SOUPS.
*
* *
CONSOMMÉ, or
Stock, forms the basis of all meat soups, and also of all principal
sauces. It
is, therefore, essential to the success of these culinary operations to
know
the most complete and economical method of extracting from a certain
quantity
of meat the best possible stock or broth. Fresh, uncooked beef makes
the best
stock, with the addition of cracked bones, as the glutinous matter
contained in
them renders it important that they should be boiled with the meat,
which adds
to the strength and thickness of the soup. They are composed of an
earthy
substance to which they owe their solidity of gelatine, and a fatty
fluid,
something like marrow. Two ounces of them contain as much gelatine as
one pound
of meat; but, in them, this is so encased in the earthy substance, that
boiling
water can dissolve only the surface of the whole bones, but by breaking
them
they can be dissolved more. When there is an abundance of it, it causes
the
stock, when cold, to become a jelly. The flesh of old animals contains
more
flavor than the flesh of young ones. Brown meats contain more flavor
than
white.
Mutton is too
strong in flavor for good stock, while veal, although quite glutinous,
furnishes very little nutriment.
Some cooks use
meat that has once been cooked; this renders little nourishment and
destroys
the flavor. It might answer for ready soup, but for stock to keep it is
not as
good, unless it should be roasted meats. Those contain higher fragrant
properties; so by putting the remains of roast meats in the stock-pot
you
obtain a better flavor. The shin bone is generally used, but the neck
or
"sticking-piece," as the butchers call it, contains more of the
substance that you want to extract, makes a stronger and more
nutritious soup,
than any other part of the animal. Meats for soup should always be put
on to
cook in cold water, in a covered pot, and allowed to simmer slowly for
several
hours, in order that the essence of the meat may be drawn out
thoroughly, and
should be carefully skimmed to prevent it from becoming turbid, never
allowed
to I oil fast at any time, and if more water is needed, use boiling
water from
the tea-kettle; cold or lukewarm water spoils the flavor. Never salt it
before
the meat is tender (as that hardens and toughens the meat), especially
if the
meat is to be eaten. Take off every particle of scum as it rises, and
before
the vegetables are put in.
Allow a little
less than a quart of water to a pound of meat and bone, and a
teaspoonful of
salt. When done, strain through a colander. If for clear soups, strain
again
through a hair sieve, or fold a clean towel in a colander set over an
earthen
bowl, or any dish large enough to hold the stock. As stated before,
stock is
not as good when made entirely from cooked meats, but in a family where
it
requires a large joint roasted every day, the bones, and bits and
under-done
pieces of beef, or the bony structure of turkey or chicken that has
been left
from carving, bones of roasted poultry, these all assist in imparting a
rich
dark color to soup, and would be sufficient, if stewed as above, to
furnish a
family, without buying fresh meat for the purpose; still, with the
addition of
a little fresh meat it would be more nutritious. In cold weather you
can gather
them up for several days and put them to cook in cold water, and when
done,
strain, and put aside until needed.
Soup will be as
good the second day as the first if heated to the boiling point. It
should
never be left in the pot, but should be turned into a dish or shallow
pan, and
set aside to get cold. Never cover it up, as that will cause it to turn
sour
very quickly.
Before heating a
second time, remove all the fat from the top. If this be melted in, the
flavor
of the soup will certainly be spoiled.
Thickened soups
require nearly double the seasoning used for thin soups or broth.
Coloring is used
in some brown soups, the chief of which is brown burnt sugar, which is
known as
caramel by French cooks.
Pounded spinach
leaves give a fine green color to soup. Parsley, or the green leaves of
celery
put in soup, will serve instead of spinach.
Pound a large
handful of spinach in a mortar, then tie it in a cloth, and wring out
all the
juice; put this in the soup you wish to color green five minutes before
taking
it up.
Mock turtle, and
sometimes veal and lamb soups, should be this color.
Okras gives a
green color to soup.
To color soup
red, skin six red tomatoes, squeeze out the seeds, and put them into
the soup
with the other vegetables or take the juice only, as directed for
spinach.
For white soups,
which are of veal, lamb or chicken, none but white vegetables are used;
rice,
pearl barley, vermicelli, or macaroni, for thickening.
Grated carrot
gives a fine amber color to soup; it must be put in as soon as the soup
is free
from scum.
Hotel and
private-house stock is quite different.
Hotels use meat
in such large quantities that there is always more or less trimmings
and bones
of meat to add to fresh meats; that makes very strong stock, which they
use in
most all soups and gravies and other made dishes.
The meat from
which soup has been made is. good to serve cold thus: Take out all the
bones,
season with pepper and salt, and catsup, if liked, then chop it small,
tie it
in a cloth, and lay it between two plates, with a weight on the upper
one;
slice it thin for luncheon or supper; or make sandwiches of it; or make
a hash
for breakfast; or make it into balls, with the addition of a little
wheat flour
and an egg, and serve them fried in fat, or boil in the soup.
An agreeable
flavor is sometimes imparted to soup by sticking some cloves into the
meat used
for making stock; a few slices of onions fried very brown in butter are
nice;
also flour browned by simply putting it into a saucepan over the fire
and
stirring it constantly until it is a dark brown.
Clear soups must
be perfectly transparent, and thickened soups about the consistency of
cream.
When soups and gravies are kept from day to day in hot weather, they
should be
warmed up every day, and put into fresh-scalded pans or tureens, and
placed in
a cool cellar. In temperate weather, every other day may be sufficient.
HERBS
AND VEGETABLES USED IN
SOUPS.
OF vegetables
the principal ones are carrots, tomatoes, asparagus, green peas, okra,
macaroni, green corn, beans, rice, vermicelli, Scotch barley, pearl
barley,
wheat flour, mushroom, or mushroom catsup, parsnips, beetroot, turnips,
leeks,
garlic, shallots and onions; sliced onions fried with butter and flour
until
they are browned, then rubbed through a sieve, are excellent to
heighten the
color and flavor of brown sauces and soups. The herbs usually used in
soups are
parsley, common thyme, summer savory, knotted marjoram, and other
seasonings,
such as bay-leaves, tarragon, allspice, cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, mace,
black and
white pepper, red pepper, lemon peel and juice, orange peel and juice.
The
latter imparts a finer flavor and the acid much milder. These
materials, with
wine, and the various catsups, combined in various proportions, are,
with other
ingredients, made into almost an endless variety of excellent soups and
gravies. Soups that are intended for the principal part of a meal
certainly
ought not to be flavored like sauces, which are only intended to give
relish to
some particular dish.
STOCK.
Six pounds of
shin of beef, or six pounds of knuckle of veal; any bones, trimmings of
poultry, or fresh meat; one-quarter pound of lean bacon or ham, two
ounces of
butter, two large onions, each stuck with cloves; one turnip, three
carrots,
one head of celery, two ounces of salt, one-half teaspoonful of whole
pepper,
one large blade of mace, one bunch of savory herbs except sage, four
quarts and
one half-pint of cold water.
Cut up the meat
and bacon, or ham, into pieces of about three inches square; break the
bones
into small pieces, rub the butter on the bottom of the stewpan; put in
one-half
a pint of water, the broken bones, then meat and all other ingredients.
Cover
the stewpan, and place it on a sharp fire, occasionally stirring its
contents.
When the bottom of the pan becomes covered with a pale, jelly-like
substance,
add the four quarts of cold water, and simmer very gently for five or
six
hours. As we have said before, do not let it boil quickly. When nearly
cooked,
throw in a tablespoonful of salt to assist the scum to rise. Remove
every
particle of scum whilst it is doing, and strain it through a fine hair
sieve;
when cool remove all grease. This stock will keep for many days in cold
weather.
Stock is the
basis of many of the soups afterwards mentioned, and this will be found
quite
strong enough for ordinary purposes. Keep it in small jars, in a cool
place. It
makes a good gravy for hash meats; one tablespoonful of it is
sufficient to
impart a fine flavor to a dish of macaroni and various other dishes.
Good soups
of various kinds are made from it at short notice; slice off a portion
of the
jelly, add water, and whatever vegetables and thickening preferred. It
is best
to partly cook the vegetables before adding to the stock, as much
boiling
injures the flavoring of the soup. Season and boil a few moments and
serve hot.
WHITE
STOCK.
WHITE stock is
used in the preparation of white soups, and is made by boiling six
pounds of a
knuckle of veal, cut up in small pieces, poultry trimmings, and four
slices of
lean ham. Proceed according to directions given in STOCK, on opposite
page.
FRANCES FOLSOM
CLEVELAND
TO
CLARIFY STOCK.
PLACE the stock
in a clean saucepan, set it over a brisk fire. When boiling, add the
white of
one egg to each quart of stock, proceeding as follows: beat the whites
of the
eggs up well in a little water; then add a little hot stock; beat to a
froth
and pour gradually into the pot; then beat the whole hard and long;
allow it to
boil up once, and immediately remove and strain through a thin flannel
cloth.
BEEF
SOUP.
SELECT a small
shin of beef of moderate size, crack the bone in small pieces, wash and
place
it in a kettle to boil, with five or six quarts of cold water. Let it
boil
about two hours, or until it begins to get tender, then season it with
a
tablespoonful of salt, and a teaspoonful of pepper; boil it one hour
longer,
then add to it one carrot, two turnips, two tablespoonfuls of rice or
pearl
barley, one head of celery, and a teaspoonful of summer savory powdered
fine;
the vegetables to be minced up in small pieces like dice. After these
ingredients have boiled a quarter of an hour, put in two potatoes cut
up in
small pieces, let it boil half an hour longer; take the meat from the
soup, and
if intended to be served with it, take out the bones and lay it closely
and
neatly on a dish, and garnish with sprigs of parsley.
Serve made
mustard and catsup with it. It is very nice pressed and eaten cold with
mustard
and vinegar, or catsup. Four hours are required for making this
soup. Should
any remain over the first day, it may be heated, with the addition of a
little
boiling water, and served again. Some fancy a glass of brown sherry
added just
before being served. Serve very hot.
VEAL
SOUP. (Excellent.)
PUT a knuckle of
veal into three quarts of cold water, with a small quantity of salt,
and one
small tablespoonful of uncooked rice. Boil slowly, hardly above
simmering, four
hours, when the liquor should be reduced to half the usual quantity;
remove
from the fire. Into the tureen put the yolk of one egg, and stir well
into it a
teacupful of cream, or, in hot weather, new milk; add a piece of butter
the
size of a hickory nut; on this strain the soup, boiling hot, stirring
all the
time. Just at the last, beat it well for a minute.
SCOTCH
MUTTON BROTH.
Six pounds neck
of mutton, three quarts water, five carrots, five turnips, two onions,
four
tablespoonfuls barley, a little salt. Soak mutton in water for an hour,
cut off
scrag, and put it in stewpan with three quarts of water. As soon as it
boils, skim
well, and then simmer for one and one-half hours. Cut best end of
mutton into
cutlets, dividing it with two bones in each; take off nearly all fat
before you
put it into broth; skim the moment the meat boils, and every ten
minutes
afterwards; add carrots, turnips and onions, all cut into two or three
pieces,
then put them into soup soon enough to be thoroughly done; stir in
barley; add
salt to taste; let all stew together for three and one-half hours;
about
one-half hour before sending it to table, put in little chopped parsley
and
serve.
Cut the meat off
the scrag into small pieces, and send it to table in the tureen with
the soup.
The other half of the mutton should be served on a separate dish, with
whole
turnips boiled and laid round it. Many persons are fond of mutton that
has been
boiled in soup.
You may thicken
the soup with rice or barley that has first been soaked in cold water,
or with
green peas, or with young corn, cut down from the cob, or with
tomatoes,
scalded, peeled and cut into pieces.
GAME
SOUP.
Two GROUSE or
partridges, or, if you have neither, use a pair of rabbits; half a
pound of
lean ham; two medium-sized onions; one pound of lean beef; fried bread;
butter
for frying; pepper, salt and two stalks of white celery cut into inch
lengths;
three quarts of water.
Joint your game
neatly; cut the ham and onions into small pieces, fry all in butter to
a light
brown. Put into a soup-pot with the beef, cut into strips, add a little
pepper.
Pour on the water; heat slowly, and stew gently two hours. Take out the
pieces
of bird, and cover in a bowl; cook the soup an hour longer; strain;
cool; drop
in the celery and simmer ten minutes. Pour upon fried bread in the
tureen.
Venison soup
made the same, with the addition of a tablespoonful of brown flour wet
into a
paste with cold water, adding a tablespoonful of catsup,
Worcestershire, or
other pungent sauce, and a glass of Madeira or brown sherry.
CONSOMMÉ
SOUP.
TAKE good strong
stock (see pages 27 and 30), remove all fat from the surface, and for
each
quart of the stock allow the white and shell of one egg and a
tablespoonful of
water, well whipped together. Pour this mixture into a saucepan
containing the
stock; place it over the fire and heat the contents gradually, stirring
often
to prevent the egg from sticking to the bottom of the saucepan. Allow
it to
boil gently until the stock looks perfectly clear under the egg, which
will
rise and float upon the surface in the form of a thick white scum. Now
remove
it and pour it into a folded towel laid in a colander set over an
earthen bowl,
allowing it to run through without moving or squeezing it. Season with
more
salt if needed, and quickly serve very hot. This should be a clear
amber color.
JULIENNE
SOUP.
CUT carrots and
turnips into quarter-inch pieces the shape of dice; also celery into
thin
slices. Cover them with boiling water; add a teaspoonful of salt, half
a
teaspoonful pepper, and cook until soft. In another saucepan have two
quarts of
boiling stock (see pages 27 and 30) , to which add the cooked
vegetables, the
water and more seasoning if necessary. Serve hot.
In the spring
and summer season use asparagus, peas and string beans all cut into
small
uniform thickness. CREAM
OF SPINACH.
PICK, wash and
boil enough spinach to measure a pint, when cooked, chopped and pounded
into a
soft paste. Put it into a stewpan with four ounces of fresh butter, a
little
grated nutmeg, a teaspoonful of salt. Cook and stir it about ten
minutes. Add
to this two quarts of strong stock (see pages 27 and 30); let boil up,
then rub
it through a strainer. Set it over the fire again, and, when on the
point of
boiling, mix with it a tablespoonful of butter, and a teaspoonful of
granulated
sugar.
CHICKEN
CREAM SOUP.
AN old chicken
for soup is much the best. Cut it up into quarters, put it into a soup
kettle
with half a pound of corned ham, and an onion; add four quarts of cold
water.
Bring slowly to a gentle boil, and keep this up until the liquid has
diminished
one-third, and the meat drops from the bones; then add half a cup of
rice.
Season with salt, pepper and a bunch of chopped parsley.
Cook slowly
until the rice is tender, then the meat should be taken out. Now stir
in two
cups of rich milk thickened with a little flour. The chicken could be
fried in
a spoonful of butter and a gravy made, reserving some of the white part
of the
meat, chopping it and adding it to the soup.
PLAIN
ECONOMICAL SOUP.
TAKE a cold
roast-beef bone, pieces of beefsteak, the rack of a cold turkey or
chicken. Put
them into a pot with three or four quarts of water, two carrots, three
turnips,
one onion, a few cloves, pepper and salt. Boil the whole gently four
hours;
then strain it through a colander, mashing the vegetables so that they
will all
pass through. Skim off the fat, and return the soup to the pot. Mix one
tablespoonful of flour with two of water, stir it into the soup and
boil the
whole ten minutes. Serve this soup with sippits of toast.
Sippits are bits
of dry toast cut into a triangular form.
A seasonable
dish about the holidays.
OX-TAIL
SOUP.
Two ox-tails,
two slices of ham, one ounce of butter, two carrots, two turnips, three
onions,
one leek, one head of celery, one bunch of savory herbs, pepper, a
tablespoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of catsup, one-half glass of
port
wine, three quarts of water.
Cut up the
tails, separating them at the joints; wash them, and put them in a
stewpan with
the butter. Cut the vegetables in slices and add them with the herbs.
Put in
one-half pint of water, and stir it over a quick fire till the juices
are
drawn. Pill up the stewpan with water, and, when boiling, add the salt.
Skim
well, and simmer very gently for four hours, or until the tails are
tender.
Take them out, skim and strain the soup, thicken with flour, and flavor
with
the catsup and port wine. Put back the tails, simmer for five minutes
and
serve. Another way to make an appetizing ox-tail soup. You should begin
to make
it the day before you wish to eat the soup. Take two tails, wash clean,
and put
in a kettle with nearly a gallon of cold water; add a small handful of
salt;
when the meat is well cooked, take out the bones. Let this stand in a
cool
room, covered, and next day, about an hour and a half before dinner,
skim off
the crust or cake of fat which has risen to the top. Add a little
onion,
carrot, or any vegetables you choose, chopping them fine first; summer
savory
may also be added.
CORN
SOUP.
CUT the corn
from the cob, and boil the cobs in water for at least an hour, then add
the
grains, and boil until they are thoroughly done; put one dozen ears of
corn to
a gallon of water, which will be reduced to three quarts by the time
the soup
is done; then pour on a pint of new milk, two well-beaten eggs, salt
and pepper
to your taste; continue the boiling a while longer, and stir in, to
season and
thicken it a little, a tablespoonful of good butter rubbed up with two
tablespoonfuls of flour. Corn soup may also be made nicely with water
in which
a pair of grown fowls have been boiled or parboiled, instead of having
plain
water for the foundation.
EDITH CAREW ROOSEVELT
SPLIT
PEA SOUP. No. 1.
WASH well a pint
of split peas and cover them well with cold water, adding a third of a
teaspoonful of soda; let them remain in it over night to swell. In the
morning
put them in a kettle with a close fitting cover. Pour over them three
quarts of
cold water, adding half a pound of lean ham or bacon cut into slices or
pieces;
also a teaspoonful of salt and a little pepper, and some celery chopped
fine.
When the soup begins to boil, skim the froth from the surface. Cook
slowly from
three to four hours, stirring occasionally till the peas are all
dissolved,
adding a little more boiling water to keep up the quantity as it boils
away.
Strain through a colander, and leave out the meat. It should be quite
quick.
Serve with small squares of toasted bread, cut up and added. If not
rich
enough, add a small piece of butter.
CREAM
OF ASPARAGUS.
FOR making two
quarts of soup, use two bundles of fresh asparagus. Cut the tops from
one of
the bunches and cook them twenty minutes in salted water, enough to
cover them.
Cook the remainder of the asparagus about twenty minutes in a quart of
stock or
water. Cut an onion into thin slices and fry in three tablespoonfuls of
butter
ten minutes, being careful not to scorch it; then add the asparagus
that has
been boiled in the stock; cook this five minutes, stirring constantly:
then add
three tablespoonfuls of dissolved flour, cook five minutes longer. Turn
this
mixture into the boiling stock and boil twenty minutes. Rub through a
sieve;
add the milk and cream and the asparagus heads. If water is used in
place of
stock, use all cream.
GREEN
PEA SOUP.
WASH a small
quarter of lamb in cold water, and put it into a soup-pot with six
quarts of
cold water; add to it two tablespoonfuls of salt, and set it over a
moderate
fire let it boil gently for two hours, then skim it clear; add a quart
of
shelled peas, and a teaspoonful of pepper; cover it, and let it boil
for half
an hour; then having scraped the skins from a quart of small young
potatoes,
add them to the soup; cover the pot and let it boil for half an hour
longer;
work quarter of a pound of butter and a dessert-spoonful of flour
together, and
add them to the soup ten or twelve minutes before taking it off the
fire.
Serve the meat
on a dish with parsley sauce over it, and the soup in a tureen.
DRIED
BEAN SOUP.
PUT two quarts
of dried white beans to soak the night before you make the soup, which
should
be put on as early in the day as possible.
Take two pounds
of the lean of fresh beef the coarse pieces will do. Cut them up and
put them
into your soup-pot with the bones belonging to them (which should be
broken in
pieces) , and a pound of lean bacon, cut very small. If you have the
remains of
a piece of beef that has been roasted the day before, and so much
under-done
that the juices remain in it, you may put it into the pot and its bones
along
with it. Season the meat with pepper only, and pour on it six quarts of
water.
As soon as it boils, take off the scum, and put in the beans (having
first
drained them) and a head of celery cut small, or a tablespoonful of
pounded
celery seed. Boil it slowly till the meat is done to shreds, and the
beans all
dissolved. Then strain it through a colander into the tureen, and put
into it
small squares of toasted bread with the crust cut off..
TURTLE
SOUP FROM BEANS.
SOAK over night
one quart of black beans; next day boil them in the proper quantity of
water,
say a gallon, then dip the beans out of the pot and strain them through
a colander.
Then return the flour of the beans, thus pressed, into the pot in which
they
were boiled. Tie up in a thin cloth some thyme, a teaspoonful of summer
savory
and parsley, and let it boil in the mixture. Add a tablespoonful of
cold
butter, salt and pepper. Have ready four hard-boiled yolks of eggs
quartered,
and a few force meat balls; add this to the soup with a sliced lemon,
and half
a glass of wine just before serving the soup.
This approaches
so near in flavor to the real turtle soup that few are able to
distinguish the
difference.
PHILADELPHIA
PEPPER POT.
PUT two pounds
of tripe and four calves' feet into the soup-pot and cover them with
cold
water; add a red pepper, and boil closely until the calves' feet are
boiled
very tender; take out the meat, skim the liquid, stir it, cut the tripe
into
small pieces, and put it back into the liquid; if there is not enough
liquid,
add boiling water; add half a teaspoonful of sweet marjoram, sweet
basil, and
thyme, two sliced onions, sliced potatoes, salt. When the vegetables
have
boiled until almost tender, add a piece of butter rolled in flour, drop
in some
egg balls, and boil fifteen minutes more. Take up and serve hot.
SQUIRREL
SOUP.
WASH and quarter
three or four good sized squirrels; put them on, with a small
tablespoonful of
salt, directly after breakfast, in a gallon of cold water. Cover the
pot close,
and set it on the back part of the stove to simmer gently, not boil.
Add
vegetables just the same as you do in case of other meat soups in the
summer
season, but especially good will you find corn, Irish potatoes,
tomatoes and
Lima beans. Strain the soup through a coarse colander when the meat has
boiled
to shreds, so as to get rid of the squirrels' troublesome little,
bones. Then
return to the pot, and after boiling a while longer, thicken with a
piece of
butter rubbed in flour. Celery and parsley leaves chopped up are also
considered an improvement by many. Toast two slices of bread, cut them
into
dice one-half inch square, fry them in butter, put them into the bottom
of your
tureen, and then pour the soup boiling hot upon them. Very good.
TOMATO
SOUP. No. 1.
PLACE in a
kettle four pounds of beef. Pour over it one gallon of cold water. Let
the meat
and water boil slowly for three hours, or until the liquid is reduced
to about
one-half. Remove the meat and put into the broth a quart of tomatoes,
and one
chopped onion; salt and pepper to taste. A teaspoonful of flour should
be
dissolved and stirred in, then allowed to boil half an hour longer.
Strain and
serve hot. Canned tomatoes in place of fresh ones may be used.
TOMATO
SOUP. No. 2.
PLACE over the
fire a quart of peeled tomatoes, stew them soft with a pinch of soda.
Strain it
so that no seeds remain, set it over the fire again, and add a quart of
hot
boiled milk; season with salt and pepper, a piece of butter the size of
an egg,
add three tablespoonfuls of rolled cracker, and serve hot. Canned
tomatoes may
be used in place of fresh ones.
TOMATO
SOUP. No. 3.
PEEL two quarts
of tomatoes, boil them in a saucepan with an onion, and other soup
vegetables;
strain and add a level tablespoonful of flour dissolved in a third of a
cup of
melted butter; add pepper and salt. Serve very hot over little squares
of bread
fried brown and crisp in butter.
An excellent
addition to a cold meat lunch.
MULLAGATAWNY
SOUP. (As made
in India.)
CUT four onions,
one carrot, two turnips, and one head of celery into three quarts of
liquor, in
which one or two fowls have been, boiled; keep it over a brisk fire
till it
boils, then place it on a corner of the fire, and let it simmer twenty
minutes;
add one tablespoonful of currie powder, and one tablespoonful of flour;
mix the
whole well together, and let it boil three minutes; pass it through a
colander;
serve with pieces of roast chicken in it; add boiled rice in a separate
dish.
It must be of good yellow color, and not too thick. If you find it too
thick,
add a little boiling water and a teaspoonful of sugar. Half veal and
half
chicken answers as well.
A dish of rice,
to be served separately with this soup, must be thus prepared: put
three pints
of water in a saucepan and one tablespoonful of salt; let this boil.
Wash well,
in three waters, half a pound of rice; strain it, and put it into the
boiling
water in saucepan. After it has come to the boil — which it will do in
about
two minutes — let it boil twenty minutes; strain it through a colander,
and
pour over it two quarts of cold water. This will separate the grains of
rice.
Put it back in the saucepan, and place it near the fire until hot
enough to
send to the table. This is also the proper way to boil rice for
curries. If
these directions are strictly carried out every grain of the rice will
separate, and be thoroughly cooked.
MOCK
TURTLE SOUP, OF CALF'S
HEAD.
SCALD a well-cleansed
calf's head, remove the brain, tie it up in a cloth, and boil an hour,
or until
the meat will easily slip from the bone; take out, save the broth; cut
it in
small square pieces, and throw them into cold water; when cool, put it
in a
stewpan, and cover with some of the broth; let it boil until quite
tender, and
set aside.
In another
stewpan melt some butter, and in it put a quarter of a pound of lean
ham, cut
small, with fine herbs to taste; also parsley and one onion; add about
a pint
of the broth; let it simmer for two hours, and then dredge in a small
quantity
of flour; now add the remainder of the broth, and a quarter bottle of
Madeira
or sherry; let all stew quietly for ten minutes and rub it through a
medium
sieve; add the calf's head, season with a very little cayenne pepper, a
little
salt, the juice of one lemon, and, if desired, a quarter teaspoonful
pounded
mace and a dessert-spoon sugar.
Having
previously prepared force meat balls, add them to the soup, and five
minutes
after serve hot.
GREEN
TURTLE SOUP.
ONE turtle, two
onions, a bunch of sweet herbs, juice of one lemon, five quarts of
water, a
glass of Madeira.
After removing
the entrails, cut up the coarser parts of the turtle meat and bones.
Add four
quarts of water, and stew four hours with the herbs, onions, pepper and
salt.
Stew very slowly, do not let it cease boiling during this time. At the
end of
four hours strain the soup, and add the finer parts of the turtle and
the green
fat, which has been simmered one hour in two quarts of water. Thicken
with
brown flour; return to the soup-pot, and simmer gently for an hour
longer. If
there are eggs in the turtle, boil them in a separate vessel for four
hours,
and throw into the soup before taking up. If not, put in force meat
balls; then
the juice of the lemon, and the wine; beat up at once and pour out.
Some cooks add
the finer meat before straining, boiling all together five hours; then
strain,
thicken and put in the green fat, cut into lumps an inch long. This
makes a
handsomer soup than if the meat is left in.
Green turtle can
now be purchased preserved in air-tight cans.
Force Meat
Balls for the Above. — Six tablespoonfuls of turtle
meat chopped very fine. Rub to a paste,
with the yolk of two hard-boiled eggs, a tablespoonful of butter, and,
if
convenient, a little oyster liquor. Season with cayenne, mace, half a
teaspoonful of white sugar and a pinch of salt. Bind all with a
well-beaten
egg; shape into small balls; dip in egg, then powdered cracker; fry in
butter,
and drop into the soup when it is served.
MACARONI
SOUP.
To a rich beef
or other soup, in which there is no seasoning other than pepper or
salt, take
half a pound of small pipe macaroni, boil it in clear water until it is
tender,
then drain it and cut it in pieces of an inch length; boil it for
fifteen
minutes in the soup and serve.
TURKEY
SOUP.
TAKE the turkey
bones and boil three-quarters of an hour in water enough to cover them;
add a
little summer savory and celery chopped fine. Just before serving,
thicken with
a little flour (browned), and season with pepper, salt and a small
piece of
butter. This is a cheap but good soup, using the remains of cold turkey
which
might otherwise be thrown away.
GUMBO
OR OKRA SOUP.
FRY out the fat
of a slice of bacon or fat ham, drain it off, and in it fry the slices
of a
large onion brown; scald, peel and cut up two quarts fresh tomatoes,
when in
season (use canned tomatoes otherwise), and cut thin one quart okra;
put them,
together with a little chopped parsley, in a stew-kettle with about
three
quarts of hot broth of any kind; cook slowly for three hours, season
with salt
and pepper. Serve hot.
In chicken broth
the same quantity of okra pods, used for thickening instead of
tomatoes, forms
a chicken, gumbo soup.
TAPIOCA
CREAM SOUP.
ONE quart of
white stock; one pint of cream or milk; one onion; two stalks celery;
one-third
of a cupful of tapioca; two cupfuls of cold water; one tablespoonful of
butter;
a small piece of mace; salt, pepper. Wash the tapioca and soak over
night in cold
water. Cook it and the stock together very gently for one hour. Cut the
onion
and celery into small pieces, and put on to cook for twenty minutes
with the
milk and mace. Strain on the tapioca and stock. Season with salt and
pepper,
add butter and serve.
SOUPS
WITHOUT MEAT.
ONION
SOUP.
ONE quart of
milk, six large onions, yolks of four eggs, three tablespoonfuls of
butter, a
large one of flour, one cup full of cream, salt, pepper. Put the butter
in a
frying pan. Cut the onions into thin slices and drop in the butter.
Stir until
they begin to cook; then cover tight and set back where they will
simmer, but
not burn, for half an hour. Now put the milk on to boil, and then add
the dry
flour to the onions and stir constantly for three minutes over the
fire; then
turn the mixture into the milk and cook fifteen minutes. Rub the soup
through a
strainer, return to the fire, season with salt and pepper. Beat the
yolks of
the eggs well, add the cream to them and stir into the soup. Cook three
minutes,
stirring constantly. If you have no cream, use milk, in which case add
a
tablespoonful of butter at the same time. Pour over fried croutons in a
soup
tureen. This is a refreshing dish when one is fatigued.
WINTER
VEGETABLE SOUP.
SCRAPE and slice
three turnips and three carrots and peel three onions, and fry all with
a
little butter until a light yellow; add a bunch of celery and three or
four
leeks cut in pieces; stir and fry all the ingredients for six minutes;
when
fried, add one clove of garlic, two stalks of parsley, two cloves,
salt, pepper
and a little grated nutmeg; cover with three quarts of water and simmer
for
three hours, taking off the scum carefully. Strain and use. Croutons,
vermicelli, Italian pastes, or rice may be added.
VERMICELLI
SOUP.
SWELL quarter of
a pound of vermicelli in a quart of warm water, then add it to a good
beef,
veal, lamb, or chicken soup or broth, with quarter of a pound of sweet
butter;
let the soup boil for fifteen minutes after it is added.
SWISS
WHITE SOUP.
A SUFFICIENT
quantity of broth for six people; boil it; beat up three eggs well, two
spoonfuls of flour, one cup milk; pour these gradually through a sieve
into the
boiling soup; salt and pepper.
SPRING
VEGETABLE SOUP.
HALF pint green
peas, two shredded lettuces, one onion, a small bunch of parsley, two
ounces
butter, the yolks of three eggs, one pint of water, one and a half
quarts of
soup stock. Put in a stewpan the lettuce, onion, parsley and butter,
with one
pint of water, and let them simmer till tender. Season with salt and
pepper.
When done, strain off the vegetables, and put two-thirds of the liquor
with the
stock. Beat up the yolks of the eggs with the other third, toss it over
the
fire, and at the moment of serving add this with the vegetables to the
strained-off
soup. CELERY
SOUP.
CELERY soup may
be made with white stock. Cut down the white of half a dozen heads of
celery
into little pieces and boil it in four pints of white stock, with a
quarter of
a pound of lean ham and two ounces of butter. Simmer gently for a full
hour,
then strain through a sieve, return the liquor to the pan, and stir in
a few
spoonfuls of cream with great care. Serve with toasted bread, and if
liked,
thicken with a little flour. Season to taste.
IRISH
POTATO SOUP.
PEEL and boil
eight medium-sized potatoes with a large onion sliced, some herbs, salt
and
pepper; press all through a colander; then thin it with rich milk and
add a
lump of butter, more seasoning, if necessary; let it heat well and
serve hot.
PEA
SOUP.
PUT a quart of
dried peas into five quarts of water; boil for four hours; then add
three or
four large onions, two heads of celery, a carrot, two turnips, all cut
up
rather fine. Season with pepper and salt. Boil two hours longer, and if
the
soup becomes too thick add more water. Strain through a colander and
stir in a
tablespoonful of cold butter. Serve hot, with small pieces of toasted
bread
placed in the bottom of the tureen.
NOODLES
FOR SOUP.
BEAT up one egg
light, add a pinch of salt, and flour enough to make a very stiff
dough; roll
out very thin, like thin pie crust, dredge with flour to keep from
sticking.
Let it remain on the bread board to dry for an hour or more; then roll
it up
into a tight scroll, like a sheet of music. Begin at the end and slice
it into
slips as thin as straws. After all are cut, mix them lightly together,
and to
prevent them sticking, keep them floured a little until you are ready
to drop
them into your soup which should be done shortly before dinner, for if
boiled
too long they will go to pieces.
FORCE
MEAT BALLS FOR SOUP.
ONE cupful of
cooked veal or fowl meat, minced; mix with this a handful of fine bread
crumbs,
the yolks of four hard-boiled eggs rubbed smooth together with a
tablespoon of
milk; season with pepper and salt; add a half teaspoon of flour, and
bind all
together with two beaten eggs; the hands to be well floured, and the
mixture to
be made into little balls the size of a nutmeg; drop into the soup
about twenty
minutes before serving.
EGG
BALLS FOR SOUP.
TAKE the yolks
of six hard-boiled eggs and half a tablespoonful of wheat flour, rub
them,
smooth with the yolks of two raw eggs and a teaspoonful of salt; mix
all well
together; make it in balls, and drop them into the boiling soup a few
minutes
before taking it up.
Used in green
turtle soup.
EGG
DUMPLINGS FOR SOUP.
TO HALF a pint
of milk put two well-beaten eggs, and as much wheat flour as will make
a
smooth, rather thick batter free from lumps; drop this batter, a
tablespoonful
at a time, into boiling soup.
Another Mode. One cupful of sour cream
and one cupful of sour milk, three eggs, well beaten, whites and yolks
separately; one teaspoonful of salt, one level teaspoonful of soda,
dissolved
in a spoonful of water, and enough flour added to make a very stiff
batter. To
be dropped by spoonfuls into the broth and boiled twenty minutes, or
until no
raw dough shows on the outside.
SUET
DUMPLINGS FOR SOUP.
THREE cups of
sifted flour in which three teaspoonfuls of baking powder have been
sifted; one
cup of finely chopped suet, well rubbed into the flour, with a
teaspoonful of
salt. Wet all with sweet milk to make a dough as stiff as biscuit. Make
into
small balls as large as peaches, well floured. Drop into the soup
three-quarters of an hour before being served. This requires steady
boiling,
being closely covered, and the cover not to be removed until taken up
to serve.
A very good form of pot-pie.
SOYER'S
RECIPE FOR FORCE
MEATS.
TAKE 1 1/2 lbs.
of lean veal from the fillet, and cut it in long thin slices; scrape
with a
knife till nothing but the fibre remains; put it in a mortar, pound it
ten
minutes or until in a puree; pass it through a wire sieve (use the
remainder in
stock), then take 1 Ib. of good fresh beef suet, which skin, shred and
chop
very fine; put it in a mortar and pound it, then add 6 oz. of panada
(that is,
bread soaked in milk, and boiled till nearly dry) with the suet; pound
them
well together, and add the veal, season with 1 teaspoonful of salt, 1/2
teaspoonful of pepper, 1/2 that of nutmeg; work all well together; then
add
four eggs by degrees, continually pounding the contents of the mortar.
When
well mixed, take a small piece in a spoon, and poach it in some boiling
water,
and if it is delicate, firm, and of a good flavor, it is ready for use.
CROUTONS
FOR SOUP.
IN a frying pan
have the depth of an inch of boiling fat; also have prepared slices of
stale
bread cut up into little half -inch squares; drop into the frying pan
enough of
these bits of bread to cover the surface of the fat. When browned,
remove with
a skimmer and drain; add to the hot soup and serve.
Some prefer them
prepared in this manner:
Take very thin
slices of bread, butter them well; cut them up into little squares
three-fourths of an inch thick, place them in a baking pan, buttered
side up,
and brown in a quick oven.
FISH
STOCK.
PLACE a saucepan
over the fire with a good-sized piece of sweet butter and a sliced
onion; put
into that some sliced tomatoes, then add as many different kinds of
fish as you
can get — oysters, clams, smelts, pawns, crabs, shrimps and all kinds
of
pan-fish; cook all together until the onions are well browned; then add
a bunch
of sweet herbs, salt and pepper, and sufficient water to make the
required
amount of stock. After this has cooked for half an hour pound it with a
wooden
pestle, then strain and cook again until it jellies.
FISH
SOUP.
SELECT a large,
fine fish, clean it thoroughly, put it over the fire with a sufficient
quantity
of water, allowing for each pound of fish one quart of water; add an
onion cut
fine and a bunch of sweet herbs. When the fish is cooked, and is quite
tasteless, strain all through a colander, return to the fire, add some
butter,
salt and pepper to taste. A small
tablespoonful of Worcestershire sauce may be added if liked. Serve with
small
squares of fried bread and thin slices of lemon.
LOBSTER
SOUP, OR BISQUE.
HAVE ready a
good broth made of three pounds of veal boiled slowly in as much water
as will
cover it, till the meat is reduced to shreds, It must then be well
strained.
Having boiled
one fine middle-sized lobster, extract all the meat from the body and
claws.
Bruise part of the coral in a mortar, and also an equal quantity of the
meat.
Mix them well together. Add mace, cayenne, salt and pepper, and make
them up
into force meat balls, binding the mixture with the yolk of an egg
slightly
beaten.
Take three
quarts of the veal broth and put it into the meat of the lobster cut
into
mouthfuls. Boil it together about twenty minutes. Then thicken it with
the
remaining coral (which you must first rub through a sieve), and add the
force
meat balls and a little butter rolled in flour. Simmer it gently for
ten
minutes, but do not let it come to a boil, as that will injure the
color. Serve
with small dice of bread fried brown in butter.
OYSTER
SOUP. No. 1.
Two QUARTS of
oysters, one quart of milk, two tablespoonfuls of butter, one teacupful
of hot
water; pepper, salt.
Strain all the
liquor from the oysters; add the water, and heat. When near the boil,
add the
seasoning, then the oysters. Cook about five minutes from the time they
begin
to simmer, until they "ruffle." Stir in the butter, cook one minute,
and pour into the tureen. Stir in the boiling milk and send to table.
Some
prefer all water in place of milk.
IDA SAXTON McKINLEY
OYSTER
SOUP. No. 2.
SCALD one gallon
of oysters in their own liquor. Add one quart of rich milk to the
liquor, and
when it comes to a boil, skim out the oysters and set aside. Add the
yolks of
four eggs, two good tablespoonfuls of butter, and one of flour, all
mixed well
together, but in this order — first, the milk, then, after beating the
eggs,
add a little of the hot liquor to them gradually, and stir them rapidly
into
the soup. Lastly, add the butter and whatever seasoning you fancy
besides plain
pepper and salt, which must both be put in to taste with caution.
Celery salt most
persons like extremely; others would prefer a little marjoram and
thyme;
others, again, mace and a bit of onion. Use your own discretion in this
regard.
CLAM
SOUP. (French Style.)
MINCE two dozen
hard shell clams very fine. Fry half a minced onion in an ounce of
butter; add
to it a pint of hot water, a pinch of mace, four cloves, one allspice
and six
whole pepper corns. Boil fifteen minutes and strain into a saucepan;
add the
chopped clams and a pint .of clam juice or hot water; simmer slowly two
hours;
strain and rub the pulp through a sieve into the liquid. Return it to
the
saucepan and keep it lukewarm. Boil three half -pints of milk in a
saucepan
(previously wet with cold water, which prevents burning) and whisk it
into the
soup. Dissolve a teaspoonful of flour in cold milk, add it to the soup,
taste
for seasoning; heat it gently to near the boiling point; pour it into a
tureen
previously heated with hot water, and serve with or without pieces of
fried
bread — called croutons in kitchen French.
CLAM
SOUP.
TWENTY-FIVE
clams chopped fine. Put over the fire the liquor that was drained from
them,
and a cup of water; add the chopped clams and boil half an hour; then
season to
taste with pepper and salt and a piece of butter as large as an egg;
boil up
again and add one quart of milk boiling hot, stir in a tablespoon of
flour made
to a cream with a little cold milk, or two crackers rolled fine. Some
like a
Little mace and lemon juice in the seasoning.
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