The Project Gutenberg eBook of The "ideal" cookery book: A reliable guide for home cooking This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: The "ideal" cookery book: A reliable guide for home cooking Author: Lilian Clarke Release date: January 25, 2023 [eBook #69876] Language: English Original publication: United Kingdom: Brumby & Clarke, Limited Credits: David E. Brown and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive) *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE "IDEAL" COOKERY BOOK: A RELIABLE GUIDE FOR HOME COOKING *** The “Ideal” Cookery Book _THIRD EDITION._ A Reliable Guide to Home Cooking _Containing 246 Useful and Dainty Recipes_ BY LILIAN CLARKE BRUMBY & CLARKE, LIMITED, HULL AND 5, FARRINGDON AVENUE, LONDON, E.C. PREFACE. Of the making of Cookery Books, we are told, there is no end, but the comparative worthlessness of their contents for practical domestic purposes is no doubt the reason why there is still as great a demand as ever for a thoroughly reliable and up-to-date volume. The little book I now offer to the public, claims to be the _best, cheapest, and most useful_ Culinary Handbook yet produced, and I venture to think its contents will fully justify this assertion. A large proportion of the recipes are my _own compilation_, and all alike have been _carefully revised and repeatedly tested_. Every recipe has been arranged with a view to _practical usefulness_, and may be confidently recommended for _ease of preparation_, _daintiness_, and _economy_. Those who once use the “IDEAL COOKERY BOOK,” will afterwards use no other, not because their years have been shortened by bad cooking and unwholesome food, but because they recognise in it all the qualities it claims to possess, and are able by its aid to _realize in the home the true “Ideal” of the Culinary Art_. THE AUTHOR. CONTENTS. I. Savouries. PAGE 1. Forcemeat 13 2. Mince Meat 13 3. Potato Balls 13 4. Tasty Dish of Cold Cooked Beef 14 5. Savoury Puffs 14 6. Breakfast Dish 14 7. Potato Cakes 14 8. Veal Mould 15 9. Timbales of Mutton 15 10. Rolled Steak with Potatoes 16 11. Salad Dressing 16 12. Cabbage Balls 16 13. Cheese Croquettes 16 14. Potato Ribbons 17 15. Rissoles à Lilian 17 16. Fish Cakes 17 17. Savoury Omelette 18 18. Dough Nuts 18 19. Cheese Straws 18 20. Egg and Bacon Pie 19 21. Another Cold Meat Dish 19 22. Scrambled Eggs 19 23. Meat Roll 19 24. Pommes de Terre à la Reine 20 25. Dormers 20 26. Beef or Veal Mould 20 27. Gravy for Mutton 21 28. Gravy for Beef 21 29. Beefsteak Pie 21 30. Tasty Dish of Beefsteak 22 31. Cold Meat Pâtés 22 32. Potted Beef 22 33. Pommes de terre au Lait 23 34. Pommes de terre à L’Écosse 23 35. Potato Croquettes 23 36. A dainty way of Cooking an Egg 24 37. Beef Tea Custard 24 38. Beef Tea 24 39. Dainty way of Serving Mashed Potatoes 25 40. Fried Potatoes 25 41. Ragôut of Mutton and Eggs 25 II. Pastry. 1. Short Pastry (_Rich_) 26 2. Ground Rice Cheesecakes 26 3. Cocoanut Cheesecakes 26 4. Macaroons 27 5. Maids of Honour 27 6. Lemon Curd 27 7. Welsh Cheesecakes 27 8. Milk Rolls 28 9. Almond Cheesecakes 28 10. Bakewell Cheesecakes 28 11. Pastry Sandwiches 28 12. French Tartlets 29 13. Apple Cheesecakes 29 14. Good Family Pastry 29 15. Pie Pastry 29 III. Custards, Puddings, and Blanc Manges. 1. Lemon Rice Pudding 30 2. Sponge Cake Pudding 30 3. Strawberry Blanc Mange 30 4. Honeycomb 31 5. Lemon Mould 31 6. Baroness Pudding 31 7. Holderness Pudding 32 8. Lemon Pudding 32 9. Parson’s Pudding 32 10. Queen’s Pudding 32 11. Ideal Pudding 33 12. Curd Pudding 33 13. Chocolate Blanc Mange 33 14. Suet Dumplings 34 15. Snow Pudding 34 16. French Pancakes 34 17. German Pancakes 34 18. Junket 35 19. Three Minutes Pudding 35 20. German Pudding 35 21. Rhubarb Mould 36 22. Imperial Pudding 36 23. Fig Pudding (_No. 1._) 36 24. Sultana Pudding 37 25. Trieste Pudding 37 26. Stewed Figs 37 27. Baked Milk (_For Fruit_) 37 28. Baked Rhubarb Pudding 38 29. Apple Snow 38 30. Prune Mould 38 31. Bachelor’s Pudding 39 32. Raspberry Sponge 39 33. Lemon Cream 39 34. Gâteau de Riz 40 35. Kingston Puddings 40 36. Fig Puddings (_No. 2._) 40 37. Cheese Pudding (_No. 1._) 41 38. Paragon Pudding 41 39. Cambridge Pudding 41 40. Sago Kelley 42 41. Orange Meringue 42 42. Spanish Custard 42 43. Cheese Pudding (_No. 2._) 43 44. Apple Trifle 43 45. Economic Custard 43 46. Tasmanian Pudding 43 47. Yorkshire Pudding 44 48. Steamed Batter Pudding 44 49. Chocolate Pudding 44 50. Gêlée à la Normandie 45 51. Chocolate Blanc Mange 45 52. Eastbourne Pudding 45 53. Summerville Plum Pudding 45 54. Victoria Pudding 46 55. Prune Gâteau 46 56. Raspberry Pudding 46 57. Rice Pudding 47 58. Small Sago Pudding 47 59. Ground Rice Pudding 47 60. Custard Pudding 48 61. Stewed Pears 48 62. Harrogate Pudding 48 IV. Sauces. 1. Apple Sauce 49 2. Bread Sauce 49 3. Melted Butter 49 4. Egg Sauce 50 5. White Sauce 50 6. Mint Sauce 50 7. Onion Sauce 50 V. Cakes. 1. Madeira Cake 51 2. Beverleigh Buns 52 3. Queen Cakes 52 4. Raspberry Sandwich 52 5. Rock Buns 52 6. Cornflour Cake 53 7. Oatmeal Buns 53 8. Lemon Sandwich Cakes 53 9. Yorkshire Parkin 53 10. Drummond Cake 54 11. Gingerbread 54 12. Ginger Nuts 54 13. Victoria Roll 55 14. Yorkshire Cake 55 15. Sally Lunn Teacakes (_No. 1._) 55 16. Summerville Cakes 55 17. Soda Cake 56 18. Brunswick Cakes 56 19. Jordan Cakes 56 20. Lunch Cake 56 21. Plain Plum Cake 57 22. Rice Buns 57 23. Raspberry Buns 57 24. Walnut Cake 58 25. Icing for Walnut Cake 58 26. Cocoanut Pyramids 58 27. London Buns 58 28. Victoria Buns 59 29. Norwegian Cake 59 30. Sultana Cake 59 31. Cocoanut Cake 59 32. Lancashire Parkin 60 33. Delicious Cake 60 34. Chocolate Cake 60 35. Rich Plum Cake 61 36. Plain Seed or Currant Loaf 61 37. Malta Cake 61 38. Small Rice Cake 62 39. Parisian Sandwich 62 40. Sultana Scones 62 41. York Teacakes 63 42. Fairy Cakes 63 43. Orange Rock Cakes 63 44. Jersey Cake 63 45. Seed Bread (_To Butter_) 64 46. Queen Anne’s Cake 64 47. Spice Bread 64 48. Bachelor’s Buttons 65 49. Cocoanut Fingers 65 50. Victorine Buns 65 51. Orange Cakes 66 52. Ginger Cakes 66 53. Cherry Cakes 66 54. Small Seed Cakes 67 55. Demon Jumbles 67 56. Cocoanut Gingerbread 67 57. Lemon Buns 68 58. Ashton Sandwiches 68 59. Christmas or Wedding Cake 68 60. Split Cakes 69 61. Baking Powder Rolls 69 62. American Cake 70 63. Shrewsbury Cakes 70 64. Swiss Roll 71 65. Westwood Buns 71 66. Sally Lunn Teacakes (_No. 2._) 71 67. Queen Cakes (_No. 2._) 72 68. Neapolitan Ribbon Cake 72 69. Clancarthy Buns 73 70. Spice Bread 73 71. Swiss Cakes (_Another Method_) 73 72. Genoa Cake 74 73. Fairy Baskets 74 74. Fancy Bread (_Without Yeast_) 75 VI. Biscuits. 1. Picnic Biscuits 76 2. Rice Biscuits 76 3. Shrewsbury Biscuits 76 4. Ginger Drops 77 5. Seventy Little Biscuits for 2d. 77 6. Ginger Biscuits 77 7. Rice Biscuits 77 8. Seed Biscuits 78 9. Soda Biscuits 78 10. Sweet Biscuits 78 11. Chestnut Biscuits 78 12. Cocoanut Biscuits 79 13. Four pounds of Biscuits for 8d. 79 14. Chocolate Biscuits 79 15. Cinnamon Stars 79 16. Ratafias 80 17. Almond Rings 80 18. Cheese Straws 80 19. Patent Barley Biscuits 80 VII. Bon Bons. 1. French Almond Rock 81 2. Candy Dough 81 3. Candy Cherries 81 4. Almond Creams 82 5. Walnut Creams 82 6. Cream Dates 82 7. Brandy Snap (_No. 1._) 82 8. Raspberry Rock 82 9. Cocoanut Fondant 83 10. Chocolate or Coffee Fondant 83 11. Nougat 83 12. Gelées Françaises 84 13. Chestnut Bonbons 84 14. Chocolate Baisers 84 15. Yorkshire Toffee 84 16. Brandy Snap (_No. 2._) 85 17. Marmalade 85 18. Patent Groats 85 VIII. Beverages. 1. Apple Wine 86 2. Barley Water 86 3. Ginger Beer 86 4. Ginger Wine 87 5. Lemon Squash 87 6. Lemon Water 87 IX. Additional Useful Recipes. 1. To Bottle Green Gooseberries 88 2. Gooseberry Jelly 88 3. Apple Jelly 88 4. Cough Mixture 89 5. Pork Pie Pastry 89 6. Recipe for Keeping Eggs 89 I. SAVOURIES. The general rule for roasting or boiling joints is to allow a quarter of an hour for each pound and half an hour over, unless the meat is preferred underdone. 1. Forcemeat. 2-oz. ham. ¼-lb. suet 6-oz. bread crumbs. 2 eggs. Salt and pepper. Make it into balls or use as stuffing. Bake ½ hour. 2. Mince Meat. 1¼-lb. raisins. ¾-lb. sultanas. 1-lb. currants. ½-lb. suet. ¼-lb. peel. 1-lb. sugar. 1-lb. apples. 1-gill of Rum. Chop the suet very fine, stone the raisins and chop them, chop the sultanas, peel, and apples, and add the currants. Put in a bowl with the sugar and rum and mix very thoroughly. Put in jars and tie down. 3. Potato Balls. Mash the potatoes--season with pepper and salt and little chopped parsley and bind with yolk of egg. Form into balls, dip in egg and bread crumbs and fry in boiling fat or in the oven--serve hot. 4. Tasty dish of Cold Cooked Beef. Butter a pie dish and scatter with bread crumbs and chopped parsley. Arrange layer of slices of beef with pepper and salt. Next, layer of crumbs, then beef, placing sippets of bread on the top. Pour gravy over, and bake 2 hours. 5. Savoury Puffs. ½-lb. potatoes, yolk of 1 egg, 2-oz. flour, pepper, salt, and cold meat. Mash the potatoes, add yolk of egg and seasoning, blend well into dry dough, roll ¼ inch thick, cut in rounds and fill with rissole mixture, fold over and press together. Fry brown and serve. 6. Breakfast Dish. Boil two eggs twelve minutes and put in cold water. When cool remove shells, dry with flour, cover each with sausage meat, egg and bread crumbs, and fry in boiling fat till brown. Cut in halves and serve. 7. Potato Cakes. 1-lb. mashed potatoes. 2 yolks of eggs. ½-lb. flour. Little salt. Mix flour and potato, bind with yolks, and season. Roll out half inch thick. Bake in quick oven. Split open and butter. Serve very hot. 8. Veal Mould. 1-lb. veal. ½-lb. fat bacon. Little parsley. Grated rind of 1 lemon. 4 eggs. 1-gill of stock. Pepper and salt. Boil the eggs hard and cut in slices. Chop the parsley and mix it with the rind and seasonings. Line a plain mould with pieces of egg at the bottom. Cut up the veal in neat, square pieces, and put in the mould in alternate layers with cut-up bacon and sliced eggs, sprinkling each layer with seasoning. When full, pour in the stock. Cover tightly with buttered paper, putting a plate and weight on the top. Bake in a slow oven for 4 hours. Turn out when cold. 9. Timbales of Mutton. ½-lb. cold minced mutton. ¼-lb. finely chopped mushrooms. 1 teaspoonful chopped parsley. Salt and pepper. 2-oz. bread crumbs. ¼-pint gravy. 2 eggs. 1 teaspoonful anchovy essence. Put the meat, crumbs, parsley and seasonings in a basin, mix well and add beaten eggs. Put into well buttered castle pudding tins, cover with buttered paper, and steam ½ hour. Turn out and serve with a brown or tomato sauce. Any cold meat may be used this way. 10. Rolled Steak with Potatoes. About 2-lbs. (sufficient for five persons) of lean, thick beefsteak. Cut in thin slices and roll each piece up with the fat in the middle. Place in a large dish and add pepper and salt. Fill up with cold water and put in the oven for 2 hours. If the gravy boils away, fill up with boiling water. Place whole, pared potatoes on the top one hour before the dinner is wanted. Bake the potatoes brown. Serve in the dish. 11. Salad Dressing. The yolk of 1 egg, a little mustard and salt, 1 teaspoonful sugar, 1 tablespoonful cream, and a little vinegar. 12. Cabbage Balls. Mince some cold cabbage finely, mix with an equal part of bread crumbs, season with pepper and salt, and bind with the beaten egg. Form into large sized balls, roll in flour, and fry in boiling fat. Drain on paper, sprinkle with salt, pile in a pyramid, and serve hot, with gravy. 13. Cheese Croquettes. 2-oz. grated cheese, mixed with some cold mashed potatoes, season with pepper and salt, and add about 2-oz. bread crumbs. Mix with half of a beaten egg, and form into balls. Dip them in rest of egg, and fry in boiling fat or bake in a tin with dripping in the oven. Serve hot. 14. Potato Ribbons. Peel the potatoes, then peel round and round very thinly. Let them lie in cold water for an hour, drain, place in frying basket, plunge into hot fat, drain on paper and serve hot. 15. Rissoles à Lilian. Cold meat. 1 egg. ½-pint bread crumbs. Seasoning and gravy. Mince the meat finely, and put in a bowl with bread crumbs. Bind with the egg and a little gravy, but they must be stiff. Put a little of the mixture in the bottom of a floured teacup and press it down, then turn out into well-greased dripping tin and bake. Serve hot, with gravy. 16. Fish Cakes. ½-lb. cold fish. ½ teaspoonful salt. Bread crumbs. ½-lb. mashed potatoes. ¼ teaspoonful pepper. 2-oz. butter. Remove bones from fish, mix with the potato, and add the melted butter, salt, pepper and one and a half beaten eggs. Make into flat round cakes, brush over with rest of egg and cover with bread crumbs. Fry in hot fat 4 or 5 minutes. Drain and serve hot. 17. Savoury Omelette. 1-oz. butter. 2 eggs. Chopped parsley. Pepper and salt. Beat eggs slightly, and add seasoning. When the butter is hot in the frying-pan, pour in the eggs, stir to prevent sticking, and as soon as it commences to set, draw towards the handle of the pan, turn over and cook for a minute. Serve hot. 18. Dough Nuts. 1-oz. castor sugar. ½-lb. flour. 2-oz. butter. 1 egg. Spice or ginger. 1-gill milk. Pinch of salt. Rub butter into flour, mix dry ingredients, make into a paste with egg and milk, roll out, cut with a round cutter, then take the centre out with a smaller one, fry in hot fat and dredge freely with sugar. 19. Cheese Straws. 2-oz. butter. 3-oz. grated cheese. 1 tablespoonful water. Salt. 2-oz. flour. 1 yolk of egg. Pepper. Cayenne. Mix well, roll into fingers and rings. Bake 7 minutes. When cold put two or three straws through each ring. 20. Egg & Bacon Pie. Put a layer of pastry in a soup plate, put small pieces of cooked ham or bacon in, beat one or more eggs, season with pepper, pour over the bacon, and cover with pastry and bake. 21. Another Cold Meat Dish. Make a batter of 3 tablespoonsful of flour, ½-pint of milk, one egg. Chop the meat, add half a boiled onion, ½ teaspoonful chopped parsley, and salt. Stir into the batter. Grease a pie dish, stir in the omelette, and bake ½ hour. Turn out on a dish, and serve with gravy. 22. Scrambled Eggs. 1 egg. 1-oz. butter. 1 tablespoonful milk. Pepper and salt. Put butter in pan, and when melted, add eggs and milk. Stir until it thickens, and serve on buttered toast. Use more eggs for more than one person. 23. Meat Roll. 1-lb. beefsteak or veal (minced raw). ¾-lb. minced ham. 2 eggs. 6-ozs. bread crumbs. Mix all well together, and form into a roll, place in a cloth tied at each end, and steam 2 hours. Serve hot or cold. 24. Pommes de Terre à la Reine. Take some boiled potatoes and mash them finely. Take any cold meat, and chop it also finely. Make the meat and potato in little balls, cover with egg and bread crumbs, and fry in boiling fat. Serve on a d’oyley. Gravy is an improvement. 25. Dormers. ½-lb. cold meat. 3-ozs. boiled rice. Pepper, salt. 2-ozs. suet. 1 egg. Bread crumbs. Gravy. Chop the meat and suet and rice finely. Mix well together and add seasoning and egg. Roll in shapes, sprinkle with bread crumbs, and fry in hot dripping a light brown. 26. Beef or Veal Mould. 1-lb. beef or veal. ½ small packet of gelatine. 2 eggs. Put the gelatine to soak in a little cold water. Cut the meat into small pieces, or put through the mincing machine, and stew till tender in enough water to cover it. Boil the eggs hard and arrange them in a mould. Add the gelatine to the liquid, and pour the whole into a mould and put in a cool place to set. There should not be more liquid than will fill the mould. 27. Gravy for Mutton. Pour off nearly all the fat from the joint, and make a thin gravy by pouring boiling water over the meat. Replace in the oven and boil a few minutes. Add a little gravy browning if liked, also add pepper and salt. 28. Gravy for Beef. Pour off nearly all the dripping from the joint. Pour boiling water over the meat and season with pepper and salt, adding gravy browning if desired. Mix a little flour and cold water to a smooth paste, and thicken with boiling water, and add to the gravy, stirring thoroughly and returning to the oven to boil. 29. Beefsteak Pie. Take from 1 to 2 lbs. of beefsteak, according to the quantity required, and cut into small pieces. Place it in a pan with sufficient cold water to cover. Season with pepper and salt, and stew for 1½ hours. Have ready a pie dish lined with crust, into which put the stewed steak and part of the gravy. Put on the cover and bake about ¾ of an hour. Use the rest of the gravy as required. Make the crust according to “Pie Pastry” recipe. 30. Tasty Dish of Beefsteak. Take as much beefsteak as is required and place it in an enamelled pie dish, cover with cold water and put into the oven to stew, placing an inverted pie dish on the top. Season with pepper and salt. Add more boiling water as the other evaporates. Stew for 2½ hours, but a quarter of an hour before dishing up thicken the gravy with flour and water and let it boil up. 31. Cold Meat Pâtés. Take the remains of a joint and mince very finely. Place in a basin, add a little gravy to moisten, and mix well, seasoning with pepper and salt. Have ready some patty pans lined with pie pastry, into which put a portion of the mince, and cover with a pastry lid. Bake until the pastry is brown, and serve hot on a d’oyley. Put some good gravy in a tureen to serve with the pâtés. 32. Potted Beef. Take 1-lb. of second beefsteak and cut into small pieces, and cover with cold water and put in a pan and stew gently for about 1½ hours. Put through the mincing machine twice. Place in a basin and add as much of the gravy as is necessary to moisten slightly. Mix and beat thoroughly and put into pots, making the surface very smooth. Melt some butter and pour a little into each pot. Decorate when cold with a sprig of parsley. 33. Pommes de terre au Lait. Cut some cooked potatoes into slices and lay them in a pan of warm milk. Boil for a few minutes, when the milk will become thick. Add a little butter, parsley, and nutmeg to the contents of the pan and serve at once. 34. Pommes de terre à L’Écosse. Take some large raw potatoes and cut them into square shapes. Blanch them in salt and water, and then scoop out the centre of each potato with a spoon. Fill up the holes with finely chopped meat or ham. Lay the stuffed potatoes in a dripping tin, cover with gravy or water and a little gravy browning. Bake slowly until tender, pouring the gravy over them from time to time until they present a glacé appearance. 35. Potato Croquettes. Take some mashed potatoes and add 2-oz. butter, 2 eggs, and ½ teacup of flour, and a little grated nutmeg. Mix all well together, and if hot, let it get cold. Form into fingers, cover with egg and flour, and fry in boiling fat. 36. A dainty way of Cooking an Egg. Take a large saucer, and rub it with butter, and set it over a pan of boiling water. Beat an egg lightly with 1 tablespoonful of milk and a pinch of pepper and salt. Strain into the saucer, cover it, and leave for 10 minutes to cook. 37. Beef Tea Custard. Beat a fresh egg, strain into a gill of beef tea, and add salt to taste. Turn into a small buttered cup, cover with buttered paper, and steam 20 minutes. The water should not boil. This can be turned out and eaten either hot or cold. 38. Beef Tea. Take 1-lb. of steak, neck, or shin of beef. Cut it into small pieces, put it into a basin, and cover with cold water, leaving for an hour or two. Place in a double pan or in any pan that will allow the contents to gently simmer, and simmer for two or three hours, when it will be ready for use. Add salt and pepper if desired. 39. Dainty way of Serving Mashed Potatoes. Steam the potatoes for about half an hour, mash well or put through a potato sieve. Have ready a basin, the bottom and sides of which have been greased with lard or butter and sprinkled with bread raspings. Press the potatoes into the basin and turn out into a tureen. 40. Fried Potatoes. Peel the potatoes and leave whole, unless very large. Place in a dripping tin, in which there is a depth of an inch of hot dripping, and put into a fairly hot oven. As the potatoes brown on the one side, turn on the other. When cooked, which should be in about half an hour, strain well and serve in a tureen. 41. Ragôut of Mutton and Eggs. Mince finely any cold mutton and season with pepper and salt. Place in a dish in the oven and simmer half an hour. Fry as many eggs as required, and have ready a hot dish with pieces of toast arranged on it. Turn the meat on to the dish and place the eggs on the top and serve. II. PASTRY. 1. Short Pastry (Rich). 6-ozs. flour. 4-ozs. butter. 1-oz. castor sugar. Pinch of salt. Yolk of egg. Water. Mix sugar and salt with flour, rub the butter lightly in, add yolk of egg and enough water to make into a stiff paste. Roll out once, and it is ready for use. 2. Ground Rice Cheesecakes. Breakfast cup of ground rice. Ditto of castor sugar. 1 egg. ¼-lb. butter. Almond flavouring. Cream the butter and sugar, add egg, rice, etc. Mix well and use. 3. Cocoanut Cheesecakes. 2-ozs. cocoanut. 1½-ozs. castor sugar. 1 tablespoonful flour. 1½-ozs. butter. 1 egg. Cream the butter and sugar, add egg and flour, and lastly cocoanut. Put a spoonful of the mixture into patty pans lined with pastry and bake. 4. Macaroons. 2 eggs (whites). Pinch of salt. 2-oz. castor sugar. 2-ozs. ground almonds. Whip the whites to a stiff froth, add sugar and almonds. Fill patty pans and bake. 5. Maids of Honour. ½-lb. castor sugar. 3 eggs. 2-oz. butter. 2 lemons. Put the butter into a pan, and when melted, stir sugar in, then add grated rind of one lemon and the juice of two. Add beaten eggs, and simmer gently till thick. Fill lined patty pans with the mixture and bake. 6. Lemon Curd. 1-lb. lump sugar. 3 eggs. ¼-lb. butter. 2 lemons. Melt the butter and sugar in a pan, add juice of lemons and beaten eggs and stir until it is very thick. Put in jars and when cold, tie down. It will keep for months. 7. Welsh Cheesecakes. Line tart tins with pastry and fill with mixture made of the weight of 1 egg in butter, sugar and flour and 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Put a little jam in bottom of tins and then a spoonful of mixture. Bake in moderate oven. 8. Milk Rolls. Dissolve ½-oz. yeast in ¾-pint milk. Add pinch of salt and mix to a smooth dough with flour. Set to rise 2 hours, turn on board and form into twists, coils, &c. Set to rise again, brush with milk and bake. 9. Almond Cheesecakes. 4-oz. ground almonds. 1 egg. 4-oz. castor sugar. 2-oz. butter. Mix well together. Line patty pans and fill with mixture. Place bars of pastry across and bake. 10. Bakewell Cheesecakes. Weight of 1 egg in butter, sugar and flour. ½ teaspoonful baking powder. 1 egg. ½ grated lemon. Line patty pans with pastry, put in each a little jam, then the mixture. 11. Pastry Sandwiches. Make some short crust with 3-oz. butter and ½-lb. flour. Roll out half the pastry, spread with jam, cover with the other half and bake. When cold, ice evenly and dry in a slow oven or near the fire. 12. French Tartlets. 2 eggs. ¼-lb. crushed ratafias. 2-ozs. castor sugar. Put a spoonful of mixture in each lined tin, then a spoonful of jam, then the mixture on the top and bake. 13. Apple Cheesecakes. ¼-lb. apple pulp. 2-ozs. sugar. 2 yolks. 2-ozs. butter. Rind and juice of ½ lemon. 1 white of egg. Melt the butter, and add to the apple with lemon and sugar, and lastly, beaten yolks and stiff white. 14. Good Family Pastry. To every pound of flour allow ½-lb. of lard and ½ teaspoonful of salt. Rub the lard in, and mix to smooth paste with water. Roll out once altogether, and then use as required. Bake in a quick oven. Add 1-oz. more lard to make extra good. 15. Pie Pastry. To every pound of flour, allow 3-ozs. of lard, 3-ozs. of dripping, 3 teaspoonsful baking powder, and half a teaspoonful salt. Mix to a stiff dough with cold water and use as required. III. CUSTARDS, PUDDINGS, & BLANC MANGES. 1. Lemon Rice Pudding. Boil a cup of rice until soft, put in dish and add grated rind of 1 lemon, yolks of 2 eggs, little more than 1 pint of milk and a pinch of salt. Bake 1 hour. Beat to froth the whites of eggs with 1 cup of powdered sugar and the juice of 1 lemon. Spread over pudding when cold and put in the oven to brown. 2. Sponge Cake Pudding. Split some sponge cakes into slices and spread with jam and place in a pie dish. Beat 2 eggs and 1 dessertspoonful of sugar together, add ½-pint milk, a little nutmeg, and stir. Pour the custard over the cakes in the dish. Bake in a slow oven till set--about ½ hour. 3. Strawberry Blanc Mange. 2 tablespoonsful cornflour. 1 leaf of strawberries. 1½-pints milk. 2 tablespoonsful sugar. Mix the cornflour with a little milk then add the rest and boil till stiff. Add sugar and pour into mould and push strawberries down here and there. 4. Honeycomb. 3 teacups milk. 3 eggs. 1 small teacup sugar. ½-oz. gelatine. Soak gelatine for 1 hour in a teacup of milk, put the remainder of the milk over the fire with the sugar and gelatine till dissolved. Add beaten yolks of eggs to the milk and stir well until on the verge of boiling. Have the whites beaten to a stiff froth in a bowl, into which pour the contents of the pan. Stir up quickly and pour into a mould until set. 5. Lemon Mould. 2-oz. cornflour. 1-pint water. 6-oz. castor sugar. 2 lemons. Yolks of 2 eggs. Mix the cornflour with a little of the water and put rest of water in a pan with sugar and lemon rind. Bring to a boil and boil 5 minutes. Strain into cornflour the lemon juice and yolks of eggs. Stir till it boils and boil 3 minutes. 6. Baroness Pudding. ¾-lb. suet. ¾-lb. flour. ¾-lb. raisins. ½-pint milk. Chop the suet, stone the raisins and cut in halves and mix with the flour. Moisten with milk and boil 4 hours. 7. Holderness Pudding. ½-lb. suet. ½-lb. raisins. 4 tablespoonsful treacle. ½-lb. currants. ½-lb. bread crumbs. 1-pint milk. Chop the suet and stone the raisins and mix all well together and boil 3½ hours. 8. Lemon Pudding. 10-oz. bread crumbs. 2-oz. butter. 4 eggs. 2-pints milk. ¼-lb. sugar. Grated rind of 1 lemon. Bring the milk to boiling point, stir the butter in, and add the other ingredients. Put pastry round a dish, fill with the mixture, and bake ¾ hour. 9. Parson’s Pudding. ¼-lb. chopped suet. ¼-lb. currants. 1 tablespoonful moist sugar. ¼-lb. flour. ¼-lb. raisins. ½ teaspoonful ground ginger. ½ teaspoonful salt. Mix well and boil 3 hours. 10. Queen’s Pudding. 4-oz. bread crumbs. 4 tablespoonsful strawberry jam. Place in a pie dish, and pour custard on made from 1 egg and 1-pint milk. Bake ½ hour. 11. Ideal Pudding. ½-pint bread crumbs. Grated rind of 1 lemon. 1-oz. butter. 1-pint boiling milk. 1 tablespoonful sugar. Yolks of 2 eggs. Butter a dish, pour in the mixture and bake until set. Beat the whites of eggs and pile on the top of pudding and put in the oven to brown. 12. Curd Pudding. 1-lb. curd. 3 tablespoonsful bread crumbs. 1 tablespoonful milk. 2-oz. butter. 2 tablespoonsful sugar. 2 eggs. Mix all together, and bake 20 minutes in the dish. Good either hot or cold. 13. Chocolate Blanc Mange. 1-oz. gelatine. 1-pint milk. 2-oz. grated chocolate or cocoa. ¼-lb. sugar. Dissolve the gelatine in half of the pint of milk. Grate the chocolate and mix it and the sugar to a smooth paste with a little milk. Place the gelatine on the fire with rest of milk and when nearly boiling add the chocolate, &c. Boil for 12 minutes, stirring all the time one way. Put in a mould. 14. Suet Dumplings. ½-lb. suet. ¾-lb. flour. Chop suet very fine, add flour and 1 teaspoonful baking powder (if liked). Mix with water and boil. Be sure the water is boiling. 15. Snow Pudding. ½ small packet of gelatine. Juice of 2 lemons. 5-oz. castor sugar. Whites of 3 eggs. Put gelatine to soak in teacup of cold water for about ½ hour. Then pour breakfast cup of boiling water on, when quite dissolved add lemon juice and sugar, strain, add whites of eggs put in large bowl and beat with egg whisk about ½ hour--more in hot weather. 16. French Pancakes. 3 eggs. 3-oz. sifted sugar. ¾-pint of warmed milk. 3-oz. butter. 3-oz. flour. Beat eggs and add to butter, stir in sugar and flour. Mix well and add the milk and beat a few minutes. Put on a buttered dish, and bake 20 minutes. 17. German Pancakes. 2 tablespoonsful flour. 2 eggs. 2 teaspoonsful castor sugar. ½ cup milk. Bake very quickly and eat at once. 18. Junket. 1-pint new milk. 3 or 4 nibs of sugar. 1 tablespoonful rennet. Little nutmeg. Make the milk warm, put the sugar in a basin, pour the milk into it and stir well until the sugar is dissolved, then add the rennet and stir very quickly, put in a cool place as gently as possible. 19. Three Minutes Pudding. 1 tablespoonful flour. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 1 tablespoonful sugar. 1 egg. Beat the egg, add sugar &c., and beat well. Place in a dripping tin and bake lightly. Take very quickly from the tin and spread with preserve and roll up and sift sugar over. Eat with plain sauce. 20. German Pudding. Toast some thin slices of stale bread quite brown, put in a dish with jam between. Make a cold custard, of an egg and sufficient milk to fill the dish, and 1 tablespoonful of sugar. Mix and pour over the toast and stand 20 minutes. Put a little dripping on the top and bake brown. 21. Rhubarb Mould. Rhubarb sufficient to fill a quart basin. Put in pan with 1-gill of water and boil gently. Add sugar to taste with a little lemon juice, stir well and pour out. Put with it ½-oz. gelatine (previously soaked and dissolved). Add 5 or 6 drops of cochineal. Beat the rhubarb briskly and when well mixed and cool turn into mould and leave to set. Serve with whipped cream. 22. Imperial Pudding. Grate 6-oz. bread crumbs, pare, core and slice 6-oz. apples. Well grease pie dish, strew bread crumbs over the bottom and sides, cut a thin slice of bread and lay in the bottom of dish on the crumbs, put layer of apples and grate some nutmeg and strew 1 tablespoonful sugar over the apples; next, layer of crumbs, then apples, &c., finishing with crumbs. Mix 1 egg with ½-pint milk, pour over pudding, put a piece of dripping on the top, place in the oven, and bake ¾ hour. Turn out on hot dish. 23. Fig Pudding, (No. 1.) ¼-lb. flour. ¼-lb. suet. ¼-lb. bread crumbs. 6-oz. chopped figs. Mix with 2 eggs, and boil 2 or 3 hours. 24. Sultana Pudding. 6-oz. flour. 3-oz. sultanas. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 3-oz. suet. 1-oz. sugar. 1 egg. Make to stiff dough with a little milk, and boil 3 hours. 25. Trieste Pudding. Pare and core 1-lb. apples and stew in a little water and sugar to taste with a few cloves. When cool mix a teacupful of bread crumbs and yolks of 2 eggs with the apple. The bread should absorb the apple juice, if not add more bread. Warm 1-oz. butter and stir in. Place in greased dish, and bake 40 minutes. Whip whites of eggs to stiff froth, pile on the pudding and lightly brown. 26. Stewed Figs. Wash 1-lb. figs, place in pan, add enough boiling water to cover them; add 1 tablespoonful treacle and 1 teaspoonful finely chopped lemon peel. Cover the pan, and simmer till tender; serve cold. 27. Baked Milk (_For Fruit_). Put ½-pint milk into a jar, and place in warm oven for 5 or 6 hours, when it should be as thick as rich cream. 28. Baked Rhubarb Pudding. Butter the bottom of a dish, and cover with bread crumbs, then a layer of rhubarb, cut in 1-inch pieces. Sprinkle 1 tablespoonful of sugar over, and fill the dish with alternate layers; the last layer must be crumbs. Put a few bits of butter on the top and bake 1 hour. 29. Apple Snow. Place sponge cakes in a glass dish, cover with custard, and leave to soak a few hours. Cover with dry stewed apples to which has been added sugar and lemon juice. Pile whisked whites of two eggs on the top and serve. 30. Prune Mould. 1-lb. prunes. 1-oz. gelatine. Little cinnamon. 3-oz. castor sugar. Few strips lemon rind. Few drops cochineal. Clean the prunes and soak overnight, next day stew till soft, with sugar and peel. Take out the stones, crack them, and keep the kernels. Dissolve the gelatine in hot water, and stir into the fruit and sweeten to taste. Have a plain mould wetted, and arrange kernels in it, and pour in the prunes, &c., and set to cool. Turn out, scoop a hollow place in the top of the mould with a silver knife dipped in boiling water, and fill with whipped cream. 31. Bachelor’s Pudding. 4-oz. suet. 4-oz. flour. 4-oz. apples. 2-oz. sugar. 4-oz. bread crumbs. 4-oz. currants. 3 eggs. Little nutmeg. Juice of 1 lemon. Chop the apples and suet, add currants, &c. Beat well and boil 3 hours. 32. Raspberry Sponge. 1 white of egg. 1 tablespoonful lemon juice. ¼-pint sieved jam. 1-oz. sugar. ½-oz. gelatine. ¼-pint water. Dissolve gelatine, add egg and jam (heated to make it thin) whisk till stiff. Pile on a glass dish. A few drops of cochineal if necessary. 33. Lemon Cream. ½-oz. gelatine. 1 pint milk. 1 egg. ½-pint water. 4-oz. sugar. 3 lemons. Put the rind of 2 lemons in a pan with milk, and let it infuse. When boiling, let it cool slightly, and pour on beaten egg. Melt the gelatine in water and let it just reach boiling point, then add the juice of 3 lemons and sugar. Slightly cool, then add to egg and milk. If too hot it will curdle. 34. Gâteau de Riz. 1 pint milk. 2-oz. ground rice. ¼-pint sieved raspberry jam. 1½-oz. castor sugar. ½-oz. gelatine. 4 drops cochineal. Cook the rice in the milk till it thickens, take it from the fire and stir the sugar and jam in. Add the strained gelatine (which has been dissolved in hot water), colour and serve. Whipped cream improves this dish. 35. Kingston Puddings. 3-oz. butter. 2-oz. castor sugar. 3-oz. flour. ¼-pint milk. Melt butter, add sugar, etc. Bake in buttered cups ½ hour. Serve with sauce. 36. Fig Pudding (No. 2.) ½-lb. figs. 6-oz. brown sugar. ¼-lb. suet. Nutmeg to taste. ½-lb. bread crumbs. 2 eggs. 4-oz. flour. Little milk. Mix well and steam 3 hours. 37. Cheese Pudding (No. 1). Few slices of thin bread and butter. 1 egg. Pepper and salt. ½-pint milk. 3-oz. grated cheese. Bread crumbs. Grease a pie dish, and coat with crumbs. Put in a layer of bread and butter, then cheese and seasoning, and so on, with a layer of cheese on the top. Beat an egg, add it to the milk, and pour it on gradually. There will seem to be too much liquid at first, but it will soak up. Put a few bits of butter on the top. Bake until set. 38. Paragon Pudding. 1-lb. cooked potatoes. 5-oz. loaf sugar. 2 lemons. 2-oz. butter. 2 eggs. Pinch of salt. Rub the potatoes through a sieve while hot, melt the butter and add it to them, then the grated rind, sugar, eggs, and lemon juice. Stir well. Bake in a pie dish in a moderate oven 30 minutes. Turn out and serve hot, sprinkled with sugar. 39. Cambridge Pudding. 1-lb. flour. 1 egg. ½-lb. apples, peeled, cored and sliced. 1½-pts. skimmed milk. 2-oz. sugar. Make a smooth batter of flour, milk, and egg, add sugar and apples. Pour into a well-greased basin. Boil 2 hours. Any fruit can be substituted. 40. Sago Jelly. 5-oz. sago. 2-oz. castor sugar. 1½-pints water. raspberry jam. Soak the sago in the water overnight, then cook it till quite clear and tender, and add sugar and jam to taste. Add a few drops of cochineal, and pour into a mould. Turn out when cold and serve with custard. 41. Orange Meringue. 3 oranges. sugar to taste. ¼-oz. cornflour. 2 eggs. ½-pint milk. Peel and slice oranges, and put them in a pie dish. Cook the rind in the milk, and when boiling, strain the milk. Make a custard of it, and the cornflour and yolks. Pour over oranges. When cold and set, beat the whites stifly, add sugar and lemon juice, and pile on the top. Put in the oven to set. 42. Spanish Custard. 3 or 4 stale sponge cakes. 2-oz. sweet almonds. 1 teaspoonful vanilla. ¼-oz. cornflour. ½-pint milk. 2 eggs. 2-oz. chocolate. Cut the cakes in strips, and pile in a glass dish. Add the vanilla to 2 tablespoonsful of milk, and put slowly on the cake, letting it all soak in. Make a custard of eggs, milk, and cornflour. Melt the chocolate in a spoonful or two of milk, and add it to the custard. Sweeten if necessary. Pour over the cake. Blanch, roughly chop, and brown the almonds, and scatter over the whole. 43. Cheese Pudding (No. 2). 4-ozs. bread crumbs. 2 tablespoonsful grated cheese. Little pepper, salt and cayenne. 2 eggs. Little milk. Bake in a buttered dish sprinkled with grated cheese, and put small pieces of butter on the top of the pudding. 44. Apple Trifle. Peel and core some apples, and stew till tender, adding very little water. Beat to a smooth pulp, sweeten to taste, flavour with lemon, and when cold, put into a glass dish. Pour a thick custard over the apples, and garnish with fancy biscuits. 45. Economic Custard. Put 2 or 3 well-beaten eggs to nearly 1 quart of milk, and add about 1 tablespoonful cornflour mixed with a little of the milk. Pour into a pan, and heat until thick enough, stirring all the time. When finished, add sugar and flavouring to taste. Put in a cool place. 46. Tasmanian Pudding. Take 2-oz. large sago and swell in a pan on the fire in ½-pint of milk. Pare, core and slice 2 large apples, put them in the oven with a little sugar and water and cook till tender. Take the sago from the fire when it has absorbed the milk. Beat up 1 egg with 1 pint of milk, mix with the sago, and add ½ teaspoonful grated ginger. When the apples are tender, mix all well together, and put in a pie dish and bake ½ hour. 47. Yorkshire Pudding. 4 or 5 tablespoonsful flour. Milk. 2 eggs. Put the flour into a bowl and make to smooth paste with a little milk, add the eggs without beating them, then beat 3 or 4 minutes adding more milk until the batter is the desired thickness, (a little thinner than cake mixture.) Have ready a dripping tin with a depth of ¼ inch of hot dripping in it and pour the batter in and bake in a hot oven about 20 minutes. 48. Steamed Batter Pudding. Make the same as Yorkshire pudding, putting the batter into a cloth, wrung out in boiling water and steam 1½ hours. Serve with jam or raspberry vinegar. 49. Chocolate Pudding. ¼-lb. bread crumbs. 2-oz. castor sugar. 1-pint milk. 2 eggs. 1-oz. cocoa. vanilla essence. Boil the milk, add the cocoa, stir in the bread crumbs, sugar, yolks of eggs and essence, bake in a slow oven till set, whip the whites to a stiff froth, and cover the pudding. Put in the oven to brown slightly. 50. Gêlée à la Normandie. A packet of blanc mange powder made as directed, pour into small dariole moulds. Dissolve a packet of raspberry jelly and pour on a meat dish, so that it will be ½ inch thick. When both are set turn the blanc manges on to a dish, and cut out rounds of jelly with a fluted pastry-cutter, and place on the top of the blanc manges. Chop the remainder of jelly and garnish with it. 51. Chocolate Blanc Mange. 3-oz. cornflour. 2-oz. sugar. Few drops of vanilla. 1¾-pints milk. 1-oz. cocoa. Mix cornflour and cocoa in a basin, with sufficient milk to make a smooth paste, and add rest of milk, boil till thick. Add sugar and flavouring, and turn into wet mould to set. 52. Eastbourne Pudding. 6-oz. flour. 2-oz. sugar. 1½ teaspoonsful baking powder. 4-oz. butter or lard. 4-oz. sultanas. 1 egg. Bake in good oven ¾ hour. 53. Summerville Plum Pudding. 1½-lbs. suet. ½-lb. candied peel. 1-lb. raisins (stoned). 1-lb. sultanas. 9 eggs. 1-lb. currants. 1 nutmeg (grated). ½-lb. bread crumbs. 1-lb. flour. ¼-pint brandy. Boil 11 hours. 54. Victoria Pudding. 2 teacups flour. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. 1 cupful castor sugar. 2 tablespoonsful butter. 1 egg. Mix with a little milk. Beat well and bake in a greased dish until brown. Serve with sauce. 55. Prune Gâteau. 1-lb. prunes. 3-oz. sugar. ¾-pint water. ½-oz. gelatine. Well wash the prunes and stew in ½-pint of the water. Rub through a sieve. Dissolve the gelatine in the remaining ¼-pint of water, and add it to the prune pulp. Colour with a little cochineal. Put all into a mould, and sprinkle with cocoanut when it is turned out. 56. Raspberry Pudding. 2 eggs and their weight in flour, butter and sugar, 2 tablespoonsful raspberry jam, and ½ teaspoonful carbonate of soda. Mix all well together and boil or steam 2 hours. Serve with sauce. 57. Rice Pudding. Put 2 tablespoonsful rice into a dish, and fill up with milk. Add 1 tablespoonful Demerara sugar and a tiny piece of butter. Bake in a steady oven at least 1½ hours. 58. Small Sago Pudding. Put 2 tablespoonsful sago into a dish and just cover with cold water. Place in the oven, and when the water has been all soaked up, take from the oven and beat well with a fork, adding gradually sufficient milk to nearly fill the dish. Add a tablespoonful sugar and a well-beaten egg. Cook for about three-quarters of an hour. 59. Ground Rice Pudding. Put into a pan two or three tablespoonsful of ground rice and as much milk as the size of the pudding requires. Simmer for about 20 minutes and turn into a dish. Add sugar and a beaten egg and put into the oven for about half an hour. 60. Custard Pudding. Beat 2 eggs well and add them to 1 pint of milk and sweeten to taste, adding a little grated nutmeg. Place all in a dish and bake slowly for about an hour. Be careful not to let the mixture boil, or the pudding will not be quite so nice. 61. Stewed Pears. 8 large pears. 6 cloves. 5-oz. loaf sugar. ½-pint water. Peel the pears, halve them, and remove the cores and leave the stalks on. Put them into a lined saucepan with the above ingredients, and let them simmer very gently until tender, which will be in 3 or 4 hours. As each one is done, carefully lift out without breaking on to a glass dish. Boil up the syrup 2 or 3 minutes, cool a little and pour over the pears. Add a few drops of cochineal to improve the colour. Do not let the fruit boil, but gently simmer. 62. Harrogate Pudding. Take about a pound of any kind of red fruit and stew it (with sugar to taste) in a pan until tender. Line a basin or mould with slices of bread about half-an-inch thick. Strain the fruit into the mould and cover with bread. Pour as much juice over the whole as will completely saturate the bread. Put a heavy plate on the top for at least 2 hours. Turn out on to a dish and pour any remaining juice round. IV. SAUCES. 1. Apple Sauce. Pare, core, and slice 6 apples, put them in a pan with ½-oz. butter, 1-oz. moist sugar, ¼ teaspoonful grated nutmeg, and 1 teacupful of cold water. Boil till the apples are reduced to a pulp, beat with fork and serve. 2. Bread Sauce. (_A Quick Way of making it._) Put about ½-pint milk into a pan, with some stale bread broken in, let it boil and then beat with a fork. If not stiff enough, add more bread. Season with pepper and salt, and serve. 3. Melted Butter. 2 tablespoonsful flour. Butter size of walnut. 1 pint water. Put the flour in a basin, and mix with a little cold water, then pour boiling water on, stirring well all the time. Put all in a pan, and boil till thick enough. If it is lumpy, strain and put in a sauce-boat, with the butter in the middle. 4. Egg Sauce. Make same as for Melted Butter, adding 1 or 2 hard-boiled eggs finely chopped. If Parsley Sauce is required add parsley instead of eggs. 5. White Sauce. 2 tablespoonsful flour. 1 pint milk. Mix the flour with a little milk, and then add the rest of milk. Put in a pan and boil until it is the thickness required. Strain if necessary. This is used for fowls, rabbits, &c. 6. Mint Sauce. Chop some mint very finely, and place in a sauce-boat. Add a dessertspoonful of sugar, and enough vinegar to cover it well. Do not make this sauce long before it is required, as the mint will turn yellow. 7. Onion Sauce. Peel the onions, and boil till tender, squeeze the water from them and chop them. Add them to white sauce (recipe given), boil all up once and serve. V. CAKES. A few hints about Cakes. Unless otherwise specified the general rule in making cakes is to cream the butter and sugar together, then add the eggs, then flour and baking powder (mix the baking powder with the flour) and then add fruit or other ingredients and beat well. If fruit is to be added do not make the cake very soft, or currants, &c., will be liable to sink, but they are less likely to do so if previously rubbed in flour. Always grease cake tins with lard as the cakes will be less liable to burn than if the tins are rubbed with butter. Do not open the oven door for at least twenty minutes after cakes are put in, and then do it very gently as a sudden action will tend to make a cake sink in the middle. 1. Madeira Cake. ¼-lb. butter. 3 eggs. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. ½-lb. castor sugar. ½-lb. flour. Little milk if necessary. Put candied peel on the top when nearly done. 2. Beverleigh Buns. ¼-lb. cornflour. 2-oz. sugar. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 2-oz. butter. 2 eggs. Bake in patty pans. 3. Queen Cakes. ¼-lb. butter. 3 eggs. 3-oz. currants. 1 teacup milk. Almond essence. ½-lb. castor sugar. 1-lb. flour. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Bake in patty pans in brisk oven. 4. Raspberry Sandwich. 2 eggs with their weight in sugar, butter and flour and 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Bake in slow oven. 5. Rock Buns. 1-lb. flour 3-oz. sugar. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. ¼-lb. dripping (rubbed in). 6-oz. currants. 1 egg beaten with little milk. Mix all together, and bake in rough lumps on floured baking sheet. 6. Cornflour Cake. ¼-lb. butter. 1 egg. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. ½-lb. castor sugar. ½-lb. cornflour. Lemon essence. Bake in small dripping tin. 7. Oatmeal Buns. 6-oz. coarse oatmeal. 3-ozs. lard or butter (rubbed in). 4-oz. sugar. Pinch of salt. ½-lb. flour. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 1 egg. Little milk. Bake either in lumps on sheet or in patty pans. 8. Lemon Sandwich Cakes. Weight of 1 egg in flour, butter, castor sugar, and ground rice. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Beat all together, and spread on two greased plates. Bake ten minutes, and spread lemon curd between. 9. Yorkshire Parkin. 1-lb. coarse oatmeal. ½-lb. lard or dripping. ½-lb. brown sugar. 2 teaspoonsful mixed spices. Juice of 1 lemon. 1-lb. flour. 1-lb. treacle. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 2 teaspoonsful ginger. 3 eggs and a little milk. Bake in dripping tin in slow oven. 10. Drummond Cake. 2-oz. butter. 6-oz. castor sugar. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. ½-lb. currants. ½-oz. carraway seeds. 2-oz. lard. ¾-lb. flour. 2-oz. peel. 1 teaspoonful ginger. 3 eggs and a little milk. Bake in moderate oven. 11. Gingerbread. 10-oz. flour. ¼-lb. brown sugar. 1-oz. candied peel. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 2-oz. butter (rubbed in). ¼-lb. treacle. 1-oz. ground ginger. 1 egg. Little milk. Bake in dripping tin, and cut in squares when cold. 12. Ginger Nuts. 1-lb. flour. ¼-lb. treacle. ¼-lb. butter. ½-oz. ginger. Melt the butter in a pan, add the treacle, and when quite hot mix with a wooden spoon to the flour and ginger. Roll between the hands into nuts, and bake on greased tin for 20 minutes. 13. Victoria Roll. 2 eggs. 2-oz. flour. 3-oz. castor sugar. ½ teaspoonful baking powder. Butter a tin and pour in the mixture, and bake 10 minutes in a quick oven. Quickly spread with jam, roll up, and sprinkle with castor sugar. 14. Yorkshire Cake. 1 egg and its weight in flour, sugar, butter, and ground rice. 1 teaspoonful baking powder and a little milk. Spread on two greased plates and bake. Spread jam on one and press the other on the top. 15. Sally Lunn Teacakes (No. 1). 1¾-lb. flour ¼-lb. butter or lard. 2 teacupsful castor sugar. 1d. yeast. Mix well with warm milk to a stiff batter, then beat with the hand for 20 minutes. Place in tins, and allow them to rise before putting in the oven. 16. Summerville Cakes. 3-oz. butter. 3 eggs. ¼-lb. flour. ¼ teaspoonful baking powder. 3-oz. sugar. ¼-lb. grated chocolate. 6 drops essence of vanilla. Tablespoonful of milk. Bake in small patty pans. 17. Soda Cake. ¼-lb. butter or dripping. 3 eggs. ½-lb. currants. 1 teacupful of milk. ½-lb. moist sugar. 1-lb. flour. 1 teaspoonful carbonate of soda. Bake in a moderate oven about 1 hour. 18. Brunswick Cakes. ¼-lb. butter. 1 egg. ¼-lb. currants. 2-oz. mixed peel. Grated rind of 1 lemon. 2-oz. sugar. ½-lb. flour. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Add a little milk, but the mixture should be stiff. Drop on to a baking sheet in pieces the size of a walnut. 19. Jordan Cakes. 1-oz. butter. 1 egg. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 1 teacupful sugar. 1 teacupful flour. Pinch of salt. Mix and bake at once in a moderate oven. Cut in two when cold and spread with jam. 20. Lunch Cake. 1-lb. flour. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 3 eggs. 1-oz. carraway seeds. Little milk. ¼-lb. dripping (rubbed in). 1 teacupful sugar. 1 cup of milk. ¼-lb. currants. Bake 1½ hours. 21. Plain Plum Cake. ¼-lb. butter. 3 eggs. ½-lb. currants. ½-pint milk. ½-lb. sugar. ¾-lb. flour. 2-oz. candied peel. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Cream the butter, add the sugar and eggs, then rest of ingredients. Bake in moderate oven. 22. Rice Buns. ½-lb. butter. 2 eggs. ½-lb. ground rice. 1-oz. lemon peel. ½-lb. castor sugar. ½-lb. flour. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Mix with milk. Bake in patty pans. 23. Raspberry Buns. 6-oz. flour. 4-oz. butter (rubbed in). Yolk of 1 egg. 6-oz. ground rice. 8-oz. granulated sugar. Little milk. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Make into a stiff paste, and roll in the hands to size of walnuts. Make a hole in the middle, put in a little jam and close up. Bake in slow oven. 24. Walnut Cake. 4-oz. butter. 3 eggs. 6-oz. chopped walnuts. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 4-oz. castor sugar. ½-lb. flour. Essence of vanilla. Bake in tea cake tins in fairly hot oven. 25. Icing for Walnut Cake. 3-oz. chocolate. ¼ or ½-pint water. ½-lb. icing sugar. Put the chocolate in a pan with water. Allow it to boil, then add sugar, but do not let it boil. Pour over cake. Decorate with half walnuts. 26. Cocoanut Pyramids. 3-oz. cocoanut. 1 dessertspoonful cornflour. 1½-oz. castor sugar. 1 white of egg (stiff). Mix sugar, cocoanut, and cornflour together. Whip the white of egg and add it. Form in small pyramids on buttered paper. Bake a few minutes till the outside is set. 27. London Buns. 3-oz. butter. 2 eggs. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. ¼-lb. brown sugar. 1-lb. flour. 3-oz. candied peel. Juice and grated rind of 1 lemon. Mix with a little milk, and bake in patty pans. 28. Victoria Buns. 2-oz. butter. 1 egg. ½-oz. currants. ½-oz. candied peel. 2-oz. castor sugar. ¼-lb. flour. 1½-oz. ground rice. Little milk. Bake in brisk oven in patty pans. 29. Norwegian Cake. 2-oz. butter. 2 eggs. ½-lb. currants. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. ¼-lb. sugar. 1-lb. flour. 2-oz. lemon peel. Little milk. Very good made in bread tins to butter. 30. Sultana Cake. ¼-lb. butter. 3 eggs. ¾-lb. flour. ½-lb. sultanas. ½-lb. castor sugar. ½-lb. ground rice. 3 teaspoonsful baking powder. Little milk. These cakes must be fairly stiff, or the sultanas will sink to the bottom. Will make two good-sized cakes. 31. Cocoanut Cake. 2 eggs and their weight in flour, sugar and butter. Beat all together, and add a few drops of cochineal. Add 5 or 6 drops of vanilla essence. Then add the flour, and 4 chopped candied greengages, 2-oz. cocoanut, and two teaspoonsful of baking powder. 32. Lancashire Parkin. 1½-lb. fine oatmeal. ½-lb. butter (rubbed in). 1 teaspoonful ginger. 1 teaspoonful carbonate soda. ½-lb. flour. ½-lb. sugar. 1-lb. treacle. 1 egg. Dissolve the soda in 2 teacups of milk. Melt the treacle and butter together, beat the egg in, and add the soda last. Mix well. Bake in a slow oven in a dripping tin. 33. Delicious Cake. ¼-lb. butter. 3 eggs. ½ teaspoonful carbonate soda. Little milk. ½-lb. castor sugar. ½-lb. flour. 1 teaspoonful cream of tartar. 8 drops vanilla essence. Mix well together, and bake in moderate oven. 34. Chocolate Cake. ¼-lb. butter. 3 eggs. ½-lb. flour. 6-oz. sugar. 2-oz. chocolate. 1 teaspoonful vanilla essence. Dissolve the chocolate over the fire in ¾ teacup of milk and add it to the cake when still warm. 35. Rich Plum Cake. ½-lb. butter. 4 eggs. ½-lb. currants. ½ nutmeg. ½-lb. flour. ½-lb. Demerara sugar. ¼-lb. raisins (stoned and chopped). 3-oz. lemon peel. When the cake is in the tin push in a few thick lumps of citron. Bake 2 hours. 36. Plain Seed or Currant Loaf. 2-lbs. flour. ¼-lb. moist sugar. 4-oz. dripping (rubbed in). 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. 1-oz. carraway seeds or ½-lb. currants. Form into light dough with milk and bake in bread tins. 37. Malta Cake. Weight of 2 eggs in butter, sugar and flour, grated rind of 1 orange, little milk, 2 teaspoonsful baking powder, 2 eggs. Mix well and bake in dripping tin. Turn the cake on to a board when done, and ice as follows. Icing:--Squeeze the juice of 1 orange into a basin and add as much icing sugar as will make it thick. Spread while the cake is hot. When cold cut in shapes. 38. Small Rice Cake. 3-oz. butter. 2 eggs. ¼-lb. ground rice. ¼-lb. sugar. ¼-lb. flour. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Add as much milk as will make it fairly soft. Bake in a moderate oven. 39. Parisian Sandwich. 2-oz. butter. 2 eggs. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 2-oz. sugar. 3-oz. flour. Little milk. Pour on two greased plates and bake. Prepare filling. Put ½ teacupful of sugar, 1 dessertspoonful of cornflour, mixed with ½ teacupful of cold water, into a pan and simmer till thick. When cold, add beaten yolk of 1 egg, and enough lemon juice to flavour well. Spread the mixture on one cake, and press the other on the top. 40. Sultana Scones. 2-oz. butter, rubbed into 1-lb. flour, 2 teaspoonsful baking powder, and a little salt. Mix to a light dough with sour milk, and work in a handful of sultanas. Roll an inch thick, and cut in shape and bake. 41. York Tea Cakes. 2-oz. butter. ¼-lb. castor sugar. 2-lbs. flour. 1 teaspoonful salt. 2-oz. lard. 3 eggs. 1-pint milk. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Work about 10 minutes, and add a few currants. Bake in quick oven. 42. Fairy Cakes. 3-oz. butter. 3 eggs. 1 grated lemon rind. 3-oz. minced cherries. Little milk. 3-oz. castor sugar. 8-oz. flour. Few drops of cochineal. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Bake in queen cake tins or patty pans. 43. Orange Rock Cakes. 3-oz. butter. 2 eggs. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Little milk. 6-oz. castor sugar. 1-lb. flour. Grated rind of 1 orange. 1 orange juice. Either bake in patty pans or drop on floured shelf. 44. Jersey Cake. 2-oz. butter. 2 eggs. 2-oz. corn flour. 2-oz. castor sugar. 2-oz. flour. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Beat 5 minutes, and bake in small dripping tin. 45. Seed Bread (_To Butter_). 3½-lbs. flour. 1-lb. sugar. 2-oz. carraway seeds. ¼-lb. lard (rubbed in). 1d. yeast. 2-oz. candied peel. After kneeding well, let it stand 4 hours. Then put in tins and let it rise a few minutes before baking. 46. Queen Anne’s Cake. 3-oz. butter. 6-oz. castor sugar. ½-lb. flour. 1 teaspoonful grated ginger. 1-oz. lard. 2 eggs. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. 2-oz. candied peel. Beat well with a little milk and bake. 47. Spice Bread. 1½-lbs. flour. 4-oz. sugar. 3 teaspoonsful baking powder. 1½-lbs. sultanas. 1-pint buttermilk. 5-oz. lard (rubbed in). 2-oz. candied peel. 2 eggs. ½-lb. currants. Pinch of salt. Bake in bread tins. 48. Bachelor’s Buttons. 6-oz. butter. 3 yolks and 2 whites of eggs. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. ½-lb. castor sugar. 15-oz. flour. ½ teaspoonful lemon essence. Rub the butter into the flour, add the other ingredients and mix well. Divide into pieces the size of a walnut. Dip each with a fork into the third white of egg and roll in coarse sugar or finely chopped almonds or desiccated cocoanut. 49. Cocoanut Fingers. 3-oz. butter. 2 eggs. 6-oz. flour. 2-oz. castor sugar. ¼-lb. cocoanut. Roll into cork shapes, and roll in cocoanut and bake. 50. Victorine Buns. ¼-lb. butter. 2 eggs. 3-oz. ground rice. 3-oz. sultanas. ¼-lb. castor sugar. ½-lb. flour. 2-oz. peel. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Bake in patty pans. 51. Orange Cakes. 2-oz. butter. ¼-lb. castor sugar. 2 eggs. ½-lb. flour. 1 orange rind (grated). Little milk. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Bake in a moderate oven in tea cake tins. 52. Ginger Cakes. 2-oz. butter. 2½-oz. castor sugar. 1 egg. 7-oz. flour. 1-oz. treacle. ½-oz. grated ginger. ½ teaspoonful baking powder. Bake in small cakes. 53. Cherry Cakes. 3-oz. butter. ¼-lb. castor sugar. ½-lb. flour. 2 eggs. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. 3-oz. chopped candied cherries. Few drops of vanilla essence. Little milk. Cream the butter and sugar, add eggs, etc. Mix well and put in deep tins and bake. When cold, ice with water icing, and place a cherry on the top. 54. Small Seed Cakes. 3-oz. butter. 6-oz. sugar. 2 eggs. ½-lb. flour. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. 1-oz. carraway seeds. Add a little milk if necessary, and bake in tea cake tins. 55. Lemon Jumbles. 3-oz. butter. 5-oz. castor sugar. 1 egg. 14-oz. flour. 3 teaspoonsful milk. 1 teaspoonful cream of tartar. ½ teaspoonful carbonate of soda. Juice of 2 lemons. Rind of 1 lemon. Cream the butter and sugar, add the egg, stir in the milk, juice and rind. Mix the soda and tartar in the flour, and stir it in gradually till the paste is rather stiff. Roll out rather thin. Cut in ovals with cutter, and bake in a quick oven about 5 minutes. 56. Cocoanut Gingerbread. ½-lb. flour. 2-oz. sugar. 1 teaspoonful carbonate soda. ½-gill milk. 1 egg. ½-lb. treacle. 2-oz. butter. ¼-lb. cocoanut. ¼-oz. ginger. Dissolve the butter and sugar and syrup and add the other ingredients and lastly the soda dissolved in milk. Bake 1 hour. 57. Lemon Buns. 3-oz. butter. 6-oz. sugar. 2 eggs. ½-lb. flour. Grated peel of 1 lemon. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Bake in patty pans in a moderate oven. 58. Ashton Sandwiches. Beat 3 eggs with 3-oz. sugar for 10 minutes, add 3-oz. flour and bake in a flat tin lined with buttered paper. They will not take more than 7 minutes to bake. When cold, cut in fingers, divide each through the middle, spread with jam, ice on the top and decorate with preserved cherries or angelica. 59. Christmas or Wedding Cake. 1-lb. flour. 1-lb. butter. 1-lb. Demerara sugar. ½-lb. Valencia raisins. 1½-lbs. currants. ½-lb. candied peel. ½-lb. citron. 9 English eggs. ½ nutmeg. Wine glass of rum. Beat the butter to cream, add sugar, add flour by degrees, then eggs, and beat with a wooden spoon 20 minutes. Add raisins (weighed after they are stoned and chopped) and rest of fruit, etc. and mix well and put in a tin. Cut the citron in thick pieces (1 inch long) and push into the cake here and there. Bake 5 hours in slow oven. Almond Paste. 1½-lbs. ground almonds. 2½-lbs. castor sugar. ½ small packet of gelatine. Mix the almonds and sugar and bind with a very little dissolved gelatine. Put on the cake with a knife. Icing. Put 2-lbs. icing sugar in a bowl and moisten with the beaten whites of 2 eggs and lemon juice, or a little dissolved gelatine. Pour over the cake and make smooth with a knife dipped in water. Ornament with crystalized fruits or crystals put on when the icing is soft. Put in dry place to dry. 60. Split Cakes. Rub 3-oz. butter into 1-lb. flour; add 1 tablespoonful castor sugar and 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Form into small flat cakes, and bake just in time to serve hot. Split open and butter. 61. Baking Powder Rolls. Mix one dessertspoonful of baking powder with ½-lb. flour, and add 1 teaspoonful salt; moisten with milk to rather stiff dough. Roll out and bake quickly. 62. American Cake. ¾ cup of flour. ½ cup sugar (castor). 3 eggs. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Little milk. Whisk eggs for 15 minutes, add sugar and whisk 10 minutes more. Stir in the flour and baking powder, and add a little milk to moisten. Pour into shallow tins, and bake in a quick oven. When baked, put orange filling between layers of cake. Orange Filling. Grate 2 apples and the rinds of 2 oranges and 2 lemons, add 2-oz. sugar, 2 teaspoonsful arrowroot, 1 egg, a little milk, and 1-oz. butter. Put all in a pan, and cook till thick. 63. Shrewsbury Cakes. 3-oz. castor sugar. 4-oz. butter. 1 egg. 1 lemon rind (grated). 8-oz. flour. Cream the butter and sugar, add egg and lemon rind, stir well, shake flour in gradually, making a smooth paste. Roll out thinly, cut in rounds, and bake in a moderate oven. 64. Swiss Roll. 2-oz. butter. 2-oz. castor sugar. 2 eggs. ¼-lb. flour. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 2½ teaspoonsful milk. Grated rind of ½ a lemon. Bake about 8 minutes in a long dripping tin, turn out on sugared paper, spread jam on, and roll quickly. 65. Westwood Buns. 3-oz. butter. 6-oz. castor sugar 3 eggs. ½-lb. flour. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. 3-oz. cocoanut. Cream the butter and sugar, add eggs and rest of ingredients. Drop on floured baking-tin and bake. 66. Sally Lunn Tea Cakes. (No. 2). Mix ½ teaspoonful salt in 1-lb. flour, and add 3 tablespoonsful sugar. Melt ½-oz. butter in ½-pint of new milk, and when milk-warm pour it over ½-oz. German yeast. Add a well-beaten egg and grated nutmeg. Stir lightly into the flour with a wooden spoon, cover with a cloth, and set in a warm place to rise. Place in tins, and bake 15 to 20 minutes. 67. Queen Cakes (No. 2). 3 eggs, their weight in butter, sugar, flour and currants, and the grated rind of 1 lemon, 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Cream the butter and sugar together, and add the rest of ingredients. Beat thoroughly, place in tins, and bake 20 minutes. 68. Neapolitan Ribbon Cake. Weight of 3 eggs in butter. Castor sugar and flour. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Little milk. Cream the butter and sugar, and add the eggs, and beat well, adding flour and baking powder. Mix well for 3 or 4 minutes, and add milk if it is too thick. Divide the mixture into three parts. Leave one part its natural colour, colour another pink with a few drops of cochineal, and add one pennyworth of melted chocolate to the third part. Divide each portion into two parts, and bake the six divisions thus obtained in tea cake tins in a cool oven, so that they will not rise in the middle. When done, turn out, and when cold, pile one on the top of the other, with a little icing between each layer to stick them together. Ice the whole cake with the following icing:--Mix ½-lb. of icing sugar stifly with some cold water or orange juice, and spread it over the cake with a knife. Decorate with cherries or sweets. 69. Clancarthy Buns. ¼-lb. flour. 2-oz. butter. 2 dessertspoonsful castor sugar. ½ teaspoonful baking powder. Mix with a little milk. Roll out with the hand about the thickness of a finger and twist into fancy shapes and bake until crisp. 70. Spice Bread. 2-lbs. flour. 1-lb. Demerara sugar. 1-lb. currants. 1-lb. raisins. 4 eggs. 1 pint milk. ¼-lb. peel. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. A little grated ginger and nutmeg. ¼-lb. treacle. Mix well and bake in a slow oven. 71. Swiss Cakes (_Another Method_). 2 eggs. ¼-lb. castor sugar. ¼-lb. flour. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 3-oz. butter. Vanilla essence. Beat the eggs, then add the sugar, flour, and baking powder, and lastly the butter, which has previously been melted in the oven. 72. Genoa Cake. 6-oz. butter. ½-lb. sugar. 4 eggs. 12-oz. flour. 8-oz. sultanas. 3-oz. candied peel. Grated rind of a lemon. 3-oz. almonds. 1 tablespoonful milk. 3 teaspoonsful baking powder. Cream the butter and sugar, add the beaten eggs and beat well. Add the flour and baking powder and beat about 10 minutes. Add the fruit, etc., mix well, and place in small bread tins. Blanch the almonds and cut in halves, and scatter over the top of the cakes, and bake about 1½ hours. 73. Fairy Baskets. 3-oz. butter. ¼-lb. castor sugar. 6-oz. flour. 2 eggs. 2-oz. cocoanut. ¼-pint cream. A little jam. Angelica. Cream the sugar and butter, add the beaten eggs and flour, and mix well. Fill some deep patty pans with the mixture and bake about 15 minutes. When the cakes are cold, cut out the centres, spread the outside with a little jam, and decorate plentifully with cocoanut. Fill the centres with jam, and place whipped cream on the top. Cut the angelica into strips and arrange to form the handles. 74. Fancy Bread (_Without Yeast_). 1-lb. flour. ½-pint milk. 2-oz. Paisley flour. Pinch of salt. Dessertspoonful castor sugar. Mix the Paisley flour, sugar, flour, and salt well together, and mix into light dough with the milk. Make up into fancy shapes and bake in a quick oven 15 minutes. VI. BISCUITS. 1. Picnic Biscuits. 1-lb. flour. 2-oz. castor sugar. ½ teaspoonful carbonate soda. 2-oz. butter (rubbed in). Pinch of salt. Few carraway seeds and a little milk. Mix very stiff and roll out ¼ inch thick. 2. Rice Biscuits. ½-lb. flour. ½-lb. butter. 2 eggs. ½-lb. ground rice. ½-lb. castor sugar. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Rub the butter into the flour and rice, add the rest of the ingredients and mix and roll out. 3. Shrewsbury Biscuits. ¼-lb. butter. ¼-lb. sugar. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 6-oz. flour. 1 egg. Roll them out thin and bake. 4. Ginger Drops. 8-oz. sugar. Beaten white of 1 egg. 2 teaspoonsful essence ginger. Mix well and drop on greased paper and put them in the oven. They are done as soon as they can be taken off the paper. 5. Seventy Little Biscuits for 2d. Put the white of an egg into a basin and beat to a stiff froth with a silver fork, gradually add ½-lb. of castor sugar, and flavour with essence of almonds. Mix well to a thick white paste. Take some sheets of greased white paper and place on the baking sheet, then take a small spoon and drop pieces of the mixture on the paper, keeping them ½ inch apart. Put in a cool oven till they change colour. Take from the oven and let them get cold and then remove with a knife from the paper. A few drops of cochineal added to half the mixture will make a variety. 6. Ginger Biscuits. 1-lb. flour. ¼-lb. butter. ½-lb. sugar. ¾-oz. ground ginger. 2 eggs. 1 teaspoonful baking powder. 7. Rice Biscuits. 1-lb. rice flour. ¼-lb. sugar. ¼-lb. butter. 2 eggs. 8. Seed Biscuits. 1-lb. flour. ¼-lb. butter ¼-lb. sugar. 3 eggs. ½-oz. carraway seeds. Brush them over with a little milk. 9. Soda Biscuits. 1-lb. flour. ¼-lb. butter. ½-lb. sugar. 1 teaspoonful carbonate of soda. 2 eggs. 10. Sweet Biscuits. 2 breakfast cups flour. 1 cup castor sugar. 3-ozs. butter. 2 eggs. ½ teaspoonful baking powder. Little milk. Mix very stiff and bake on a floured tin. 11. Chestnut Biscuits. ½-lb. of chestnuts. ¼-lb. sugar. Essence of vanilla. 2-oz. grated chocolate. One-sixteenth of a pint of water. Boil the chestnuts till they are tender, rub them through a sieve, and add the sugar. Melt the chocolate in water over the fire till smooth, and add to the chestnut pulp. Lightly mix in the white of an egg very stiffly whipped. Drop on wafer-paper in rocky little lumps. Bake in a moderate oven till they are dry on the outside. 12. Cocoanut Biscuits. ¼-lb. butter. 1 breakfast cup of flour. 1 breakfast cup of sugar. 1 breakfast cup of ground rice. 3 teaspoonsful baking powder. ¼-lb. cocoanut. 2 eggs. Little milk. 13. 4-lbs. Biscuits for 8d. 2-lbs. flour. ½-lb. lard. ¾-lb. moist sugar. 2 teaspoonsful baking powder. Mix with water or milk. 14. Chocolate Biscuits. 2-oz. butter. 2-oz. sugar. 1 yolk of egg. ¼-lb. flour. 2-oz. chocolate. Dissolve the chocolate with a very little water and vanilla over the fire. Cream the butter and sugar, beat well, add yolk, then chocolate and half of flour, beat well, then work in rest of flour by hand. Roll out very lightly and bake a few minutes. 15. Cinnamon Stars. 1½ whites of eggs. 1-oz. castor sugar. 4-oz. ground almonds. ½-oz. cinnamon. Mix all to stiff dough, roll out on a board sprinkled with sugar and flour, and cut in stars. Bake in a moderate oven. Brush with white of egg and return to the oven to glaze. 16. Ratafias. 1 egg, its weight in sugar and butter, ¼-lb. flour, 1 teaspoonful baking powder, few drops of essence of ratafia. Cream the butter and sugar, add flour, etc. Drop on wafer-paper in small pieces. Bake lightly. 17. Almond Rings. 2½-oz. castor sugar. White of 1 egg. 2½-oz. ground almonds. Juice of 1 lemon. 1½-oz. sweet almonds (cut in thin strips). Beat the sugar and white of egg 10 minutes and add the other ingredients, mix well and form into small rings and bake a pale brown. 18. Cheese Straws. 4-oz. grated cheese. 3 oz. butter. 4-oz. flour. 1 yolk of egg. Salt. Cayenne. Rub the butter into the flour, add the cheese and seasoning, mix with the egg into a firm paste; put on a floured board, roll out ⅛ inch thick and about 5 inches wide, cut in strips, place on a baking sheet, and cut the remaining paste into strips. 19. Patent Barley Biscuits. 2 ozs. flour. 2 ozs. Robinson’s Patent Barley. 2 ozs. castor sugar. 2 ozs. butter. 1 egg. Pinch of baking powder. Cream the butter and sugar, add the yolk of egg, then by degrees the barley and flour mixed with the baking powder. Roll out thin and cut with a round cutter. Bake in a moderate oven six minutes. VII. BONBONS. 1. French Almond Rock. Put 1-lb. loaf sugar into a pan with 1 teacup of water. Stir till the sugar is melted, take off the scum, and when it has boiled for ¼ hour, add 1 tablespoonful vinegar or lemon juice. Stir in sliced or blanched almonds to taste. Pour on a buttered tin, and cut in slices. 2. Candy Dough. _Fresh_ icing sugar. Break the white of an egg into one glass, and put an equal quantity of water into another. Put this into a basin, and stir it with the sugar until it is of a dough-like consistency. The proportion of the white of egg and water is two to each pound of sugar. 3. Candy Cherries. Cut off a piece of candy dough and make it into a thin roll about ½ inch wide. Take a sharp knife and cut into small pieces, and roll them until they are like marbles. Split some crystalized cherries, and press a marble between each. 4. Almond Creams. Blanch the almonds, and cover with candy dough. Roughen the sugar with a fork. 5. Walnut Creams. Crack the walnuts and cut in halves, using only the perfect ones, between which put a candy dough marble and press it. Leave to harden. 6. Cream Dates. Procure some fresh dates and take out the stones. Put a candy dough marble in its place, and press together and leave to harden. 7. Brandy Snap. ½-lb. treacle. 10-oz. sugar. 8-oz. flour. 2-oz. butter. ½-oz. ginger. Drop in small portions on a greased baking sheet, and when done curl round a greased rolling pin or stick. Draw off when cold. 8. Raspberry Rock. To every pound of sugar allow ¾ of a teacup of cold water. Boil the syrup till it thickens. Drop it in cold water, and it is ready when it snaps. Flavour with 3 dessertspoonsful of raspberry jam, boiled with a little water and strained. Pour on buttered plates, and when cool cut it in pieces. 9. Cocoanut Fondant. To every pound of boiled candy allow 4-oz. of cocoanut. Stir in well whilst the sugar is boiling and keep stirring. 10. Chocolate or Coffee Fondant. Over a clear fire stir together (in enamelled pan) 1-lb. loaf sugar and a small cup of cold water. When it is melted, mixed, and beginning to boil, leave alone for 10 minutes. Dip a skewer in, and if a long silky hair adheres, remove from the fire at once without shaking it, and leave it till cool. When cool, turn it into a bowl and beat briskly to a thick cream with a wooden spoon. Knead the paste (like bread) till it becomes soft and smooth. Flavour with coffee essence or melted chocolate. Drop on a buttered paper or form into pyramids. 11. Nougat. Slow fire. Put in a pan ½-lb. sifted sugar dry, no water. When melted, throw in blanched almonds and a few bitter ones (thoroughly dried and chopped into rough dice). Stir all together and turn out on a buttered dish. Work it a little, then roll flat with a greasy rolling pin or hands. Cut in shapes. 12. Gelées Françaises. 1-oz. gelatine, 1-lb. granulated sugar, nearly 1-pint water, flavouring. Put the water and gelatine in a pan, and when dissolved add sugar. Boil fast 25 minutes. Add 1 teaspoonful powdered citric acid, to give a sharp taste. Pour on three perfectly dry soup plates. Flavour each differently, and leave till next day. Then with a sharp sugared knife cut into diamond shapes, toss in castor sugar, and spread on paper to become crisper. These are much better after a few days. 13. Chestnut Bonbons. ½-lb. chestnuts, 2-oz. chocolate, ¼-gill water, 4-oz. sugar, 1 white of egg. Boil chestnuts till tender, skin and sieve; add sugar and the melted chocolate, whip the white stiffly and add it. Bake in little rocks on wafer-paper. 14. Chocolate Baisers. White of 1 egg. 1 teaspoonful sugar. 1 teaspoonful powdered chocolate. Beat the egg to froth and mix with the sugar and chocolate and form into balls. Place on well-greased tin and bake 20 minutes. 15. Yorkshire Toffee. ¼-lb. butter. 1-lb. Demerara sugar. 1 tablespoonful treacle. 1 tablespoonful vinegar. 1 teacupful water. Boil all together about 20 minutes and turn out on a buttered dish. 16. Brandy Snap. ½-lb. flour. ½-lb. treacle. ½-lb. sugar. ½-lb. butter. Boil the butter and treacle in a pan. Mix the flour, sugar, and ginger well together, then mix with the treacle and butter to a stiff cream. Drop on a baking sheet in small pieces, and when baked roll on a stick and leave to cool. 17. Marmalade. Slice very thinly 12 Seville oranges and 2 lemons, carefully removing all pips. To every pound of pulp allow 3 pints of cold water. Let this stand for 24 hours, then boil till the chips are very tender and clear. Let this remain until the following day. To every pint of boiled fruit allow 1¼-lbs. lump sugar. Boil, stirring constantly until the syrup jellies and the chips are quite clear. Try the jelly on a saucer from time to time. Patent Groats. Take of Robinson’s Patent Groats one tablespoonful, mix with a wine-glassful of cold water, gradually added, into a SMOOTH paste, pour this into a stew-pan containing nearly a pint of boiling water, or milk, stir the gruel on the fire (while it boils) for ten minutes; pour it into a basin, add a pinch of salt and a little butter, or if more agreeable, some sugar, and a small quantity of spirits. When gruel is made for an Invalid, butter had best be omitted. VIII. BEVERAGES. 1. Apple Wine. Slice a large, tart, cooking apple without peeling it, also a little lemon rind. Put all in a pan with 6 lumps of sugar and 1½-pints of cold water. Let it come slowly to nearly boiling point; draw it back from the fire and simmer slowly for a quarter of an hour. Strain into a jug. Useful during fevers, and as a summer drink. 2. Barley Water for Invalids. Take of Robinson’s Patent Barley one ounce, mix with a wine-glassful of cold water into a smooth paste free from lumps, pour this into a stew-pan containing one quart of boiling water, stir this over the fire while boiling for five minutes: then flavour with a small bit of lemon peel or cinnamon, and sweeten according to taste. When Robinson’s Patent Barley is used to make a Summer beverage, only half-an-ounce must be taken. It can be greatly improved by aeration with the aid of “_Sparklets_.” 3. Ginger Beer. Put into a deep bowl 1-lb. lump sugar, 1½-oz. bruised ginger, 1 lemon, sliced and the pips taken out, and ½-oz. cream of tartar. Pour 1 gallon of boiling water over. When milk-warm, take a whisk, and beat in vigorously ¼-pint Brewer’s yeast, or 1-oz. German yeast mixed to a liquid with powdered sugar. Whisk well, cover with a cloth, let it stand 15 hours, skim, strain through a piece of old tablecloth (or do not strain), and bottle, only half filling the bottles. 4. Ginger Wine. 1-oz. Tartaric acid, 5-drms. or 6d. worth (or more) essence of ginger, 2-drms. capsicum, 1-oz. burnt sugar, 2-lbs. lump sugar, 5-qts. boiling water. Dissolve the sugar in the boiling water, when nearly cold add the other things (which should have been mixed together in a jar), and stir often until cold. Bottle and cork. 5. Lemon Squash. Juice and rind of 3 lemons, 3-lbs. lump sugar, 1-quart water. Boil till it forms a clear syrup, and when cold add 2-oz. powdered citric acid. Strain and bottle. 6. Lemon water. 6 lemons. 1-lb. lump sugar. 1 gallon of boiling water. Take the pips from the lemons, slice, put in a deep bowl, and pour the water over. When cold, it is ready for use. IX. ADDITIONAL USEFUL RECIPES. 1. To bottle Green Gooseberries. (_Very Good_). Make the bottles hot and dry in the oven, then fill with picked fruit, not too full. Pour boiling water over, covering the berries to the top of the bottle. Cork down as soon as possible, and keep in a cool dry place. Any other fruit can be done the same way. 2. Gooseberry Jelly. ½-stone green gooseberries. 2-quarts water. Boil together to pulp, tie in a coarse cloth and let it drip all night, then add 1-lb. sugar to each pint of juice. Boil gently ¾-hour, and pour into pots. 3. Apple Jelly. Rub the apples, and cut them up without paring or coring them. Put in a pan and fill with water. Boil 1 hour. Put in a bag and strain. Allow ¾-lbs. sugar to 1 pint of juice, and boil 1 hour. Put a little into a saucer, and if it jellies it is done. Pour into pots. 4. Cough Mixture. 1d. licorice. 1d. anise seed. 1d. peppermint. 1d. common treacle. 1d. laudanum. Mix with 1½-pints of cold water and bottle. 5. Pork Pie Pastry. To every 1-lb. of flour allow 6-ozs. of lard and 1 dessertspoonful of salt. Rub the lard into the flour, boil some milk and mix to a stiff paste. Take some cake tins and take out the bottoms and line with the warm paste. Three parts fill with minced pork and put a cover about 1 inch thick on the top. Make a hole in the centre and decorate. Place in a fairly hot oven and bake about 2 hours. Brush with yolk of egg just before they are cooked. When the pies are cold, pour into the hole in the top some gelatine, which has been previously dissolved in boiling water. If better pastry is required, add more lard, or use butter instead. 6. Recipe for Keeping Eggs. Take a large stew pot, or deep bowl, and put a layer of common salt in the bottom. Then insert a few eggs with the thin end downwards, and in such a way that they do not touch each other. Then put another layer of salt on the top, and repeat the process until the pot is full, having salt as the top layer. Tie down very tightly, and whenever an egg is taken out take care to tie down again. Be sure the eggs are fresh, and have not been much shaken, and they will keep good for months. MEMORANDA. MEMORANDA. TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES: Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_. Obvious typographical errors have been corrected. Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized. Archaic or variant spelling has been retained. *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE "IDEAL" COOKERY BOOK: A RELIABLE GUIDE FOR HOME COOKING *** Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will be renamed. 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