the liquor, as for real tur- 14 tie; make it boil, then add it to the giblets, stew them .till tender, and serve them up with egg and forcemeat balls. Fish Meagre Soup. TAKE pieces of different sorts of fish, such as salmon, skate, soles, &c. Sweat them till tender, with turnip, onion, celery, a clove of garlick, and a blade of mace; then add some plain veal broth. Let all simmer together for half an hour; then strain and skim it free from fat; season with salt and cayenne pepper; clear it w j ith w r hite of eggs, and colour w r ith a little saffron. N. B. It may be served up with celery or rice in it. Mock Turtle of Calf s Head. TAKE a scalp cleaned by the butcher, scald it for twenty minutes, then wash it clean, cut it into pieces two inches square, add a gallon of veal stock, and boil them till nearly done. Have ready some pieces of veal cut in form of dice, but four times larger, seasoned with herbs, spices, and onions, the same as real tur- tle; and strain to it the liquor the scalp is boiled in. Let the meat simmer till almost done; pick it, and add to it the scalp with forcemeat and egg balls; then thicken the liquor as for real turtle, and when it boils skim it clean, put it to the meats, and simmer all together half an hour. Mutton Broth. TAKE a neck of mutton cut into pieces, preserving a handsome piece to be served up in the tureen. Put all in a stewpot with three quarts of cold beef stock, or water with a little oatmeal mixed in it, some turnips, onions, leeks, celery cut in pieces, and a small bunch of thyme and parsley. When it boils skim it clean, and take the piece of mutton out when nearly done, and let the other boil till tender; then have ready turnips cut in i6 form of dice, some leeks, celery, half a cabbage, and parsley, all cut small, and some marigolds; wash them, strain the liquor of the meat, skim it free from fat, add it to the ingredients, with the piece of mutton, and a little pearl barley if ap- proved; season with salt, simmer all to- gether till done, and serve it up with toasted bread on a plate. Real Turtle. HANG the turtle up by the hind fins, and cut off the head overnight; in the morning cut off the fore fins at the joints, and the callipee all round; then take out the entrails, and be careful not to break the gall; after which cut off the hind fins and all the meat from the bones, callipee and callipash; then chop the cal- lipee and callipash into pieces; scald them together, the fins being whole, but take care not to let the scales set. When cleaned, chop the fins into pieces four inches long; wash the pieces of the cal- lipee, callipash, and fins, and put them into a pot with the bones and a sufficient quantity of water to cover; then add a bunch of sweet herbs and whole onions, and skim it when the liquor boils. When the fins are nearly done take them out, together with the remainder of the tur- tle, when done, picked free from bone. Then strain the liquor and boil it down till reduced to one third part; after which cut the meat into pieces four times larger than dice; put it into a pot, add a mix- ture of herbs chopped fine, such as knot- ted marjoram, savory, thyme, parsley, a very little basil, some chopped onions, some beaten spices, as allspice, a few cloves, a little mace, black pepper, salt, some veal stock, and the liquor that was reduced. Boil the meat till three parts done, pick it free from herbs, strain the liquor through a tamis sieve, make a pass- ing of flour and three quarters of a pound of fresh butter, mixing it well over a fire for some time, and then add to it madeira wine, (if a turtle of seventy pounds weight, C i8 three pints,) and the liquor of the meat. When it boils, skim it clean, season to the palate with cayenne pepper, lemon juice, and salt, and strain it to the pieces of fins and shell in one pot, and the lean meat into another; and if the turtle pro- duce any real green fat, let it be boiled till done, then strained, cut into pieces, and added to the fins and shell, and then simmer each meat till tender. When it is to be served up, put a little fat at the bottom of the tureens, some lean in the center, and more fat at the top, with egg and force-meat balls, and a few entrails. * N. B. The entrails must be cleaned well, then boiled in water till very tender, and preserved as white as possible, and just before they are strained off add the balls. If a callipash is served up, the shell to be cut down on each side, and chop the pieces for the soup; the remaining part of the back shell to be pasted round with a raised crust, egged, ornamented, and baked, and the soup served in it in the same manner as in the tureens. Callipee. TAKE a quarter of the under part of a turtle of sixty pounds weight, and scald it, and when done, take the shoulder-bone out and fill the cavity with a good high- seasoned forcemeat made with the lean of the turtle; put it into a stewpan, and add a pint of madeira wine, cayenne pep- per, salt, lemon juice, a clove of garlick,*,* a little mace, a few cloves and allspice tied in a bag, a bunch of sweet herbs, some whole onions, and three quarts of good beef stock. Stew gently till three parts done ; then take the turtle and put it into another stewpan, with some of the en- trails boiled and some egg balls; add a little thickening of flour and butter to the liquor, let it boil, and strain it to the turtle, &c. then stew it till ten- der, and the liquor almost reduced to a glaize. Serve it up in a deep dish, C 9 20 pasted round as a callipash, ornamented and baked. N. B. I think the above mode of serv- ing it up in a dish the best, as it fre- quently happens that the shell of the cal- lipee is not properly baked. Glaize for Hams, Larding, roafted Poul- try) &c. TAKE a leg of veal,, lean of ham, beef, some indifferent fowls, celery, turnips, carrots, onions, leeks cleaned and cut into pieces, a little lemon peel, mace, and black pepper, a small quantity of each; add three quarts of water, sweat them down till three parts done, dis- charge with water, and boil it till the goodness is extracted; then skim it, and strain the liquor into a large pan. Next day take the fat from it very clean; set the stock over a fire, and when warm clear it with whites and a few yolks of eggs; then add a little colour and strain 2,1 . it through a tamis; boil it quick till re- duced to a glaize, and be careful not to let it burn. N. B. In the same manner may be made glaize of separate herbs or roots, which will be serviceable on board a ship, or in the country, where herbs or roots cannot be procured at all times; and they are to be preserved in bottles, as they will not, when cold, be of a portable substance. Fisli plain boiled to be prepared tlius : PUT them in clean boiling pump water well salted, and when served up to be garnished with fresh picked parsley and scraped horseradish; except salt fish, which should be properly soaked,, then cut in pieces and put in cold water> and when it boils let it simmer six or eight minutes, and serve it up on a napkin with boiled parsnips and potatoes round, or on a plate, and egg sauce in a boat. c 3 N. B. Fish should be chosen very fresh and of -good appearance, it adding as much to their beauty as gratifying to the pa- late when dressed, there being in my opinion but two sorts good and bad. But as an exception to the above obser- vation, skate will be better for eating if kept for one or two days in a cool place before it is dressed. Fish generally fried, PIECES of skate. Whitings. Fillets of haddocks. Smelts Soles. Perch. Flounders. Slices of hollibut. Slices of cod. To prepare the above for frying, WIPE the different sorts of fish dry, beat yolk of eggs, and spread it over them with a paste brush; then put crumbs of bread over the egg. Have plenty of lard in an iron frying pan, and when it almost boils put a proper quantity and fry them of a fine gold colour; drain them dr* 7 , and serve them up with fried parsley. N. B. The crumbs to be rubbed through a hair sieve. The parsley also to be picked, washed, and dried with a cloth, then to be put into the lard not very hot, and fried of a green colour. Sprinkle a little salt over. Broiled Fish prepared thus: WIPE the fish dry, flour them well, and have the gridiron clean; then rub C 4 24 the bars with a veal caul, and put the fish at a proper distance. Broil them gently over a clear coal fire till of a fine colour, and serve them up directly. N. B. Fish in general to be floured, except herrings, which are only to be scored with a knife, and the following methods of broiling other fish to be ob- served. Broiled Salmon to be prepared thus : *.- TAKE pieces or slices of salmon, wipe them dry, dip them in sweet oil, and season with pepper and salt; fold them in pieces of writing paper, broil over a clear fire, and serve them up very hot. N. B. In the same manner are to be done red mullets, &c. Brolkd Mackarel, common way. WIPE them dry, split them down the back, sprinkle with pepper and salt, and broil them gently. To stew Fish. ADD to some cullis a few chopped eshallots, anchovies, a bay leaf, horsera- dish scraped, a little quantity of lemon peel, and some red port; season it well w r ith cayenne pepper, salt, and juice of lemon, and when it boils let it be of a proper thickness, and strain it to the fish; then stew it gently, and serve it up in a deep dish with the liquor, arid fried bread round it. If carp or tench, some of the hard roe mixed in batter and fried in pieces. The roes likewise of different fish may be stewed in the same manner, and served up as a dish of themselves. Eels, soles, or other fish may be done the same way. 36 Water souchee of Perch, Flounders, Soles, Eels, &c. TAKE perch cleaned and fresh crimp- ed; put them into boiling pump water well-seasoned with salt, and when they boil, skim them clean. Take them out with a large skimmer, put them into a deep dish, strew parsley roots and scalded parsley over, and add some of the liquor. Serve them up as hot as possible, with slices of brown bread and butter on a plate. N. B. The time the fish are to boil must be according to their size ; and the parsley roots are to be cleaned, cut into slips, and boiled by themselves till ten- der. Roqfled Pike or Sturgeon. LET the fish be well cleaned, then make a stuffing of capers, anchovies, 7 27 parsley and thyme chopped fine, a little grated nutmeg and lemon peel, pepper, salt, breadcrumbs, fresh butter, and an egg. Fill the fish and sew it up; turn it round, and fasten the head with the tail; then egg the fish over and bread- crumb it; after which bake or roast it gently till done, and of a good brown colour. Serve it up w 7 ith a sauce over, made of cullis, fresh butter, cayenne, anchovie essence, and lemon pickle. Bacqmlllo with Herbs. LET the fish be well soaked ; then boil them and pick free from bone. Wash and chop small some spinach, sorrel, green onions, and parsley; after which add fresh butter, essence of anchovies, cayenne pepper, and plenty of the juice of Seville oranges. Sweat the herbs down, add the fish, and simmer them till tender. Entree of Eels. TAKE good-sized eels, bone and cut them in pieces of three inches long; pass them over a slow fire in a small quantity of sweet herbs and eshallots, fresh butter, pepper, salt, and lemon juice. When three parts done put all on a dish, dip each piece in the liquor, breadcrumb, and broil them over a clear fire. Serve them up with anchovie sauce in a boat. Entree of Soles. LET good-sized soles be cleaned and filletted; roll them up, put them into a stewpan, add a little fresh butter, lemon juice, pepper, and salt, and simmer them over a slow fire till done. Serve them up with a sauce over, made of button onions, mushrooms, egg balls, pickle cucumbers scooped round, slices of sweet- 59 breads, and good strong cullis coloured with lobster spawn. N. B. The above fillets may be fried, and served up with the sauce round. Entree of Whitings, &c. TAKE fillets of haddocks or whitings, wet them with whites of eggs, and lay upon them slices of salmon, seasoned with pepper and salt. Put them into a stew- pan with a little fresh butter; stew the fish over a slow fire till done, with the pan close covered. Serve them up with a sauce over, made with chopped parsley, chopped mushrooms and eshallots, a little rhenish wine, mustard, and cullis, mixed and boiled together for ten minutes. Entree of Salmon. MAKE white paper cases, and put a little sweet oil at the bottom of each. 3 Cut into pieces some fresh salmon, pep- per and salt them, and put them into the cases; then set them over a fire on a baking plate and in a stewpan covered over, with a fire at top and bottom. When broiled enough, serve them up with poached eggs on the top of the sal- mon, and anchovie sauce in a boat. Entree of Smelts, &c. CLEAN, turn round, and fry of a good colour, some fresh smelts; then three parts boil a slice of fresh crimped cod cut two inches thick; pull it into flakes, have ready some benshamelle, whisk it with the yolks of two eggs, add the flakes of the cod, season with salt and lemon juice to the palate, and simmer the fish over a slow stove till done. Serve it up with the fried smelts round the dish, and a few over the stew. Entree of MackareL SPLIT them down the back, season with pepper and salt, and lay a sprig of fennel in them. Broil them gently, and when served up, the fennel to be taken out, and a mixture of fresh butter, chop- ped parsley, green onions, pepper, salt, and plenty of lemon juice to be put in its stead. Mackarel the German way. SPLIT them down the back and season with pepper and salt; broil them, and serve them up with the following sauce in a boat: pick and wash fennel, parsley, mint, thyme, and green onions, a small quantity of each. Boil them tender in a little veal broth; then chop and add to them some fresh butter, the liquor, a grated nutmeg, the juice of half a lemon, a little cayenne pepper and salt. Let it boil, and make it of a proper thickness with flour and water. Olios, or a Spanish Dish. THE articles that are wanted consist of the following: viz. Leg of mutton of ten pounds. Leg of veal ditto. Chuck beef ditto. Lean ham six pounds. Best end of a neck of mutton. Breast of veal, small. Two pieces of bouillie beef of one pound each. Two pair of pigs feet and ears. A bologna sausage. A fowl. A pheasant. Two partridges. Two ruffs and rees. Two quails. Two teal. Two pigeons. 33 Two rabbits. One hare. Two stags tongues. One quart of burgonza peas. Turnips. Carrots. Celery. Onions. Leeks. Parsley. Thyme. Garlick. Allspice. Cloves. Mace. Nutmegs. Black pepper. Haricot roots. Fried bread. Eggs. Saffron, and Lemons, D 34 The Olio to be made as follows: TAKE the beef, veal, mutton, and ham; cut them into pieces, put them into a pot, cover with water, and when it boils skim clean; then add carrots, celery, turnips, onions, leeks, garlick, parsley, and thyme, tied in a bunch; allspice, cloves, nutmeg, black pepper, mace, and a little ginger, put in a cloth. Boil all together till it becomes a strong stock, and strain it. Then cut the breaffc of veal into tendrons, and beft end of neck of mutton into steaks, and half fry them; pigs feet and ears cleaned; hare cut into joints and daubed with bacon; bouillie beef tied round with packthread; poultry trussed very neat, with the legs drawn in close; the tongues scalded and cleaned; and the rabbits cut into pieces. When the different articles are ready, blanch and wash them, then braise each 35 in a separate stewpan, with the stock that was strained. When the different things are braised enough, pour the liquors from them into a pan, leaving a little with each to preserve from burn- ing. When they are to be served up, skim the liquor very clean, and clear it with whites of eggs ; then cut tur- nips and carrots into haricots, some but- ton onions peeled, and heads of celery trimmed neat; after which blanch them, cut the bologna sausage into slices, boil the burgonza peas till three parts done, then mix all together, add some of the cleared liquor, and stew them gently till done. The remainder of the liquor to be coloured with a little saffron, and served up in a tureen with a few bur- gonza peas in it. When the olio is to be served up, take a very large deep dish, make several partitions in it with slips of fried bread dipped in w 7 hites of eggs, and set it in a D 2 36 slow oven or before a fire; then lay the tendrons, birds, beef, mutton, fowls, &c. alternately in the partitions, and serve up with the haricot roots, &c. over. N. B. The whole of the liquor to be seasoned to the palate with cayenne pep- per and lemon juice. [This receipt for a Spanish olio is only written to shew how expensive a dish may be made, and which I saw done. As a substitute I have introduced the following english one, which has been generally approved; and I think, with particular attention, it will exceed the former in flavour.] Hodge Podge, or Eng/i/k Olio. TAKE four beef tails cut into joints, bouille beef two pieces about a quarter of a pound each, and two pieces of pic- 37 kle pork of the same weight. Put them into a pot, cover with water, and when it boils skim clean, and add half a sa- voy, two ounces of champignons, some turnips, carrots, onions, leeks, celery, one bay leaf, whole black pepper, a few all- spice, and a small quantity of mace. When the meats are nearly done, add two quarts of strong veal stock, and when tender take them out, put them into a deep dish, and preserve them hot till they are to be served up; then strain the liquor, skim it free from fat, season to the palate with cayenne pepper, a little salt, and lemon juice, and add a small quantity of colour; then have ready tur- nips and carrots cut into haricots, some celery heads trimmed three inches Ions;, and some whole onions peeled. Let them be sweated down, till three parts tender, in separate stewpans, and strain the essences of them to the above liquor;, clear it with whites of eggs, strain it through a tamis cloth, mix the vegeta- bles, add the liquor to them, boil them 38 gently for ten minutes, and serve them over the meats. Light Forcemeat for Pies or Fowls, f?c. CUT in pieces lean veal, ham, and fat bacon; add chopped parsley, thyme, eschallots, a little beaten spices, juice of lemon, pepper and salt, a few cleaned mushrooms, or mushroom powder. Put over a slow fire till three parts done; then pound in a marble mortar till very fine, and add a sufficient quantity of yolk of raw eggs and breadcrumbs to bind it. Forcemeat Balls for Ragouts, CUT lean veal and beef suet into small pieces, and add chopped parsley, thyme, marjoram, savory, eschallots, pepper, salt, breadcrumbs, a little grated nutmeg, and yolk of raw eggs. Pound ail well toge- ther, and roll into balls. 39 N. B. The balls should be boiled or fried before they are added to any thing. Egg for Balls. BOIL six eggs, take the yolks, pound them, and add a little flour and salt, and the yolks of two raw eggs. Mix all well together, and roll into balls. They muft be boiled before added to any made 'dish or soup. Om/ets of Eggs for garni/king or cutting in Slips. ' >*. TAKE eggs, break them, -and put the yolks and whites into separate pans; beat them up with a little salt, and then put them again into separate earthen vessels rubbed with sweet oil. Have ready a pot of boiling water over a fire, put them in close covered, and let the omlets steam till thoroughly done. Ox Cheek. BONE and wash clean the cheek; then tie it up like a rump of beef, put it in a braising pan with some good stock (or water); when it boils, skim it, add two bay leaves, a little garlick, some onions, champignons, celery, carrots, half a small cabbage, turnips, a bundle of sweet herbs, whole black pepper, a little allspice and mace. Let the cheek stew till near done, then cut off the ftrings, put the cheek in a clean stewpan, strain the liquor through a sieve, skim off the fat very clean, season with lemon juice, cayenne pepper and salt, add a little colour, clear it with eggs, strain it through a tamis cloth to the cheek, and stew it till tender. Beef Tails. CUT the tails into joints, and blanch and wash them; then braise them till tender, drain them dry, and serve them up with haricot sauce over. Haricot Sauce. TAKE clean turnips and carrots, and scoop or cut them into shapes, some ce- lery heads cut about two inches long, button onions peeled, some dry or green morells, and artichoke bottoms cut into pieces. Let them all be blanched in separate stewpans till three parts done; then drain and put them all together with some small mushrooms stewed, and a good cullis well-seasoned, and simmer the vegetables till done, Beef Collops. TAKE the fillet from the under part of a rump of beef, cut it into small thin slices, and fry them till three parts done ; then add to them slices of pickle cucum- bers, small mushrooms stewed, blanched oysters, some good-seasoned cullis, and stew them till tender. Fillet of Beef larded. TAKE a fillet or piece of a rump, force it and lard it with bacon, turn it round like a fillet of veal, roaft it, glaize the top, and serve it up with the following sauce made with cullis, lemon pickle, and ketchup ; add likewise some scalded celery heads and button onions; then stew till tender, and put the sauce round the beef. 43 Beef Pallets. SCALD and scale the pallets clean, and boil them till tender; when cool roll them up with forcemeat in the middle, and tie them with thread; braise them as white as possible and serve them up with a sauce made of ham, breast of fowl, pickle cucumbers, omlets of eggs, and good-seasoned cullis or benshamelle. N. B. The ham, &c. are to be cut in the form of dice, and the omlets made as omlets for garnishing. Rump of Beef a-la-daube, or braised. BONE a rump of beef and daub it with slips of fat bacon, seasoned with sweet herbs, eschallots, beaten spices, pepper, and salt. Bind it round with packthread, 44 and braise it till tender; then wipe it dry, glaize the top, and serve it up with the sauce round. Either Spanish onion sauce, or savoy, haricot, or ashee sauce may be used. N. B. It may be served with the sauce either plain or daubed. To make Spanish Onion Sauce. BRAISE six Spanish onions with the beef till three parts done; then peel them, and add some good cullis, seasoned with cayenne pepper, salt, lemon juice, and a little sifted lump sugar, and stew them till tender. Savoy Sauce. CUT some savoys in quarters, blanch them, and then tie them round and braise them with the beef till half done. 45 Take them out of the liquor, cut off the string, and put them into a stewpan with good strong cullis, and simmer them till tender. Asliee Sauce. TAKE some pickle cucumbers chop- ped small, then capers, parsley, eschallots, breast of a fowl, lean of ham, carrots, and yolks and whites of eggs. Then add to them a good- seasoned cullis and a little mushroom ketchup. Simmer all together a quarter of an hour. N. B. The ham, fowl, egg, and carrot to be boiled before they are chopped. Brisket of Beef with Spanish Onions. To be done in the same manner as the rump, but not to be daubed with bacon. Brisket of Beef with As J Lee or Haricot. To be done in the same manner as the preceding. Rump of Beef a- la mode. BONE the rump, daub it with slips of fat bacon seasoned with sweet herbs, beaten spices, and pepper and salt. Bind it round with packthread, put it into a braising pan, cover it with some veal stock, make it boil, skim it, and add a pint of red port, some onions, turnips, celery, a few bay leaves, garlick, cham- pignons, a few whole allspice, and a lit- tle mace. Let it stew till nearly done; then take it out of the liquor, cut off the strings, wipe it dry, and put it into a clean stewpan. Then strain the liquor, skim the fat off clean, season with ca- yenne, salt, a gill of vinegar, lemon pickle, and a small quantity of juice of lemon; add a little colour, clear it with 7 47 N whites of eggs, and strain it through a ta- mis cloth to the beef. Stew it gently till done, and serve it up in a deep dish. N. B. To the liquor, when cleared with eggs and strained, may be added some passing of flour and butter, by way of thickening, if approved. The reason for clearing the liquor is, that it will make it appear bright either thickened or plain. Baked Beef. BONE a leg of beef, wash it clean, chop plenty of parsley, a middling quan- tity of thyme, eschallots, marjoram, sa- vory, and a little basil. Then mix them together, and add a small quantity of beaten allspice, mace, cloves, pepper, and salt. Rub the beef well with the ingre- dients, set it in an" earthen pan, put to. it a gill of vinegar, half a pint of red port, eight middling-sized w^hole onions peeled, two bav leaves, a few fresh or dried 48 champignons. Let the meat remain till next day; then add a sufficient quantity of water to it, cover the pan close, and bake the meat till tender. Marrow Bones. CHOP the bones at each end so as to stand steady; then wash them clean, saw them in halves, set them upright in a saucepan with water, and boil them two hours. Serve them up very hot, and with fresh toasted bread. Mutton Rumps marinated. CLEAN and cut the rumps of an equal length, and lay them in a pan and the marinate liquor for a whole night; then pass them in butter till nearly done. Lay them on a dish to cool, wash them over with yolk of egg, and breadcrumb them. Fry them gently in boiling lard till done, 49 and of a nice colour. Drain them dry, and serve them up with a very good-sea- soned cullis sauce and ketchup in it. N. B. In the same manner may be done mutton steaks. To make Marinate. TA KE a little gravy, vinegar, salt, whole black pepper, a few bay leaves, onions sliced, a clove of garlick, and a little thyme. Boil all together and strain it. Haricot Mutton Cutlets. CUT a loin or best end of a neck of mutton into steaks, trim them neat, and fry them till three parts done, and of a nice colour. Put them into a stewpan, add a little liquor to preserve them from burning, and simmer till tender. Lay the steaks round in a dish, and serve them up with haricot sauce over. N. B. The essence that the steaks were E 5 stewed in to be strained, skimmed clean from fat, and added to the sauce. Fillet of Mutton with Cucumbers. TAKE the best end of a neck of mut- ton, cut off the under bone, leaving the Jong ones on; then trim it neat, lard it, or let it remain plain; roaft it gently, glaize it, and serve it up with cucumber >auce under. Stewed Cucumbers. TAKE fresh gathered cucumbers, pare them, cut them into shapes if seedy, or slices if young. Put them into a stew- pan, and add a little salt, vinegar, and an onion. Simmer them over a fire till nearly done and the liquor reduced, or fry them with a bit of fresh butter, and add a good strong cullis. Let the cu- eumbers stew till done, and serve them up with the mutton, which may be roasted with larding (or plain). N. B. The cucumbers may be served as an entree of itself, and fried bread put round them. Mutton Cutlets with Potatoes. CUT a loin of mutton into steaks, beat them with a chopper, and trim them neat. Pass them in sweet herbs, eschal- lots, pepper, salt, and lemon juice. When nearly done, lay them on a dish till almost cool, and then egg, breadcrumb, and fry them in boiling lard till of a light brown colour. Place the steaks round in a dish, leaving a cavity in the center, which is to be filled up with potatoes, and the sauce under the steaks. N. B. The potatoes to be peeled, scooped, or cut into shapes. Then fry them of a light colour, and put them E 2 before the fire till wanted; and add to the sauce the steaks were passed in, a little cullis and ketchup ; then strain and reduce it almoft to a glaize. Mutton Cutlets a la Mamteuon. GET the beft end of a loin of mutton^ take off the under bone, and cut it into chops; beat them, and trim them neat; then add to them a bit of fresh butter, chopped parsley, thyme, eschallots, pep- per, salt, a little pounded mace, and lemon juice. Pass them till nearly done; then lay them on a dish, pour the liquor over the chops, and, when nearly cool, breadcrumb, and put them separately in oiled white paper; fold them up, broil them over a slow fire, and serve them up with hot poivrade sauce in a boat. i N. B. See Poivrade Sauce receipt. Cutlets a la Irish Stew. i GET the best end of a neck of mutton, take off the under bone, and cut it into chops; season them with pepper, salt, a little mushroom powder, and beaten mace. Put them into a stewpan, add a large onion sliced, some parsley and thyme tied in a bunch, and a pint ot veal broth. Simmer the chops till three parts done, then add some whole pota- toes peeled, and let them stew till done. Serve it up in a deep dish. N. B. Let the parsley and thyme be taken out when the stew is to be served up. Pork Cutlets with Red or White Cabbage. TAKE a piece of back pork, cut it into chops, beat and trim them, season with pepper and salt, broil them gently 3 54 till done and of a light brown colour. Serve them up with stewed red or white cabbae under. To stew Cabbage. CUT the cabbage into slips, and blanch and drain them dry. Put them into a stew- pan, with a bit of fresh butter, pepper, salt, an onion, some vinegar, half a pint of veal broth, and a little allspice tied in a cloth. Stew the cabbage gently till done and the liquor nearly reduced, and then take the spice and onion out. Pork Cutlets with Robert Sauce. GET a piece of back pork, or the best end of a loin, and take off the under bone; then cut the chops neat, season with pepper and salt, broil them gently, and serve them up with the sauce un- derneath. To make Rob erf Sauce. TAKE some cullis, a bay leaf, an onion sliced, a blade of mace, a little mustard, and a o;ill of rhenish wine. Boil all to- o gether a quarter of an hour, strain it, and reduce it nearly to a glaize. Pork Cutlets another way. TRIM the chops neat as above, pass them with a bit of fresh butter, chopped eschallots, pepper, salt, and a little lemon juice. When nearly done, breadcrumb and broil them till of a light brown co- lour. Serve them up with the following sauce placed underneath; that is to say, cullis, mushroom, ketchup, lemon pickle, and mustard, a little of each, and reduce nearly to a glaize. E 4 Fillet of Pork roafted. TAKE a piece of back pork, cut the chine bone from the 'under part, and lay it in a marinate all night. When it is to be roasted run a lark spit through, tie it on another spit, cover it with paper, and roaft it gently ; and when to be served up, if not coloured enough, glaize it lightly, and put some robert sauce underneath, Pigs Feet and Ear$. TAKE prepared feet and pass them, with chopped parsley, thyme, eschallots, pepper, salt, and lemon juice. When done, breadcrumb and broil them gently. Let the ears be cut in slices, and add > cullis well-seasoned ; then stew them for ten minutes, and serve them up with the feet over. 57 To prepare Pigs Feet and Ears. SCALD and clean them; then split the feet and tie them round with packthread; put them in a pot covered with water; make it boil, skim it clean, and add a little garlick, thyme, eschallots, onions, bay leaves, whole black pepper, allspice, mace, salt, and udder of veal. Braise them till tender, and put them in aa earthen pan for use. Compotte of Pigeons, CUT off the pinions, draw r the legs in close, colour the breaft in boiling hot lard, and then blanch and wash them; which done, put them in a stewpan, add a little veal broth, and simmer them gently till nearly done, and then make a ragout of blanched sweetbreads, button mushrooms, truffles, morells, artichoke bottoms, egg balls, cull is, and the liquor of the pigeons strained, and season well to the palate. Let the ingredients stew for ten minutes, then add them to the pigeons, and serve up all together in a deep dish. Pigeons a la Craupldme. CUT off the pinions, draw in the legs, cut the breast so as to lay back, then pass them with sweet herbs, mushrooms, eschallots chopped fine, a little fresh but- ter, grated nutmeg, lemon juice, pep- per, and salt. Let them simmer till nearly done; then lay them on a dish, and when nearly cool, egg with yolk of eggs, and strew them with crumbs of bread rubbed through a fine hair sieve. Fry them of a light colour in boiling hot lard (or broil them). Serve them up with a good cullis and sharp sauce un- derneath. Pigeons gjdixeJ. PUT some good-seasoned forcemeat in the pigeons, cut off the pinions, lay back the legs, blanch them, and roast them gently with vine leaves and bards of fat bacon over them. When they are to be served up glaize the top part, and serve them with cullis sauce, or celery heads, or asparagus tops, &c. under them. Pigeons a la SouselL BONE the legs and wings of four pi- geons and draw them in; then fill them with a high-seasoned forcemeat, and braise them in a half pint of veal stock. When done enough, take the pigeons put, wipe them dry, glaise the top, and serve them up w r ith stewed sorrel un- derneath. N. B. The liquor they were braised in to be strained, skimmed free from fat, I 6o and reduced almost to a glaize, and added to the sorrel. (Or they may, when three parts done, be wiped dry, egged and breadcrumbed over, then fried in boil- ing lard, and served up with sorrel sauce underneath as above). Hashed Calf's Head. TAKE a head, without the scalp, chop- ped in half; wash and blanch it, peel the tongue, cut it in slices, and likewise the meat from the head. Add blanched morells and truffles, egg and forcemeat balls, stewed mushrooms, artichoke bot- toms, and well-seasoned cullis. Let the meat stew gently till nearly done, and then add slices of throat sweetbreads. When it is to be served up, put round the hash the brains and rashers of bacon; and, if approved, half the head to be put on the top, which is to be prepared thus: One half of the head when blanched to be done over with yolk of raw egg; then season with pepper and salt, strew with 6i fine breadcrumbs, bake till very tender, and colour with a salamander if requi- site. The brains to be egged and rolled in breadcrumbs, and fried in boiling lard. The rashers of bacon to be broiled. Breast of Veal en Gallenttne. BOXE the veal and lay a light force- meat over it, and upon that some slips of lean ham, pickle cucumbers, fat ba- con, and omlets of eggs white and yel- low. Roll it up tight in a cloth, tie each end, and braise it till tender. When it is to be served up, take it out of the cloth, wipe it dry, and glaize the top; then put under it stewed sorrel or stewed celery heads, or ragout. Breast of Veal Ragout. TAKE off the under bone and cut the breast in half, lengthways; then cut them in middling-sized pieces, fry them in a 63 little lard till of a light brown colour, wipe them dry, put them into a stew- pan with half a pint of veal stock, sim- mer them till nearly done and the liquor almost reduced; then add blanched mo- rell, truffles, slices of throat sw r eetbread, egg balls, artichoke bottoms, a little ketchup, and some cullis; season to the palate with cayenne pepper and salt, and a little lemon juice. Let all stew toge- ther till done. Neck of Veal en Erison. CUT off the scragg and the under chine bone, then lay a light forcemeat on the top of the veal about half the way, and wash it with whites of eggs with a paste brush, and work a sprig or any other device as fancy directs, with pickle cucumber, ham, breast of fowl, omlets of eggs white and yellow r , boiled carrots, and some capers. Put the veal into a stewpan, add a little stock, and stew it gently till tender, taking care the orna- 63 ment is not disturbed. When it is to be served up glaize the plain part, and put under a cullis sauce with asparagus or peas. N. B. In the same manner may be done heart sweetbreads. Neck of Veal larded. TAKE off the under bone of a neck of veal, leave only a part of the long bones on; trim it neat> lard it, and roast it gently with a veal caul over. Ten mi- nutes before it is done take off the caul, and let the veal be of a very light colour. When it is to be served up glaize it, and put under some sorrel sauce, celery heads, or asparagus tops. Veal Cutlets larded. CUT the beft end of a neck of veal into chops, leaving only a part of the long bone; then lard, blanch, and braise them; 64 and when they are to be served up, drain, dry, glaize, and place them round each other in a dish, and put green truffle sauce, or white mushroom sauce, in the center. Loin of Veal a la Cream. TAKE the best end of a loin of veal, joint it, and cut a little of the suet from the kidney; cause it to lay flat, and then make an incision in the center of the top part about three inches deep and six inches long. Take the piece out, chop it, add to it the suet or beef marrow, parsley, thyme, green truffles, mush- rooms, eschallots, lemon peel, chopped very fine, and season it with pepper and salt, and a little beaten spice. Put all together into a marble mortar, add the o yolks of two eggs, and a little french bread soaked in cream ; then pound the ingredients well, and fill the cavity with the forcemeat, and cover it with a piece of veal caul; after which tie it down 65 close and cover the whole with a large piece of caul, roast it gently, and when it is to be served up, take off the large piece of caul, let it colour a little, glaize it lightly, and put under it a benshamelle or a ragout of sweetbreads, &c. N. B. In the same manner may be done a fillet of veal instead of plain stuffing;. Veal Tendrons (brown or white). a breast of white veal, cut off the under bone and the top skin; then cut it into three long slips, and the slips again into pieces of two inches thick; blanch and put them into a stewpan, then add a little water,, bards of bacon, and slices of lemon. Braise them till tender, drain them dry, and serve them up with green truffle sauce, or celery, asparagus, or peas. The sauce to be served over the veal. 66 Celery Sauce, (white], for Vcal^ Chickens,, Turkies, CUT celery heads three inches long, trim them, wash and blanch them, drain them dry, add a little stock, boil them till nearly done, and the liquor almost reduced; then put to them some bensha- melle, and, if approved, five minutes be- fore the sauce is put over the meat or poultry, add a leason of two yolks of eggs and cream. Celery Sauce, (brown,) for Pullets, &c. DRESS celery heads as above, but in- stead of benshamelle add a good cullis only. V N. B. The above sauces may be served up in dishes with fried bread round the celery heads, as an entree of itself. Veal Outlets au natural. CUT the best end of a neck of veal into chops, trim off the bone, pass the steaks with a bit of fresh butter, chopped parsley, thyme, and eschallots, and sea- son with pepper, salt, and lemon juice. When nearly done, lay them on a dish with the liquor; and when cool, egg, breadcrumb, and broil them gently. Serve them up placed round each other, with a sauce in the center made with cullis, a little ketchup, lemon pickle, and arti- choke bottoms cut into pieces. Veal Gallops (brown). CUT veal cutlets (taken from the fil- let) into small thin pieces, and fry them in a little boiling lard till of a light brown colour. Drain them dry, put them into a stewpan, add cullis, stewed mushrooms, some blanched truffles, morells, pieces of F z 68 artichoke bottoms, some slices of throat sweetbreads, and egg balls. Let them simmer over a slow fire till tender, sea- son to the palate, and serve them up with rashers of broiled bacon round them. Veal Co Hops (white). CUT the collops as for brown, but in- stead of frying, put them into a stewpan with a bit of fresh butter, a little lemon juice, and a blade of mace. Simmer them till nearly done, then strain the liquor to some benshamelle, and add the collops with some slices of throat sweet- breads, some cocks combs blanched, egg balls, pieces of artichoke bottoms, and stewed white mushrooms. Let them stew gently, season to the palate with salt, and make the sauce ot a sufficient thickness to adhere to the ingredients. N. B. Five minutes before the collops are to be served up a leason may be added of eggs and cream . 6 9 Frlcando Veal. CUT off a long or round piece of veal from the leg, beat it flat with a chopper, and make an incision in the under part. Put into it a little light forcemeat, sew it up, lard the top part with pieces of fat bacon very neat, blanch it, put it into a stewpan with a little stock, and cover it close; then let it stew T till very tender, and the liquor nearly reduced. When it is to be served up glaize the larding, and put stewed sorrel under. N. B. The forcemeat, if not approved, may be omitted; and instead of only one piece of veal, three or four small pieces may be served on a dish. Sorrel Sauce. WASH clean, squeeze and chop fine, plenty of sorrel, and put into it a stew- 70 pan with a bit of fresh butter; stew it till the liquor is almost reduced, and then add a little strong cullis. Let the sauce o be of a good thickness. Veal Olives. CUT thin bards of fat bacon of six inches long and four broad, lay upon them very thin slices of vxal of the same dimensions, wash the veal with yolk of egg, and put upon it some light force- meat. Then roll them up, run a lark spit through sideway of each olive, tie a string over them to prevent their fal- ling off, trim each end with a sharp knife, roast them gently, and froth and serve them up with a cullis sauce under Breast of Veal with Oysters. ^ CUT off the under bone of a breast of white veal, and the skin from the top; 7 71 then blanch and braise it, or roast it gently till very tender with a veal caul over. When it is to be served up take off the caul, glaize the top of the breast, and put round it white oyster sauce. (See receipt for Oyster Sauce.} Lamb's Head minced. CHOP the head in halves, and blanch it with the liver, heart, and lights. Then chop the heart, &c. and add to them a little parsley chopped very fine, a small quantity of shredded lemon peel, and some cullis; then stew it gently till done, and season to the palate. Wash the head over with yolk of egg, season it with pepper and salt, strew fine breadcrumbs over, and bake it gently till very tender. When it is to be served up, colour it with a salamander, put the rrruce under, and the brains fried round it, with rash- ers of broiled bacon. F 4 7) - N. B. To prepare the brains, clean them in warm water, wipe them dry, dip them in yolk of egg, breadcrumb, and fry them in boiling lard. Breast of Lamb 'with BenshameUe. TAKE off the under bone, then blanch and put it into a stewpan, with parsley, thyme, and eschallots, chopped very fine, a bit of fresh butter, pepper, salt, a little essence of anchovie, and lemon juice. Let it simmer over a slow fire till nearly done; then lay it on a dish, and, when almost cool, egg and breadcrumb it, broil it over a slow clear fire till tender, and let it be of a nice brown colour. Serve it up w r ith a benshamelle sauce under. Breast or Tendrons of Lamb en Matelote. CUT the breast into two long slips, trim off the bone and skin, cut them into 73 small pieces, blanch and boil them in a little stock and lemon juice. When nearly done, add peeled and half-boiled button onions, pieces of pickle cucum- ber cut of the same size, a few button mushrooms stewed, some slices of throat sweetbreads, blanched omlet of egg (the same kind as for garnishing) cut into pieces the form of dice, and lean ham cut in the same manner; then add a cullis or benshamelle. When it is to be served up, put sippets of fried bread round. Breast of Lamb with Peas. \, CUT off the under bone, and then blanch and braise it. When it is to be served up, glaize the top and put the stewed peas under. V To stew Peas for Sauce: for Lamb, Veal, Chickens., &c. i To a quart of shelled young green peas add two ounces of fresh butter, a very 74 little sifted sugar, and some salt. Put them into a stewpan, cover it close, sim- mer the peas till nearly done, then add some good-seasoned cullis, and stew them till tender. Lamb Cutlets with Cucumbers. TAKE the bone from a loin of lamb, cut it into chops, beat them flat with a chopper, and trim off some of the fat. Pass them with a piece of fresh butter, chopped parsley, thyme, eschallots, le- mon juice, and pepper and salt. When three parts done, put them on a dish, and, when nearly cool, egg, breadcrumb, and fry them in boiling lard till of a light brown colour. Drain them dry, place them round each other in the dish, and serve them up with the cucumber sauce in the center. N. B. In the same manner may be done mutton and veal cutlets 75 Neck of Lamb g/aized. CUT the scragg and the chine bone from a neck of house lamb; then take oft the skin, trim part of the fat away to lard the neck lengthways, blanch it, and braise or roast it gently with a veal caul over. When it is to be served up, glaize the larding, and put round it white onion sauce made thus: Onion Sauce. TAKE boiled onions, rub them through a hair sieve; then add to them fresh but- ter, cream, flour, salt, a very little of each, and let it stew five minutes. Lamb Cutlets with Tendrons. CUT a neck of house lamb into chops, leaving only the long bone; then beat 76 them flat, and pass them with parsley, thyme, eschallots, chopped very fine, and add a little lemon juice, mushroom pow- der, pepper, and salt. When they are three parts done lay them on a dish, and when half cold breadcrumb them and broil them on a stewpan cover over a slow fire with a bit of fresh butter. When they are to be served up, put in the center of the dish some braised tendrons of the breast of lamb, and round them the cutlets, and turnip sauce over the cen- ter. Turnip Sauce. PARE four turnips, sweat them with a little water till they are done and the liquor reduced, then rub them through a tamis sieve. Add to them a small quantity of benshamelle, and then cut some more turnips in shapes as for a ha- ricot. Sweat them in the like manner, and add the benshamelle to them. 77 Lamb Cutlets with Tendrons another way. \ THE tendrons may be served in the center of the dish, with the cutlets lard- ed, braised, and glaized, to go round them; and the sauce made in the same manner, but instead of benshamelle add cullis. Shoulder of Lamb gla'tzed. BONE a shoulder of house lamb, then t season it with pepper, salt, mushroom powder, and beaten spice; fill the cavity with some light forcemeat; sew it up, and make it in the form of a leg of lamb; after which blanch it, and braise in a little stock and bards of fat bacon. When it is done wipe it dry, glaize it, and serve it up with sorrel sauce under; or a strong cullis sauce \vith a little tarragon of vine- gar in it. Shoulder of Lamb en Epigram. ROAST a shoulder of lamb till three parts done, and let it stand till cold; then take the blade-bone out with the meat, leaving only the skin whole in the form of a fan. Cut the meat into slips, add to it parsley, thyme, eschallots, and mush- rooms, chopped fine, some good-seasoned cullis, and a little lemon pickle. Let it stew gently for a quarter of an hour; and let the fan of the shoulder and the blade bone be broiled, and served up over the stew. Shoulder of Lamb grilled. ROAST it till three parts done, then score it with chequers, season with pep- per and salt, and grill it gently till done. Let it be of a light brown colour, and serve it up w r ith a sauce over it made with cullis, ketchup, lemon juice, and a bit of fresh butter. 79 Hind Quarter of Lamb marinated, BONE the leg, fill the cavity with a light forcemeat well-seasoned, sew it up and lard the top part of the quarter with slips of fat bacon. When done, take a quart of veal stock, half a gill of vinegar, whole black pepper, some salt, two bay leaves, three onions cut in pieces, a little garlick, and half a pint of rhenish wine. Boil all the ingredients together a quarter of an hour, put the lamb into a deep dish, and strain the liquor to it. Let it lay five or six hours, turn it several times, then roast the lamb gently with a veal caul over it. When it is nearly done, let it colour a little and glaize the top. Serve it up with a sauce under it, made with the above liquor boiled down almost to a glaize, with some cullis added. N. B. In the same manner may be done a shoulder or leg of lamb. 8o Plhid Quarter of Lamb with Spinach. BOJL the leg, preserve it as white as- possible,, serve it up with spinach under, and the steaks round it very hot. The loin to be cut into chops, and seasoned with pepper and salt; then fried or broil- ed. Pick and boil the spinach till nearly done; then strain and squeeze it dry, chop it,, and add a little piece of fresh butter, pepper, and salt, a little cullis or cream, and let it stew for five minutes. N. B. The spinach may be served up as a dish with fried bread round it. Leg of Lamb with Oysters. BONE the leg, fill the cavity with light forcemeat, and some blanched and beard- ed oysters pounded with it. Sew it up, put over it slices of lemon, salt, bards of fat bacon, and paper. Roaft it gently, 8i and when it is to be served up, glaize it, and put a sauce round it made with oys- ters blanched and bearded, stewed mush- rooms, boiled button onions, some cullis, and the oyster liquor they were blanched in. Reason to the palate with cayenne and lemon juice. CUT two young chickens into pieces, and blanch and drain them dry ; then put them 1. to a stewpan w r ith two table spoonfuls of currie powder and a gill of veal stock, and stew them gently till half done. Then cut into slices three middling-sized onions, and put them into a stewpan with a table spoonful of currie powder, a quart of veal stock, two ounces of Jordan almonds blanched and pounded fine, and boil till the onions are tender ; then rub it through a tamis sieve to the chicken, and season to the palate with cayenne pepper, salt, and lemon or tamarind juice. Let the G chickens stew till three parts done, then pour the liquor into another stewpan, and add three ounces of fresh butter, a very little flour and water, and reduce it to three gills. Strain it through a tamis sieve to the chickens, and let them simmer till tender. N. B. Rabbits may be done in the same manner. Plain Rice to be eaten wll j \ Ctirrie. PICK one pound of rice, and wash it very clean ; then have ready some boil- ing water and put the rice in. Let it simmer till three parts done, and strain and wash it in several waters till free from slime. Drain it in a large hair sieve, and when dry put it into a stew- pan with some paper and the cover over it. Set it in a moderate oven for one hour and a half, or longer, if there be a greater quantity. C^lrrie of Lobster. BOIL lobsters till three parts done, and pick and cut the claws and tails into good-sized pieces ; then add currie pow- der, and proceed with the same direc- tions as with the chickens, only pound the body of the lobsters and spawn, if any, and add them to the almonds and other ingredients. Currie of Veal. i CUT a piece of breast of veal into ten- drons, and fry them in a little lard till of a light colour ; then drain them dry, add currie powder, and proceed with the same directions as for chicken currie. Currie of Mutton. TAKE three pounds of the best end of a loin of mutton, cut off the bone G 3 84 and seme of the fat ; then cut the meat into small square pieces, fry them, and proceed with the same directions as for veal. Pig's Head Cnrrie. TAKE a young porker's head, cleave it in half, blanch and wash it, then cut it into small thick pieces, fry them, and dress in the same manner as veal and mutton ; only omit the fresh butter, as there will be a sufficient quantity of fat. Directions for roasting. OBSERVE that in roasting it requires a good quick fire, but not too strong, and the meats should be well-jointed, trimmed neat, and covered with paper to preserve it from being too high a co- lour. Beef and mutton should not be done too much ; veal, pork, and lamb, should be done well ; and some little time 85 before it is to be served up, take the paper off, sprinkle the meat with salt, 3nd when of a proper colour, froth it with butter and flour. L,arp-e poultry to be papered and done in the same man- ner ; but small poultry, such as chickens, woodcocks, rabbits, wild fowls, &c. will not require papering. The time the se- veral articles will take roasting depends upon a little practice, as the weather and the different strengths of fires make a material alteration. I have given direc- o tions for some particular roasts which require a preparation ; as for others which are served with sauces, they may be found under their respective heads : and for the trimmings of meat, &c. J have wrote a receipt to make into soup, or they may be put into the beef stock pot. Soup for a Family. CUT the particles of meat from the trimmings of different joints, as beef, 3 86 mutton, veal, pork, &c. and when done put the bones into a pot, cover with water, and boil them, till the goodness is extracted. Then strain the liquor, wash the trimmings of the vegetables, such as turnips, carrots, onions, leeks, celery, and a little cabbage. Cut all small, put them into a pot with the above liquor and some split peas ; boil till the peas are tender, add a little dry mint, and rub it through a tamis cloth or sieve. Then season the meat with pepper and salt, sweated down till three parts tender, and add the pulp. Boil all together till the meat is done, skim it and serve it up with fried bread in the form of dice. To prepare a Haunch of Vemson, or Mutton, for roasting. TAKE great care the venison is well hung and good. Wipe it, take the skin from the top part, and put butter and 87 plenty of salt over it ; then put paste confined on with four or five sheets of paper braced with packthread. Roast it gently, and ten minutes before it is done, take off the paper, let it colour gradually, and froth it with flour and butter. Serve up with the venison warm currant jelly in a boat, and some good gravy with a little red port in it in another sauce boat. To roast Woodcocks or Snipes. TAKE out the trail, then roast the birds, and ten minutes before they are done bake a toast, put the trail into a stew-pan, with a little cullis and fresh butter, and boil them together. When the woodcocks are to be served up put the sauce over the toast, and the woodcocks upon it. N. B. If the woodcocks are thin roast them with a bard of bacon over. G 4 88 To roast Larks. TAKE the entrails out of the birds,, "wash and wipe them dry, put them upon, a lark spit, with small thin slices of fat bacon and a piece cf a vine or green sage leaf between each, if approved ; arid while roasting, put over them crumbs of bread, or roast them plain. When they are done, serve them up with fried bread- crumbs round them, and melted butter in a sauce boat. To fry Breadcrumbs. RUB crumbs of bread through a haiy sieve, have ready a clean frying pan, put them into it with a piece of fresh butter, set them over a moderate fire, keep stir- ring with a wooden spoon till they are of a light brown colour, and put them upon a plate. Turkeys. To be roasted with a stuffing in the breast, and served with bread sauce in a boat. / Rabbits, To be roasted either plain, or a stuf- fing, with the liver chopped in it, put into the belly, and served up with parsley butter in a boat. Hares. To be dressed in the same manner as rabbits, with stuffing ; but served up with cullis and fresh butter put over, and >varm currant jelly in a sauce boat. Hare roasted another way. STUFF as above, and while roasting drudge it with flour, baste it with milk, 9 and so alternately till a quarter of an hour before the hare is done ; then baste it with a quarter of a pound of fresh butter put into the dripping pan. Serve it up with a cullis sauce and butter put over, and currant jelly in a sauce boat. N. B. Baste it repeatedly, as there must be a good crust over. It will re- quire three pints of warm milk for that purpose. Pigeons. MAY be roasted with a little stuffing; O in them, or plain ; and served up with parsley and butter. Quails, or Ruffs and Rees. To be roasted with bards of bacon and vine leaves over them, with sauce in a boat made with cullis and red port in it. Guinea Fowls, Pea Fowls, Pullets, Chickens, and Turkey Poults. v To be roasted either larded or plain, and served up with gravy under, and bread and egg sauces in separate boats. Wild Fowl. To be roasted plain, not done too much, and served up with onion sauce in a boat ; as also a small quantity of gravy and red port boiled together. Partridges and Pheasants. To be roasted plain, and served up with poivrade sauce hot, and bread sauce in boats. Green Geese and Ducklings. To be roasted with pepper and salt put in the bellies, ^nd served with green sauce in a boat. Other Geese and tame Ditch. To be roasted with onion and sage chopped fine, seasoned with pepper and salt put into the inside, and served up with apple sauce in a boat. To roast a Pig. MAKE a stuffing with chopped sage, two eschallots, two eggs, breadcrumbs, and fresh butter, and season with pep- per and salt ; put it into the belly, sew it up, spit it, and rub it over with a paste brush dipped in sweet oil. Iloast it gently, and when done cut off the head ; then cut the body and the head in halves, lay them on a dish, put the stuffing with ig the brains into a stewpan, add to them some good gfavy, make it boil, and serve up the pig with the sauce under it. 93 ( To roast Sweetbreads. BLANCH heart sweetbreads till half done, then wash and wipe them dry, cut off some of the pipe, put yolk of eggs on the tops with a paste brush, and strew fine breadcrumbs over. Roast them gently till done and of a nice colour, serve them up with a toast under and melted butter poured over, together with some cullis sauce round. To roast Ribs of Beef. BONE the beef, roll it round like a fillet of veal, put a good stuffing in the center, bind it tight, roast it gently, and serve it up with brown oyster sauce round it. . Fillet of Veal. To be dofte in the same manner as the above, with white oyster or cullis sauce round. 94 Observations on Meat and Poultrv. ^ MEATS to be preferred when of a good fatness and the lean appears juicy, but not particularly streaked with fat, as it then frequently happens to eat hard. When the season will permit let it hang for a week, and not more, as I have found that period bring it to its best state. Poultry, likewise, should be chosen to- lerably fat and of a soft grain. Let them hang three or four days, which will add to their better eating ; except woodcocks, snipes, larks, or pigs, which should be dressed fresh. Be particular that the poultry are trussed very neat. Stuffing for Turkles, Hares* Veal, &?t\ CHOP very fine beef suet, parsley, thyme, eschallots, a very small quantity of marjoram, savory, basil, and lemon peel, with grated nutmeg, two eggs (or milk), pepper, salt, and an anchovie chopped (if approved). Mix all well together. 95 Gravy for Roast Meat, Steaks, and Poultry. CUT slices of chuck beef, veal, and lean ham ; pare onions, turnips, a carrot, and cut them with celery ; then add a bunch of parsley and thyme, a few whole pepper, and a little mace. Put all the ingredients into a stewpan, set them over a moderate fire, sweat down till the li- quor becomes of a light brown colour, and be careful not to let it burn. Dis- charge it with water or beef stock, season to the palate with salt, and, if required, add a little liquid of colour. Let it sim- mer till the meat is perfectly done, skim it free from fat, and strain it through a tamis cloth. Peloe of Rice. WASH, pick, and dress, in the same manner as the directions for plain rice, observing only, that, before it is to be 7 set in the oven, add a little pounded mace with the rice ; and put into a stew- pan a chicken half boiled and a piece of pickle pork three parts boiled, and cover with the rice. When it is to be served up, put the fowl and pork at the bottom of the dish, the rice over, and garnish with boiled or fried button onions and halves of hard eggs, which should be hot. Peloe of Rice another way* WASH and pick two pounds of rice, boil it in plenty of water till half done, with a dozen of whole cardamum seeds ; then drain it, pick out the seeds, put the rice into a stewpan, with three quarters of a pound of fresh butter and some pounded mace, and salt to the palate. Take a loin of house lamb or some fresh pork cut into small pieces ; put them into a frying-pan, add cinnamon, cloves, cum- min and cardamurn seeds, a small quan- tity of each pounded and sifted, with a 97 bit of butter and some cayenne pepper, and fry the meat till half done. Then take two bay leaves, four good- sized onions sliced, and add to them a pint and a half of veal stock. Boil them till tender and rub them through a tamis V- cloth or sieve ; then boil the liquor over a fire till it is reduced to half a pint, add it to the fried meat and spices, together with some peeled button onions boiled. Then put some of the rice at the bottom of another stewpan, then a layer of meat and onions on the rice, and so on alter- nately till the whole is put in. Cover the pan close, set it in a moderately heated oven for two hours and a half, and when it is to be served up turn the rice out carefully on a dish. Tinibol of Rice. PICK, wash, and parboil the rice ; then strain it, put it into a stewpan with a little oiled butter and yolk of egg. Simmer it H gently till tender ; then fill an oval tin mould with the rice, press it down close, take the shape out of the mould, w r ash it lightly with a paste brush with yolk of egg, and set it in a quick oven. When it is a good colour cut a square piece out of the top, scoop out the inside, and fill the cavity with fricassee of chickens, or any thing else you please. Petit Patties of Chicken and Ham. SHEET the pans with puff paste, and put a bit. of crumb of bread the bigness of a dice in each ; then cover them with more paste, trim round the pan, w^ash the tops of the paste with egg, and bake the patties of a light colour. When they are to be served up take out the bread, have ready the white meat of dressed fowl, lean ham, an eschallot chopped fine, a spoonful of consume of v^eal, a little cream, flour, salt, cayenne, and lemon juice, a small quantity of each. 99 Mix all the ingredients together over a fire, boil them for five minutes, fill the patties with it, and serve them up very hot. Patties of Lobsters or Oysters. BAKE patties as before directed, fill them with lobsters or oysters chopped, add to them a little strong consume of veal, a small quantity of flour, lemon juice, cayenne pepper, a bit of 'lemon peel, an eschallot chopped fine, an an- chovie rubbed through a sieve, and mixed over a fire for five minutes. N. B. The lobsters or oysters are to be half boiled before they are chopped. Forcemeat Patties. SHEET the pans as for chicken patties, but instead of bits of bread fill them with H 3 p J IOO a HAt forcemeat well-seasoned. Cover o and bake them, and serve them up with a little cullis added to the forcemeat. Pulpton of Chicken, Rabbits, TAKE veal suet or beef marrow, chop it, put it into a stewpan over a fire till melted, and when lukewarm mix it to some flour with a little water into a paste. Knead it well, and rub fresh butter round the inside of a mould of any shape, and strew vermicelli upon the butter. Then sheet the mould over the vermicelli w T ith the paste rolled of the thickness of half an inch, and within the paste put a layer of chicken, slices of sweetbread, mush- rooms, artichoke bottoms, truffles, and morells; after which put a little light forcemeat round with a paste over, close it well, egg, and bake it gently. When to be served up, turn it out of the mould,. make a little hole in the top, and put into it a good cullis. 101 N. B. Cut the chicken in pieces and blanch them ; the sweetbreads, truffles, and morels to be blanched, and afterwards season with pepper and salt. Fishmeagre Pie. - BONE and cut into pieces a male carp ; make it into a forcemeat with some of the roe, parsley, thyme, eschallots chopped very fine, a quarter of a pound of fresh butter, pepper, salt, a little beaten spice, half a pint of cream, four eggs, and crumb of french bread. Afterwards take pieces of eel, salmon, and skate, pass them with sweet herbs, pepper, salt, lemon juice, and a bit of butter. When they are cold, put some of the forcemeat at the bottom of a deep dish, and mix with the fish some stewed mushrooms, button onions, truffles and morells blanched, and the roe cut into pieces, and put them into the dish with more forcemeat round the top ; then cover with puff paste, ornament with leaves of paste, egg it, H 3 103 and bake it. When it is to be served up cut a small hole in the center of the top. and add a good cullis. Raised Ham Pie, wifh Directions for mailing a raised Crust. TAKE water boiling hot, put a piece of fresh butter into it. and mix it with flour into a paste, and as it gets cold knead it several times, taking care it is of a good consistence but not too stiff, and then raise it into any shape you please. Have ready part of a ham boiled till half done, trim it to the shape of the crust, which must be big enough to put some light forcemeat at the bottom and round the ham when in the pie. Cover it with the same kind of paste, pinch round the top, and egg and ornament it. Just before it is set in the oven add half a pint of madeira wine, bake it gently for four hours, and when it is to be served up add some good cullis, but b.e careful it is not too salt. 103 Raised Chicken Pie. CUT chicken into pieces, and put them into a stewpan, either blanched or not, with a bit of fresh butter, lemon juice, pepper and salt, parsley, thyme, eschallots chopped very fine, and a little pounded mace. When the chicken are half done put them on a dish, and when cold raise the crust, put light forcemeat at the bottom, the chicken upon it, and more forcemeat round the top. Cover, bake gently, and when served up, cut off the lid, and add a ragout of sweetbreads, cocks combs, &c. &c. N. B. Rabbits and veal may be done in the same manner ; as also pigeons, but they are to be put into the crust whole. Flat Chicken Pie (or Tourte). CUT chicken into pieces, blanch them, and season with pepper and salt ; then H 4 IO4 put a light forcemeat at the bottom of a deep dish, and upon it some of the chicken, some slices of throat sweet- breads seasoned, some stewed mush- rooms, truffles and morells, and upon them the remainder of the chicken. Cover it with a puff paste, then egg and ornament the top with leaves of paste of the same kind, bake it of a nice colour, and when it is to be served up put into it a good cullis. * N. B. The chicken may be passed with sweet herbs, &c. and when cold put into the dish as above. Rabbits also may be done in the same manner. Pigeon Pie. WASH the pigeons in cold water and wipe them dry ; then put into a deep dish a rump steak cut into pieces, beat with a chopper, and seasoned with pepper and salt, and upon it the pigeons with the liver, &c. seasoned. Add also some yolk of hard eggs, cover it with puff paste, egg and ornament it with small leaves, bake it, and add some cullis. Raised Turkey Pie with a Tongue. BONE a turkey, and have ready a boil- ed pickled tongue; pare the principal part, put it into the center of the turkey with some light forcemeat w r ell-seasoned, and some slices of throat sweetbreads. Sew it up, and put it into boiling water for ten minutes. Then make a crust with raised paste big enough to receive the turkey, which, when cold, put in with bards of fat bacon upon it and forcemeat at the bottom of the crust; then cover and ornament it as a raised chicken pie, and bake it. When it is to be served up, take off the lid and the bards of ba- con, glaize the breast lightly, and add a cullis or green truffle sauce. io6 N. B. Pullets, chickens, partridges, and pheasants, may be done in the same manner ; but instead of the tongue put in w r hole green truffles pared, and some truffles pounded with the forcemeat, and when served up, add a good cullis. Or, instead of a raised crust, they may be put in a dish and covered with puff paste, &c. Raised Macaroni Pie. RAISE a crust and ornament and bake it, and when it is to be served up have ready some hot macaroni stewed and a white fricassee of chicken in separate stewpans. Put them alternately into the pie, strew a little grated parmezan cheese over it, put a slip of paper round the edge of the pie to prevent from burning, arid colour the cheese with a salamander. Raised Beef Steak Pie. TAKE prime steaks of a rump of beef, cut the skin from the fat, beat the steaks \vith a chopper, cut them into middling- sized pieces, then pass them with a bit of fresh butter, pepper, salt, lemon juice., and eschallots chopped, and when they are half done put them into a dish till cold. Blanch oysters, strain them, and preserve the liquor; then raise a crust, put a layer of steak at the bottom, some oysters upon it, and so alternately ; cover the pie, ornament and bake it. When it is to be served up put into it a good cullis, with the oyster liquor and some ketchup mixed with it. IM.B. In the same manner put steaks and oysters into a deep dish, and cover them with puff paste. Veal Pie. CUT the best end of a loin of veal into thin chops, take off part of the bone and some of the fat from the kidney, season . * with pepper and salt, put them into a io8 deep dish with yolks of boiled eggs, cover with puff paste, egg and ornament with leaves, bake it, and when it is to be served up, put into it some good con- sume. Pork Pie. TAKE a piece of loin of pork with the rind and part of the under bone cut off; then cut into chops, season them with pepper and salt, cover them with puff paste, bake the pie, and when it is to be served up put into it cullis, with the essence of two onions and a little mustard mixed with it. N. B. I have directed puff paste to be used for meat pies, it having the best appearance when baked; but there is another mode which may be thought preferable; and which is, to mix together half a pound of sifted flour, six ounces of fresh butter, the yolks and whites of two eggs well beaten, and a little milk and salt; then knead it well. I 109 Eel Pie. SKIN and clean the eels, cut them into pieces of two inches long, pass them with chopped parsley and eschallots, a little grated nutmeg, pepper, salt, and lemon juice, for five minutes; then put a little light forcemeat at the bottom of a deep dish, put the eels over it, cover with puff paste, bake it, and put into it some benshamelle or cullis. Mutton Pie. TAKE off the bone from part of a loin of mutton, cut it into chops, and season with pepper and salt. Then put into a deep dish a layer of chops, and upon them some slices of peeled potatoes (and if approved, some thin slices of onions); put the remaining chops over, cover with puff paste, bake it, and add some cullis. Or, the chops may be passed with sweet herbs, &c. and when cold put into small I 10 or large raised crusts with the above vegetables, and when baked add some cullis. Sea Pie. TAKE small pieces of salt beef and pickle pork, veal and mutton chops, a goose or a duck cut into pieces, onions and potatoes cut into thick slices, and season with a little salt and plenty of pepper. Make a paste with beef suet chopped fine, some flour and water; knead them well together, then roll out the paste, sheet a large bowl with it, put into it the above ingredients alter- nately; cover it w r ith the paste, put a cloth over, and boil four hours. When it is to be served up take off the cloth, make a little hole in the top, and add a good consume. Rissoles. CUT into small slips breast of fowl, lean ham, pickle cucumbers, and ancho- Ill yies; add to them consume, cayenne pep- per, breadcrumbs, and raw yolk of egg. Simmer them over a fire for five minutes, and be careful not to let the mixture burn. Then put the mixture on a plate, and when cold, cut into pieces, and dip them in yolk of raw egg, afterwards in fine breadcrumbs, and mould them with the hands into w T hat form you please. Have ready boiling lard, fry them of a nice co- lour, drain them dry, and serve them up with fried parsley under. To fry Parsley. TAKE fresh gathered parsley, pick, wash, and drain it very dry with a cloth. Have ready clean boiling lard, put the parsley into it, keep stirring with a skim- mer, and when a little crisp, take it out, put it on a drainer, and strew salt over. Pttffs with Chicken, &c. CHOP breast of fowl, lean ham, and half an anchovie; then add a small quan- 112 tity of parsley, lemon peel, and eschallots, cut very fine, with a little cayenne and pounded mace. Put them into a stew- pan with a ragout spoonful of bensha- melle, set them over a fire for five mi- nutes; then put the mixture on a plate, and when cold roll out puff paste thin, cut it into square pieces, put some of the mixture on them, fold the paste, run a jagger iron round to make them in form of a puff, fry them in boiling lard, and serve them up with fried pars- ley under. Wings and Legs of Fowls with Colours. CUT the legs from a good-sized fowl and the wrings as large as possible, leaving no breast bone; then fill the cavities with light forcemeat, sew them up neat, blanch them, drain them dry, wash the tops with raw white of egg, and lay a small quantity of forcemeat on it, and work a sprig with slips of lean ham and white and yellow omlets of eggs. Then put them into a stewpan with a little stock, cover the pan close, and stew them gently till done and the liquor nearly reduced. When they are to be served up, put un- der a cullis boiled almost to a glaize. N. B. They may be done in the same manner and served up cold ; or put round them savory jelly, instead of cullis, for an ornamental supper. Wings and Legs larded and glaized. CUT the wings and legs and force them as before directed, then lard very neat and blanch them, and stew them with a little stock. When they are to be served up, glaize the larding, and put under a strong cullis, or sorrel sauce, or bensha- melle. N. B. They may be done likewise in the above manner, and served up cold for a ball supper. Fowl a la Menehout. TAKE the bones out of the legs and wings, and draw them in; then split the fowl from the top to the bottom of the back, skewer it down close, pass it with chopped parsley, thyme, and eschallots, pepper, salt, and lemon juice. When three parts done put it on a dish, and when cold wash it with yolk of egg with a paste brush, strew breadcrumbs over", and broil gently till done and of a light brown colour. Serve it up with a cullis sauce under, with ketchup and lemon- pickle mixed in it. Pulled "Chicken (or Turkey). BOIL a fowl till three parts done, and let it stand till cold; then take off the skin, cut the white meat into slips, put them into a stewpan, add a little cream, 1*5 a very small quantity of grated lemon- peel and pounded mace, cayenne, salt> one eschallot chopped, a little lemon juice, and a spoonful of consume 7 ; thicken with a little flour and water, simmer it over a fire ten minutes, during which time score the legs and rump, season them with pepper and salt, broil them of a good colour, and serve them up over the pulled chicken. Another Way. CUT the fowl as above, and add to it some benshamelle; or, instead of thick- ening with flour and water as the above, add, five minutes before it is to be served up, a leason of two eggs. Pullet a la Memorancy* BONE it, leaving the legs and wings on; then season the inside with pepper, 1*6 salt, and beaten spice. Put a light torce- jneat into it, sew it up, truss it as tor roasting, set it with hot water, lard it neat, and roast it gently with a veal caul over. When it is done, take off the caul, glaize the larding, and serve it up with white ragooed sweetbreads round it, or with strong cullis or plain benshamelle. Chickens with Lemon Sauce. * BOIL two chickens as white as possi- ble, or braise them with bards of bacon over them ; and when they are done wipe them dry and pour the sauce over. To make Lemon Sauce. 4 PARE two lemons and cut them into very small pieces in the form of dice; then take the liver and scalded parsley chopped, put them into a stewpan, add some boiling benshamelle and a little 7 "7 melted butter, and simmer over a fire for two minutes. Fricassee of C hie kens or Rabbi fs (white). CUT them into pieces and blanch and drain them dry; then put them into a stewpan with a little veal stock, a blade of mace, and a middling-sized whole onion. Stew them gently till three parts done; then add slices of blanched throat sweetbreads, stewed white button mush- rooms, egg balls, and pieces of artichoke bottoms. When they are all nearly stew- ed, season with salt and a little lemon juice, add a leason of three eggs, simmer jt over a fire for five minutes, taking care not to let it curdle, and serve it up very hot, with the mace and onion taken out. N. B. Instead of a leason, the stock it is stewed in may be almost reduced, and a benshamelle added with the sweet- breads, mushrooms, &c. 3 u8 Chickens or Turkies with Celery. BOIL or braise them, and when they are to be served up wipe them dry, and pour over them white celery sauce. Or they may be served with brown celery sauce under them, and the breast of the poultry glaized. [See Celery Sauce, white and brown."] TurkleSy Pullets, or Chickens, with Oyster Sauce. JBoiL them, wipe them dry, and when they are to be served up pour over them white oyster sauce. To make white Oyster Sauce. BLANCH large oysters till half done, and strain and preserve the liquor; then beard and wash them, and put the liquor, free from sediment, into a stewpan. Add to it two ounces of fresh butter, half a pint of good cream, a piece of lemon peel, and a blade of mace ; put it over a fire, and when it nearly boils add mixed flour and water to thicken it properly. Season to the palate with lemon juice, salt, and a little cayenne pepper if approved; then strain it through a fine hair sieve to the oysters, and boil them gently five minutes. N. B. In the same manner may be done stewed oysters for dishes, only serve them up with sippets of bread round. Chickens with Peas. TRUSS them as for boiling, blanch them five minutes, and wash them clean; then braise them till tender with a little veal stock and bards of fat bacon or with white paper over them. When they are to be served up wipe them dry, glaize the tops lightly, and put pea sauce under. 4 120 Another way to stew Chickens with Peas. CUT the chickens into pieces, blanch and drain them dry, and put them into a stewpan with a little veal stock ; then stew them till tender and the liquor almost reduced. When they are to be served up, put them on a dish, and the peas sauce over. Fricassee of Chickens or Rabbits (brown). CUT the chickens into pieces, and fry them in a little lard till of a light brown colour; then drain them with a cloth very dry; after which put them into a stewpan, add button mushrooms stewed, pieces of artichoke bottoms, blanched truffles, morells, egg balls, and some good- seasoned cullis. Set them over a moderate fire, stew them gently till done, and serve up with fried oysters round them. 121 To fry Oysters for a Dish. OPEN twenty-four large oysters, blanch them with their own liquor, and when three parts done strain them, and preserve the liquor ; then wash and let them drain. In the meanwhile make a batter with four table spoonfuls of flour, two eggs, a little pepper and salt, and their liquor. Beat it well with a wooden spoon or a whisk for five minutes. Put the oysters into the batter, mix them lightly, and have ready boiling lard. Take the oysters out singly with a fork, put them into the lard, and fry them of a nice brown co- lour. Then put them on a drainer, strew over a small quantity of salt, and serve them up. If they are for a dish put fried parsley under them, or stewed spinach. Directions for Poultry, &?6\ plain boiled. LET it be observed that turkies, chick- ens, and meats, intended to be plain boil- 12,2 ed, should be soaked in cold water, and put afterwards into plenty of boiling pump water, kept skimmed and preserved as white as possible. The time they will take dressing depends on a little practice, as in roasting. Be particular in trim- ming the meats neat, and in trussing the poultry. The carving, likewise, should be carefully attended to, which is fre- quently expressed by the phrase of cutting into pieces. Jugged Hare. CASE the hare, cut off the shoulders and legs, and the back into three pieces. Daub them well with fat bacon, and put them into a stewpot with the trimmings. Add to them allspice, mace, whole pep- per, a little of each ; a small clove of gar- lick, three onions, two bay leaves, parsley, thyme, and savory, tied together in a small bunch ; a quart of veal stock, three gills of red port ; and simmer them over a fire till three parts done. Then take 123 out the shoulders, legs, and back ; put them into another stewpan, strain the liquor to them, and add some passed flour and butter to thicken it a little. Let it stew till tender, skim it free from fat, season with cayenne, salt, and lemon juice, and serve it up in a deep dish. x. Glatzed Hare. CASE the hare, bone it as whole as possible, wash it, and fill the inside with light forcemeat ; then sew it up, and truss it as for roasting. Lard the back with bacon, the same as a fricando veal ; cover it with a veal caul, and roast it very gently. When it is to be served up, take off the caul, glaize the larding, and put strong cullis, with a gill of red port boiled with it, under the hare. Duck aux Naves. BONE a tame duck as whole as pos- sible, and season the inside with beaten 124 spices, pepper, and salt ; then draw in the legs and wings, and fill the inside with light forcemeat. Sew it up, braise it in a pint of veal stock, cover it with white paper and the cover of the stewpan. Let it stew gently till tender, and the liquor almost reduced. When it is to be served up glaize the breast, and pour the sauce round it, which is to be made with turnips cut into shapes as for haricot ; afterwards to be put into a stewpan and sweated with a bit of fresh butter till three parts done ; then add a good cullis and the essence in which the duck was braised. When it boils, skim free from fat, season to the palate, and stew the turnips till done. A Duck with Cucumbers. THE duck to be boned, braised, and served up in the same manner as the above, but instead of turnips put cu- cumber sauce, or peas, as for veal tendrons. A Duck a la BeiisJiamelle. BONE, braise, and glaize the duck as mentioned in the preceding article, and when it is to be served up put a sauce round it made with heads of sprue grass boiled in a little veal stock, and when tender rub them through a tamis. Add the pulp to a fmall quantity of bensha- melle, boil them together for five mi- nutes, and let the sauce be very white and strong;. Hashed Mutton for a Dish. TAKE mutton ready dressed, cut it into thin slices, put them into a stew- pan with slices of pickle cucumbers, or walnuts, or onions ; then make a sauce with chopped eschallots or onions passed with a bit of fresh butter over a slow fire till three parts done ; after which add a pint of veal stock, or gravy, and a little ketchup, Boil it ten minutes, sea- 12,6 son to the palate with cayenne pepper and salt ; then strain it to the mutton, let it stew gently till thoroughly hot, and add a small quantity of liquid of colour. N. B. In the same manner may be done beef; and when it is to be served up put the bones (which are to be seasoned with pepper and salt, and grilled) over the hash. Hasherf Venison. TAKE the part least done of ready- dressed venison, cut it in slices, and put them into a stewpan ; then pass a bit of fresh butter and flour and chopped es- challots over a slow fire for ten minutes, and add to them half a pint of red port, a pint and a half of veal stock, its own gravy, if any, a little piece of lemon peel, cayenne pepper, salt, and lemon juice. Season to the palate, boil all together a quarter of an hour, and strain it to the venison. Let it simmer gently till tho- roughly hot. N. B. The venison should not be put into the liquor above ten minutes before it is to be served up, by reason of the fat dissolving too much. Hashed Fowls. CUT into pieces (very neat) ready- dressed fowls, turkies, or rabbits, and put them into a stewpan ; then make a thickening with a bit of fresh butter, flour, and chopped eschallots or onions mixed over a slow fire. Discharge it with veal stock, add a little lemon pickle and ketchup, season to the palate, put a small quantity of liquid of colour, boil for ten minutes, strain to the poultry, and let it stew gently. When served up, there may be put a few pieces of the fowl grilled round it. \ N. B. Instead of the thickening and veal stock, may be added cullis with le- mon pickle and ketchup. 138 Has J led Hare, Wild Foivl, Pheasants, or Partridges. CUT the poultry into neat pieces, put them into a stewpan, and add a liquor made in the same manner as for venison ; or put cullis and red port wdth their own gravy. Broiled Beef Steaks. TAKE a small fat rump of beef, and cut off the fillet and the first two or three steaks ; then cut the remainder into steaks also, and cut the skin from the fat. Beat them with a chopper, and season with pepper and salt just before they are to be put on the gridiron, which should be well cleaned, and the steaks frequently turned. When they are done according to desire, serve them up on a hot dish with a little gravy under, some scraped horseradish, chopped es- challots, and pickles, on small plates, and Oyster sauce in a sauce boat, or with slices of onions dipped in batter and fried. N. B. The fillet and outside steaks of the rump may be made into a pudding, in order to have prime steaks for broiling. Beef Steal Pudding. TAKE flour, chopped suet, some milk, a little salt, and one egg, and mix them well together. Roll out the paste of half an inch thick, and sheet a bason or a bowl with it. Then trim the skin from the meat, beat the steaks well with a chopper, cut them into middling-sized pieces, season with pepper and salt, put them into the bason with blanched oysters and slices of potatoes alternately (or slices of onions, if approved). Cover the top with paste, and tie a cloth over the bason. Boil the pudding (if of a middling size) two hours ; and when it is to be served up put into it a little cullis and ketchup. K Ojtfer Sauce for Beef Steals.- BLANCH a pint of oysters, and pre- serve their liquor ; then wash and beard them, and put their liquor into a stew- pan with india soy and ketchup, a small quantity of each, and a quarter of a pound of fresh butter. Set them over a fire, and when nearly boiling thicken with flour and water ; season to the pa- late with a little cayenne pepper, salt, and lemon juice ; strain it to the oysters, and stew them gently five minutes. To dress Mutton, Lam~b, or Pork Chops in a plain Manner. CUT a loin of mutton, lamb, or pork f into chops of a middling thickness ; beat them with a chopper, trim off* a sufficient quantity of the bone and fat ; then sea- son with pepper and salt, broil them over a clear moderate fire, and serve them up very hot with gravy. N. B. Lamb chops may have stewed spinach or fried parsley underneath. To dress Veal Cutlets. BEAT the cutlets with a chopper, and cut them into middling-sized pieces ; then strew on each side of them a mix- ture of breadcrumbs, chopped parsley and thyme, grated nutmeg, pepper and salt, and broil them over a clear fire till done and of a nice colour. Serve them up with cullis sauce and ketchup in it, or stewed mushrooms and cullis. Rashers of broiled bacon and fried oysters (a few of each if approved) may be put round the cutlets or chops, which may be done in the same manner. Minced Veal for a Dish. CUT into small pieces ready dressed veal, put it into a stewpan, add to it a very small quantity of grated lemon peel K 2. ' 132 and a little benshamelle ; season to the palate with cayenne pepper, lemon juice, and salt; stew the veal gently ten minutes, and serve it up with sippets of bread round it either fried or plain. Minced Veal another way. ADD to the veal a little stock, one eschallot chopped fine, some grated nut- meg and grated lemon peel, a very small quantity of each. Season with cayenne pepper, lemon juice, and salt. Let it stew ten minutes, and just before it is to be served up add a leason of two eggs and cream, simmer them together five ^ ' minutes, and be careful it does not burn nor curdle. Sippets of bread, likewise, to be placed round. Partridges or Pheasants au Choux. BONE the birds, put into them some light forcemeat well-seasoned ; sew them 133 up, blanch and wipe them dry, and braise them in a pint of stock till tender. After which cut two savoys into quarters and boil them till a fourth part done ; then squeeze them and tie round with twine, put them into a stewpan, add a pint of stock, and boil them gently till done. Then take the savoys out, cut off the strings, put the birds into the center of a dish, the savoys round them, and set the dish in an oven or in a warm place covered over. Then mix the two liquors together, season to the palate with pep- per, salt, and lemon juice. Make it of a proper thickness with flour and water, boil it till three parts reduced, add a little colour and strain it. When the birds are to be served up glaize their breasts lightly, and put the sauce over the savoys. Partridges or Pheasants with Truffles. BONE the birds, and force and braise them in a small quantity of stock. When they are to be served up glaize the breasts lightly, and put green truffle sauce round them, \vith the essence of the birds mixccj in it. Turkey with Truffles. TRUSS the turkey as for boiling, put some light forcemeat with truffles pound- ed with it into the cavity near the breast, and secure it from falling out. Then put slices of lemon, some salt, and bards of fat bacon on the breast, and white pa- per over it bound on with packthread., and roast gently (if a good-sized turkey) one hour and a half. When it is to be served up, take off the paper, glaize the breast, and put the truffle sauce round the turkey. N. B. In the same manner may be done pullets or chickens. Truffle Sauce for Turkks, &c. PUT green truffles into water, clean them well with a hard brush, cut the 135 outside paring thinly off, trim them into shapes or round, put the trimmings into a marble mortar, pound them, and add to the forcemeat which is to be put into the cavity near the breast of the turkey. Then put the truffles into a stewpan with a pint of beef stock, stew them gently, and when the liquor is almost reduced add some cullis w r ell-seasoned. Turkey with CJiesnuts. TRUSS the turkey as for boiling, stuff It with light forcemeat and Spanish ches- nuts whole, and paper and roast it as a turkey with truffles. When it is to be served up, glaize the breast and put ches- nut sauce round it, made with good cul- lis and chesnuts, which should be boiled till half done, and then roasted in a fry- ing pan till wholl) done ; after which let them be peeled and put into the cullis five minutes before the turkey is served up. K 4 Turkey with Ragout. STUFF it in the plain way, boil it, and when it is to be served up put over the following sauce : Take slices of throat sweetbreads blanched, white but- ton mushrooms stewed, artichoke bot-* toms boiled till half done and cut in halves, cocks combs boiled till done, a few egg balls scalded; add a good benshamelle, and stew them gently for ten minutes. Or, instead of benshamelle, there may be put to the above ingredients half a pint of veal stock, and let them all be boiled ten minutes ; then add a leason of three eggs and cream, simmer them together five minutes more, and season with salt, lemon juice, and cayenne pepper. Rabbits with Onions. BOIL them as white as possible, and when they are to be served up, wipe them dry and put over onion sauce, made thus : Take mild onions peeled, and boiled till three parts done ; then squeeze and chop them but not too small ; add a bit of fresh butter, a little salt and flour, a suf- ficient quantity of cream to mix them, and a little white ground pepper, if ap- proved. Let the sauce be of a good thickness, and simmered over a slow fire for ten minutes, Glalzed Sweetbreads. LARD very neat two heart sweetbreads, then blanch and braise or roast them ; and when they are to be served up, glaize the top part, and put stewed endive under them. Matelote of Rabbits. CUT them into pieces and blanch and wash them ; then put them into a stew- pan with a gill of water, cover close and preserve them as white as possible. When they are nearly done and the liquor almost reduced, which should not be of any co- lour, add half a pint of good benshamelle, a few whole boiled cocks combs, pickle cucumbers, ham, tongue, omlets of eggs (the same as for garnishing) cut into small squares, and a few stewed button mush- rooms. Stew them together for ten mi- \^y~ nutes, and serve the matelote up directly, Sweetbreads en Erison. To be done in the same manner as neck of veal, which see. -* Stewed Giblets plain, CUT two pair of scalded goose giblets into pieces of two inches long ; then blanch them, trim the bones from the ends, and wash the giblets ; after which drain them dry, put them into a stew- pan with half a pint of stock, cover the pan close, simmer over a slow fire till three parts done and the liquor nearly reduced, then add good-seasoned cullis^ and stew them till tender. Slewed Giblets with Peas-. PROCEED as with the above, except^ instead of plain cullis, take a pint of shelled young green peas, and sweat them till three parts done with a bit of fresh butter and a little salt ; then add some cullis, put them to the giblets, and stew them till tender. If requisite put a little liquid of colour. Green Truffles for a Dish. WELL clean two pounds of green truffles ; then put them into a stewpan with half a pint of stock, a gill of red port, and a little salt, and boil them gently half an hour. When they are to be served up, drain them dry and put them into a folded napkin. They are to 140 be eaten with cold fresh butter, or with oil, vinegar, and cayenne pepper. N. B. The liquor they were boiled in may be made into a cullis, and put into different sauces, such as haricot, ragout, or celery, &c. Rabbits en Gallentme for a Dish. BONE two rabbits, lay them flat, put a little light forcemeat upon them, and slips of lean ham, breast of fowl, and omlets of eggs white and yellow, the same as for garnishing. Roll the rabbits up tight and sew them, lard the top part with slips of fat bacon very neat, and blanch and braise them. When they are to be served up glaize the larding, and put good cullis under them. Ham braised. TAKE a mellow smoked ham per- fectly clean ; then well trim and put it into a braising pan ; after which, add to it four quarts of water, a bottle of ma- deira wine, and a few bay leaves. Cover the pan close, and simmer the ham over a moderate fire till very tender. Then wipe it quite dry, take off the rind, glaize the top part, and serve it up on a large dish with stewed spinach on one side and mashed turnips on the other. N. B. Hams may be plain boiled and ser\ 7 ed up in the same manner. Pickled tongues may be stuffed with marrow and boiled, then peeled, and served up with the above vegetables and in the same manner. Jerusalem Artichokes stewed. PARE and cut them into halves, boil them in a little consume till nearly done and the liquor almost reduced ; then add a bit of fresh butter, salt, flour, and cream, a small quantity of each. Set them over a fire for five minutes, and serve them up with fried bread round. Jerusalem Artichokes another PARE and cut them into shapes as fbf haricot, and fry them in boiling-hot lard till of a light brown colour ; then drain them dry, put them into a stewpan, and add a little strong cullis with a small quantity of vinegar and mustard mixed in it. Serve them up with fried bread round* Mashed Pot at Ms* PARE and steam or boil floury potatoes> and mash them with a wooden spoon ; then add a bit of fresh butter, a little salt, and some milk or cream. Mix them well together over a fire for five minutes, then o put them in the center of a dish, make them smooth, chequer the top with the back of a knife, and put some whole po- tatoes round if approved. Serve them up very hot, but be careful the mash is not too thin, and preserve them as white as posssible. 3 N. B. The same mash may be put into scollop shells and coloured with a salamander ; or the mash may be