English Drawn Butter, Plain Hollandaise; Anchovy, Bechamel, Tarragon, Horseradish, Cream or White, Brown Butter, Perigueux, Tomato, Paprika, Curry, Italian
By Mrs. S.T. Rorer
Author of Mrs. Rorer's New Cook Book, Philadelphia Cook Book, Bread
and Bread-Making, and other Valuable Works on Cookery.
SAUCES
English Drawn Butter, Plain Hollandaise;
Anchovy, Bechamel, Tarragon, Horseradish, Cream or White,
Brown Butter, Perigueux, Tomato, Paprika, Curry, Italian
COOKING OF EGGS
To Preserve Eggs, Egging and Crumbing,
Shirred Eggs, Mexicana, On a Plate, de Lesseps, Meyerbeer,
a la Reine, au Miroir, a la Paysanne, a la Trinidad, Rossini,
Baked in Tomato Sauce, a la Martin, a la Valenciennes, Fillets,
a la Suisse, with Nut-Brown Butter, Timbales, Coquelicot,
Suzette, en Cocotte. Steamed in the Shell, Birds' Nests, Eggs
en Panade, Egg Pudding, a la Bonne Femme, To Poach Eggs, Eggs
Mirabeau, Norwegian, Prescourt, Courtland, Louisiana, Richmond,
Hungarian, Nova Scotia, Lakme, Malikoff, Virginia, Japanese,
a la Windsor, Buckingham, Poached on Fried Tomatoes, a la
Finnois, a la Gretna, a l'Imperatrice, with Chestnuts, a la
Regence, a la Livingstone, Mornay, Zanzibar, Monte Bello,
a la Bourbon, Bernaise, a la Rorer, Benedict, To Hard-boil,
Creole, Curried, Beauregard, Lafayette, Jefferson, Washington,
au Gratin, Deviled, a la Tripe, a l'Aurore, a la Dauphin,
a la Bennett, Brouilli, Scalloped, Farci, Balls, Deviled Salad,
Japanese Hard, en Marinade, a la Polonnaise, a la Hyde, a
la Vinaigrette, a la Russe, Lyonnaise, Croquettes, Chops,
Plain Scrambled, Scrambled with Chipped Beef, Scrambled with
Lettuce, Scrambled with Shrimps, Scrambled with Fresh Tomatoes,
Scrambled with Rice and Tomato, Scrambled with Asparagus Tips,
Egg Flip OMELETS Omelet with Asparagus Tips, with Green Peas,
Havana, with Tomato Sauce, with Oysters, with Sweetbreads,
with Tomatoes, with Ham, with Cheese, with Fine Herbs, Spanish,
Jardiniere, with Fresh Mushrooms, O'Brien, with Potatoes
SWEET OMELETS
Omelet a la Washington, with Rum, Swiss
Souffle, a la Duchesse, Souffle SAUCES The philosophy of a
sauce, when understood, enables even an untrained cook to
make a great variety of every day sauces from materials usually
found in every household; to have them uniform, however, flavorings
must be correctly blended, and measurements must be rigidly
observed. Two level tablespoonfuls of butter or other fat,
two level tablespoonfuls of flour, must be used to each half
pint of liquid. If the yolks of eggs are added, omit one tablespoonful
of flour or the sauce will be too thick. Tomato sauce should
be flavored with onion, a little mace, and a suspicion of
curry. Brown sauce may be simply seasoned with salt and pepper,
flavored and colored with kitchen bouquet. Spanish sauce should
also be flavored with mushrooms, or if you can afford it,
a truffle, a little chopped ham, a tablespoonful of chives,
shallot and garlic. Water sauce, drawn butter and simple sauce
Hollandaise, when they are served with fish, must be flavored
with a dash of tarragon vinegar, salt and pepper.
ENGLISH DRAWN BUTTER
3 tablespoonfuls of butter1/2 pint
of boiling water 2 tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 teaspoonful
of salt 1 dash of pepper Rub two tablespoonfuls of butter
and the flour together, add the boiling water, stir until
boiling, add the salt and pepper; take from the fire, add
the remaining tablespoonful of butter and it is ready for
use. It must not be boiled after the last butter is added.
PLAIN SAUCE HOLLANDAISE
Make English drawn butter and add to
it, when done, the yolks of two eggs beaten with two tablespoonfuls
of water; cook until thick and jelly-like, take from the fire
and add one tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar or the juice
of half a lemon.
ANCHOVY SAUCE
Rub two teaspoonfuls of anchovy essence
with the butter and flour and then finish the same as English
drawn butter.
SAUCE BECHAMEL
2 tablespoonfuls of butter 1 yolk of
an egg 1/2 cup of milk 1 saltspoonful of pepper 1 tablespoonful
of flour 1/2 cup of stock 1/2 teaspoonful of salt Rub the
butter and flour together, add the stock and the milk and
stir until boiling; add the salt and pepper, take from the
fire and add the beaten yolk of the egg, heat for a moment
over hot water, and it is ready for use.
TARRAGON SAUCE
Add two tablespoonfuls of tarragon
vinegar to an English drawn butter.
HORSERADISH SAUCE
Make an English drawn butter, and,
just at serving time, add a half cupful of freshly grated
horseradish. If you are obliged to use that preserved in vinegar,
press it perfectly dry before using it.
CREAM OR WHITE SAUCE
2 tablespoonfuls of butter 1/2 pint
of milk 2 tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of pepper Rub the butter and flour together,
add the milk cold and stir until boiling; add the pepper and
salt and it is ready for use.
BROWN BUTTER SAUCE
6 tablespoonfuls of butter 1 teaspoonful
of mushroom catsup 1 tablespoonful of vinegar 4 tablespoonfuls
of stock Melt the butter, brown it and then skim; pour it
carefully into a clean saucepan, add the vinegar, catsup and
stock, boil a minute, and it is ready for use.
SAUCE PERIGUEUX
4 tablespoonfuls of butter 1/2 pint
of stock 1 glass of white wine 1/2 teaspoonful of salt 2 tablespoonfuls
of flour 1 bay leaf 2 chopped truffles 1 saltspoonful of pepper
1 teaspoonful of kitchen bouquet Chop the truffles and put
them with the bay leaf and wine in a saucepan on the back
of the stove. Rub half the butter and flour together, add
the stock, stir until boiling and add one teaspoonful of kitchen
bouquet, the salt and pepper, and then the truffles; cook
ten minutes, add the remaining quantity of butter and use
at once.
TOMATO SAUCE
Rub together two level tablespoonfuls
of flour and two of butter. Add a half pint of strained tomatoes.
Stir until boiling. Add a teaspoonful of onion juice, a half
teaspoonful of salt and a saltspoonful of pepper. Strain and
use.
PAPRIKA SAUCE
Rub together two level tablespoonfuls
of flour and two of butter, with a tablespoonful of paprika.
Add a half pint of chicken stock. Stir until boiling. Add
a half teaspoonful of salt, and strain. This sauce may be
used over chicken as well as eggs.
CURRY SAUCE Chop
fine one onion. Cook it with two level
tablespoonfuls of butter until soft. Do not brown. Add two
level tablespoonfuls of flour, one teaspoonful of curry powder
and a half teaspoonful of salt. Mix and add a half pint of
boiling water. Stir until boiling, and strain.
ITALIAN SAUCE
Chop sufficient carrot to make a tablespoonful;
chop one onion. Place them in a saucepan with three level
tablespoonfuls of butter, a bay leaf and a blade of mace.
Shake the pan over the fire until the vegetables are slightly
browned. Drain off the butter and add to it two level tablespoonfuls
of flour, a half cupful of good stock, a half cupful of strained
tomatoes, and bring to a boil. Add a half teaspoonful of salt
and a dash of cayenne. Strain. Stir until boiling, strain
again and add four tablespoonfuls of sherry.
COOKING OF EGGS
Any single food containing all the
elements necessary to supply the requirements of the body
is called a complete or typical food. Milk and eggs are frequently
so called, because they sustain the young animals of their
kind during a period of rapid growth. Nevertheless, neither
of these foods forms a perfect diet for the human adult. Both
are highly nutritious, but incomplete. Served with bread or
rice, they form an admirable meal and one that is nutritious
and easily digested. The white of eggs, almost pure albumin,
is nutritious, and, when cooked in water at 170 degrees Fahrenheit,
requires less time for perfect digestion than a raw egg. The
white of a hard-boiled egg is tough and quite insoluble. The
yolk, however, if the boiling has been done carefully for
twenty minutes, is mealy and easily digested. Fried eggs,
no matter what fat is used, are hard, tough and insoluble.
The yolk of an egg cooks at a lower temperature than the white,
and for this reason an egg should not be boiled unless the
yolk alone is to be used. Ten eggs are supposed to weigh a
pound, and, unless they are unusually large or small, this
is quite correct. Eggs contain from 72 to 84 per cent. of
water, about 12 to 14 per cent. of albuminoids. The yolk is
quite rich in fat; the white deficient. They also contain
mineral matter and extractives. To ascertain the freshness
of an egg without breaking it, hold your hand around the egg
toward a bright light or the sun and look through it. If the
yolk appears quite round and the white clear, it is fresh.
Or, if you put it in a bucket of water and it falls on its
side, it is fresh. If it sort of topples in the water, standing
on its end, it is fairly fresh, but, if it floats, beware
of it. The shell of a fresh egg looks dull and porous. As
it begins to age, the shell takes on a shiny appearance. If
an egg is kept any length of time, a portion of its water
evaporates, which leaves a space in the shell, and the egg
will "rattle." An egg that rattles may be perfectly good,
and still not absolutely fresh.
TO PRESERVE EGGS
To preserve eggs it is only necessary
to close the pores of the shells. This may be done by dipping
them in melted paraffine, or packing them in salt, small ends
down; or pack them in a keg and cover them with brine; or
pack them in a keg, small ends down and cover them with lime
water; this not only protects them from the air, but acts
as a germicide. Eggs should not be packed for winter use later
than the middle of May or earlier than the first of April.
Where large quantities of the yolks are used, the whites may
be evaporated and kept in glass bottles or jars. Spread them
out on a stoneware or granite plate and allow them to evaporate
at the mouth of a cool oven. When the mixture is perfectly
dry, put it away. This powder is capable of taking up the
same amount of water that has been evaporated from it, and
may then be used the same as fresh whites.
EGGS AND CRUMBING
To do this successfully one must prepare
a mixture, and not use the egg alone. If an egg mixture or
a croquette is dipped in beaten egg and rolled in cracker
crumbs and dropped into fat, it always has a greasy covering.
This is the wrong way. To do it successfully and have the
articles handsome, beat the egg until well mixed, add a teaspoonful
of olive oil, a tablespoonful of water and a dash of pepper.
Dip the articles into this mixture, and then drop them on
quite a thick bed of either sifted dry bread crumbs or soft
white bread crumbs. I prefer sifted dry bread crumbs for croquettes,
and soft white crumbs for lobster cutlets and deviled crabs.
SHIRRED EGGS
Cover the bottoms of individual dishes
with a little butter and a few fresh bread crumbs; drop into
each dish two fresh eggs; stand this dish in a pan of hot
water and cook in the oven until the whites are "set." Put
a tiny bit of butter in the middle of each, and a dusting
of salt and pepper.
EGGS MEXICANA
Put two tablespoonfuls of butter in
a saucepan. Add four tablespoonfuls of finely chopped onion
and shake until the onion is soft, but not brown. Then add
four Spanish peppers cut in strips, a dash of red pepper and
a half pint of tomatoes; the tomatoes should be in rather
solid pieces. Add a seasoning of pepper and salt. Let this
cook slowly while you shir the desired quantity of eggs. When
the eggs are ready to serve, put two tablespoonfuls of this
sauce at each side of the dish, and send at once to the table.
EGGS ON A PLATE
Rub the bottom of a baking dish with
butter. Dust it lightly with salt and pepper. Break in as
many fresh eggs as required. Stand the dish in a basin of
water and cook in the oven five minutes, or until the whites
are "set." While these are cooking, put two tablespoonfuls
of butter in a pan and shake over the fire until it browns.
When the eggs are done, baste them with the browned butter,
and send to the table.
EGGS DE LESSEPS
Shir the eggs as directed. Have ready,
carefully boiled, two sets of calves' brains; cut them into
slices; put two or three slices between the eggs, and then
pour over browned butter sauce.
EGGS MEYERBEER
To each half dozen eggs allow three
lambs' kidneys. Broil the kidneys. Shir the eggs as directed
in the first recipe. When done, put half a kidney on each
side of the plate and pour over sauce Perigueux.
EGGS A LA REINE
6 eggs 1/2 pint of chopped cold cooked
chicken 1/2 can of mushrooms 2 tablespoonfuls of butter 2
tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 pint of milk 1/2 teaspoonful of
salt 1 saltspoonful of pepper Use ordinary shirring dishes
for the eggs; butter them, break into each one egg, stand
these in a pan of boiling water and in the oven until they
are "set." Rub the butter and flour together, add the milk,
stir until boiling, add the salt, pepper, chopped chicken
and mushrooms, and put one tablespoonful of this on top of
each egg and send at once to the table. This is also nice
if you put a tablespoonful of the mixture in the bottom of
the dish, break the egg into it, and then at serving time
put another tablespoonful over the top.
EGGS AU MIROIR
Cover the bottom of a graniteware or
silver platter with fresh bread crumbs, break in as many eggs
as are needed for the number of persons to be served. Put
bits of butter here and there, stand the platter over a baking
pan of hot water in the oven until the eggs are "set," dust
them with salt and pepper and send them to the table.
EGGS A LA PAYSANNE
6 eggs 1/2 cupful of cream 2 tablespoonfuls
of grated onion 1 clove of garlic 1/2 teaspoonful of salt
1 saltspoonful of pepper Add the onion and the garlic, mashed,
to the cream; pour it in the bottom of a baking dish, break
on top the eggs, dust with salt and pepper, stand the baking
dish in a pan of water and cook in the oven until the eggs
are "set." Serve in the dish in which they are cooked.
EGGS A LA TRINIDAD
6 eggs 2 lamb's kidneys 1 cupful of
fresh bread crumbs 2 level tablespoonfuls of butter 2 level
tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 pint of stock 1 teaspoonful of
kitchen bouquet 1/2 teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful of
pepper Split the kidneys, cut out the tubes; scald them, drain,
and cut them into thin slices. Put the butter into a saucepan,
add the kidneys, toss until the kidneys are cooked, then add
the flour, stock, kitchen bouquet, salt and pepper; stir until
boiling. Grease a shallow granite or silver platter, break
into it the eggs, sprinkle over the bread crumbs and stand
them in the oven until the eggs are "set," then pour over
the sauce, arrange the kidneys around the edge of the dish
and send at once to the table.
EGGS ROSSINI
6 eggs 4 chicken livers 12 nice mushrooms
1/2 cupful of stock 1/2 teaspoonful of salt 1 dash of pepper
Put the stock in a saucepan and boil rapidly until reduced
one-half, add a drop or two of browning. Throw the chicken
livers into boiling water and let them simmer gently for ten
minutes; drain. Slice the mushrooms and put them, with the
livers, into the stock; let them stand until you have cooked
the eggs. Put a tablespoonful of butter in the bottom of a
shallow platter; when melted break in the eggs, stand them
in the oven until "set," garnish with the livers and mushrooms
and pour over the sauce.
EGGS BAKED IN TOMATO SAUCE
Make a tomato sauce. Pour one-half
in the bottom of a baking dish or granite platter, break in
from four to six fresh eggs, cover with the other half of
the sauce, dust the top with grated cheese, and bake in a
moderate oven until "set," about fifteen or twenty minutes.
Serve for supper in the place of meat.
EGGS A LA MARTIN
Make a half pint of cream sauce. Put
half of it in the bottom of a baking dish or into the bottom
of ramekin dishes or individual cups. Break fresh eggs on
top of the cream sauce, dust with a little salt and pepper,
pour over the remaining cream sauce, sprinkle the top with
grated cheese, and bake in a moderate oven until the cheese
is browned and eggs are "set." Serve in the dish or dishes
in which they are cooked.
EGGS A LA VALENCIENNE
6 eggs 1 pint of dry boiled rice 1/2
pint of strained tomato 2 mushrooms 2 tablespoonfuls of grated
Parmesan cheese 2 level tablespoonfuls of butter 2 level tablespoonfuls
of flour 1/2 saltspoonful of grated nutmeg 1/2 teaspoonful
of paprika 1 teaspoonful of salt 1/2 saltspoonful of pepper
Rub the butter and flour together, add the strained tomato,
stir until boiling, add the mushrooms, sliced, salt, paprika,
nutmeg and pepper. Take a granite or silver platter, put in
two tablespoonfuls of butter extra, let the butter melt and
heat; break into this the eggs, being very careful not to
break the yolks. Let the eggs cook in the oven until "set."
Then put around the edge of the dish as a garnish the boiled
rice, pour over the eggs the tomato sauce, dust the top with
the Parmesan cheese and send at once to the table.
FILLETS OF EGGS
6 eggs 4 tablespoonfuls of good stock
1/2 teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful of pepper Beat the
eggs with the stock, add the salt and pepper. Turn them into
a buttered square pan, stand this in another of boiling water,
and cook in the oven until the eggs are thoroughly "set."
Cut the preparation into thin fillets or slices, dip in either
a thin batter made from one egg, a half cupful of milk and
flour to thicken, or they may be dipped in beaten egg, rolled
in bread crumbs and fried in deep hot fat. Arrange the fillets
in a platter on a napkin, one overlapping the other; garnish
with parsley and send to the table with a boat of tomato or
white sauce.
EGGS A LA SUISSE
Cover the bottom of a baking dish with
about two tablespoonfuls of butter cut into bits. On top of
this, very thin slices of Swiss cheese. Break over some fresh
eggs. Dust with salt and pepper. To each half dozen eggs,
pour over a half cup of cream. Then cover the top with grated
Swiss cheese and bake in the oven until the cheese is melted
and the eggs "set." Send this to the table with a plate of
dry toast.
EGGS WITH NUT-BROWN BUTTER
These eggs may be shirred or poached
and served on toast. Put two tablespoonfuls of butter in a
saute or frying pan. As soon as it begins to heat, break into
it the eggs and cook slightly until the yolks are "set;" dish
them at once on toast or thin slices of broiled ham. Put two
more tablespoonfuls of butter in the pan, let it brown, and
add two tablespoonfuls of vinegar; boil it up once and pour
over the eggs.
EGG TIMBALES
Butter small timbale molds or custard
cups, dust the bottoms and sides with chopped tongue and finely
chopped mushrooms. Break into each mold one fresh egg. Stand
the mold in a baking pan half filled with boiling water, and
cook in the oven, until the eggs are "set." Have ready nicely
toasted rounds of bread, one for each cup, and a well-made
tomato or cream sauce. Loosen the eggs from the cups with
a knife, turn each out onto a round of toast, arrange neatly
on a heated platter, fill the bottom of the platter with cream
or tomato sauce, garnish the dish with nicely seasoned green
peas and serve at once.
EGGS COQUELICOT
Grease small custard or timbale cups
and put inside of each a cooked Spanish pepper. Drop in the
pepper one egg. Dust it lightly with salt, stand the cups
in a pan of boiling water and cook in the oven until the eggs
are "set." Toast one round of bread for each cup and make
a half pint of cream sauce. When the eggs are "set," fill
the bottom of the serving platter with cream sauce, loosen
the peppers from the cups and turn them out on the rounds
of toast. Stand them in the cream sauce, dust on top of each
a little chopped parsley and send to the table.
EGGS SUZETTE
Bake as many potatoes as you have persons
to serve. When done, cut off the sides, scoop out a portion
of the potato, leaving a wall about a half inch thick. Mash
the scooped-out portion, add to it a little hot milk, salt
and pepper, and put it into a pastry bag. Put a little salt,
pepper and butter into each potato and break in a fresh egg.
Press the potato from the pastry bag through a star tube around
the edge of the potato, forming a border. Stand these in a
baking pan and bake until the eggs are "set." Put a tablespoonful
of cream sauce in the center of each, and send to the table.
EGGS EN COCOTTE
Chop fine one good-sized onion. Cook
it, over hot water, in two level tablespoonfuls of butter.
When the onion is soft add a quarter of a can of mushrooms,
chopped fine, two level tablespoonfuls of flour and one cupful
of stock. Stir until boiling. Add a tablespoonful of chopped
parsley, a half teaspoonful of salt and a saltspoonful of
pepper. Put a tablespoonful of this sauce in the bottom of
individual cups. Break into each cup one egg. Pour over the
remaining mixture. Stand the cups in a pan of hot water and
bake in a moderate oven about five minutes.
EGGS STEAMED IN THE SHELL
Eggs put into hot water and kept away
from the fire are much better than eggs actually boiled for
only a short time. The greater the number of eggs to be cooked,
the greater the amount of water that must be used. To cook
four eggs, put them into a kettle, pour over them two quarts
of water, cover the kettle and allow them to stand for ten
minutes. Lift them from the water, put them into a large bowl,
cover with boiling water, and send at once to the table. The
whites will be coagulated, but should be soft and creamy,
while the yolks will be perfectly cooked. If you should add
six eggs to this volume of water, lengthen the time of standing.
A single egg, dropped into a quart of water, must stand five
minutes.
BIRDS' NESTS
Separate the eggs, allowing one to
each person. Beat the whites to a stiff froth. Heap them into
individual dishes, make a nest, or hole, in the center. Drop
into this a whole yolk. Stand the dish in a pan of water,
cover, and cook in the oven about two or three minutes. Dust
lightly with salt and pepper, put a tiny bit of butter in
the center of each, and send at once to the table. This is
one of the most sightly of all egg dishes.
EGGS EN PANADE
2 eggs 6 slices of bread 1/2 cupful
of milk or cream 4 tablespoonfuls of olive oil 1 tablespoonful
of chopped parsley 1/2 teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful
of pepper Trim the crusts from the bread. Beat the eggs until
well mixed, but not light, then add the milk or cream, salt
and pepper. Put the oil in a shallow frying pan, dip the slices
of bread in the beaten egg and drop them into the hot oil;
when brown on one side, turn and brown the other. Dish on
a hot platter, dust with the chopped parsley and send at once
to the table.
EGG PUDDING
6 eggs 6 slices of bread 1 tablespoonful
of chopped parsley 2 tablespoonfuls of chopped chives 2 tablespoonfuls
of butter 1 tablespoonful of flour 1/2 pint of milk 1/2 teaspoonful
of salt 1 saltspoonful of white pepper Break the eggs in a
bowl, add all the seasoning. Rub the butter and flour together,
add the milk, stir until boiling, and then add this to the
eggs; beat together until thoroughly mixed. Crumb the bread,
removing the crusts; stir this in at last. Turn into a buttered
baking dish, cover with grated cheese, and bake in the oven
until thoroughly "set" and a nice brown. It makes an exceedingly
good, easily digested luncheon or supper dish for children.
EGGS A LA BONNE FEMME
1 Spanish or 2 Bermuda onions 2 level
tablespoonfuls of butter 2 level tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2
pint of milk 6 eggs 1 teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful of
pepper 1/2 saltspoonful of grated nutmeg Separate the whites
and yolks of the eggs. Put the butter into a saucepan, add
the onions, cut into _very thin_ slices; shake until the onions
are soft, but not brown, then dust over the flour, mix, and
add the milk, salt, pepper and nutmeg. Stir carefully until
this reaches boiling point, then stand it on the back part
of the stove where it will keep hot for at least ten minutes.
Beat the yolks of the eggs until very creamy, then stir them
into the sauce, take from the fire, and fold in the well-beaten
whites of the eggs. Turn into a baking dish or casserole and
bake in a hot oven fifteen minutes; serve at once. TO
POACH EGGS
Use a shallow frying pan partly filled
with boiling water. The eggs must be perfectly fresh. The
white of an egg is held in a membrane which seems to lose
its tenacity after the egg is three days old. Such an egg,
when dropped into boiling water, spreads out; that is, it
does not retain its shape. When ready to poach eggs, take
the required number to the stove. The water must be boiling
hot, but not actually bubbling. Break an egg into a saucer,
slide it quickly into the water, and then another and another.
Pull the pan to the side of the stove, where the water cannot
possibly boil. With a tablespoon, baste the water over the
yolks of the eggs, if they happen to be exposed. They must
be entirely covered with a thin veil of the white. Have ready
the desired quantity of toast on a heated platter, lift each
egg with a slice or skimmer, trim off the ragged edges and
slide them at once on the toast. Dust with salt and pepper,
baste with melted butter, and send to the table.
EGGS MIRABEAU
Cut a sufficient number of rounds of
bread, toast them carefully and cover them with _pate de foie
gras_, put on top of each a poached egg, pour over sauce Perigueux,
and send to the table.
EGGS NORWEGIAN
Cover rounds of toasted bread first
with butter and then with anchovy paste, put on top of each
a poached egg, pour over anchovy sauce, and send at once to
the table.
EGGS PRESCOURT
Toast slices of bread, put thin slices
of chicken on each, on top of this a poached egg, cover with
sauce Bernaise, and serve at once.
EGGS COURTLAND
Mince sufficient cold chicken to make
a half cupful. Make a half pint of cream sauce, add the minced
chicken, a half teaspoonful of salt and a dash of red pepper.
Toast a sufficient quantity of bread, put it on a heated platter,
pour over a small quantity of the minced chicken and cream
sauce, put on each a poached egg, cover with the remaining
sauce, dust with parsley and serve with a garnish of green
peas.
EGGS LOUISIANA
Make a half pint of tomato sauce, toast
a sufficient quantity of bread, butter the bread and put on
each slice a poached egg; cover with the tomato sauce.
EGGS RICHMOND
Chop sufficient cold chicken to make
a half cupful, add an equal quantity of finely-chopped mushrooms,
add this to a half pint of cream sauce. Add one unbeaten egg
to a pint of cold boiled rice, season it with salt and pepper,
make into round, flat cakes, and fry in hot fat. Arrange these
on a heated platter, pour over the cream sauce mixture, and
put on top of each a poached egg.
HUNGARIAN EGGS
Boil a cup of rice until tender and
dry. Make a half pint of paprika sauce. Turn the rice into
the center of a platter, smooth it down, cover the top with
poached eggs, pour over the paprika sauce and send at once
to the table.
EGGS NOVA SCOTIA
Put a poached egg on top of a flat
codfish cake, pour over cream or tomato sauce, and send to
the table.
EGGS LAKME
Cut cold chicken or turkey into very
thin slices, and stand over hot water, in a dish, until heated;
toast a sufficient quantity of bread, butter the slices, put
on each a slice of chicken or turkey, dust lightly with salt
and pepper. On top of these place a poached egg, cover with
tarragon sauce, and send to the table.
EGGS MALIKOFF
Toast rounds of bread, cover them with
caviar which has been seasoned with a little onion and pepper.
Put on top of each a poached egg, cover with horseradish sauce,
and send to the table.
EGGS VIRGINIA
Grate six ears of corn. Add half cupful
of milk, a half cupful of flour and two eggs, beaten separately,
and a half teaspoonful of salt and a dash of pepper. Drop
the mixture in large tablespoonfuls in hot fat. When brown
on one side, turn and brown on the other. Drain and arrange
neatly on a large platter. Put a poached egg on the top of
each cake, cover with cream sauce and send to the table. This
dish, with green peas, makes quite a complete meal.
JAPANESE EGGS
Carefully boil one cup of rice, drain
dry. Make a half pint of cream sauce, add to it a teaspoonful
of grated onion and a teaspoonful of chopped celery. Poach
the desired number of eggs. Put the rice in the center of
a platter, cover it with the eggs, pour over the sauce. Dust
the dish with parsley, and send at once to the table. The
edge of this dish may be garnished with broiled sardines or
carefully broiled smoked salmon.
EGGS A LA WINDSOR
6 eggs 6 rounds of toast 2 level tablespoonfuls
of butter 2 level tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 pint of chicken
stock 1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley 1 tablespoonful of
chopped olive 1 tablespoonful of chopped Spanish pepper 1/2
teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful of black pepper Rub the
butter and flour together and add the stock; stir until boiling,
and add the salt and pepper. Toast the bread. Poach the eggs,
put them on the toast, pour over carefully the sauce, heap
the chopped vegetables, mixed, in the center of each egg and
send to the table.
EGGS BUCKINGHAM
Allow one egg to each person that is
to be served. Cut either a dry or a Virginia ham into very
thin slices; allow one thin square to each person. Toast squares
of bread, remove the crust. Broil the ham quickly; put each
square of ham on a square of toast, put on top a poached egg,
dust lightly with pepper and send to the table.
POACHED EGGS ON FRIED TOMATOES
Cut solid tomatoes into slices a quarter
of an inch thick, dust them with salt and pepper, dip them
in egg beaten with a tablespoonful of water, roll them thickly
with bread crumbs, dip them again in the egg, dust again with
bread crumbs, and fry in deep hot fat. Drain on brown paper,
dish on a heated platter, put a poached egg in the center
of each slice, dust with salt and pepper, put a tablespoonful
of tomato sauce over each egg and send at once to the table.
Cream sauce may be used in the place of tomato sauce.
EGGS A LA FINNOIS
6 eggs 2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
2 level tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 pint of strained tomato
1 tablespoonful of chopped chives 2 green peppers Rub the
butter and flour together, add the tomatoes, and the peppers,
chopped very fine. Stir until this reaches boiling point,
and stand it over hot water. Poach the eggs in deep water.
Toast six rounds of bread; arrange the toast on a platter,
put one egg on each slice, pour around the tomato sauce, dust
thickly with the chives and send to the table.
EGGS A LA GRETNA
6 eggs 2 heads of celery 2 level tablespoonfuls
of butter 2 level tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 pint of milk
1 teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful of pepper Cut the celery
into inch lengths, wash thoroughly, cover with boiling water
and simmer gently thirty minutes until the celery is tender;
drain, saving the water in which the celery was cooked for
another purpose. Rub the butter and flour together, add the
milk, salt and pepper; when boiling add the celery; stand
this over hot water while you poach the eggs and toast six
squares of bread. Butter the toast, put on each slice one
egg; put these around the edge of a large platter, turn the
celery into the middle of the dish and send at once to the
table. To increase the beauty of this dish, and to give it
a greater food value, you may garnish between the toast and
celery with carefully boiled rice; this then makes an exceedingly
nice supper dish.
EGGS A L'IMPERATRICE
Toast six slices of bread; butter them,
put on top a thin slice of _pate de foie gras_, and on top
of this a hot poached egg. Baste with a little melted butter,
dust with salt and pepper and send at once to the table. This
is one of the most elegant of all the egg dishes.
EGGS WITH CHESTNUTS
This is an exceedingly nice dish to
serve in the Fall when chestnuts are fresh. Shell a quart
of chestnuts, blanch them, then boil them until tender; drain
and press through a colander. Add a half cupful of hot milk,
a tablespoonful of butter, a teaspoonful of salt and a saltspoonful
of pepper. Beat until light and stand over a kettle of hot
water while you poach six or eight eggs. Dish the chestnut
puree in a small platter, cover the poached eggs over the
top, dust them with salt, pepper and chopped parsley.
EGGS A LA REGENCE
6 eggs 1/2 cupful of chopped cold cooked
ham 1 grated onion 1/2 can of chopped mushrooms 2 tablespoonfuls
of butter 2 tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 pint of chicken stock
1/2 teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful of pepper Stand the
ham over hot water until thoroughly heated. Rub the butter
and flour together, add the stock, stir until boiling, add
the mushrooms, sliced, the salt, pepper and the onion; stand
this over hot water while you poach the eggs. Dish the eggs,
cover them with the sauce, strained, and cover with the chopped
ham. Garnish the dish with mashed potatoes or boiled rice,
and send at once to the table.
EGGS A LA LIVINGSTONE
6 squares of toast 1 tureen of pate-de-foie-gras
6 eggs 1/2 cupful of good stock 2 tablespoonfuls of sherry
1 teaspoonful of kitchen bouquet 1/2 teaspoonful of salt 1
dash of pepper Toast the bread, butter it and put on top of
each slice of toast a slice of _pate de foie gras_; put this
on a heated dish, stand it at the mouth of the oven door while
you poach the eggs. Put into a saucepan all the other ingredients,
bring to a boil, put one poached egg on each slice of _pate
de foie gras_; baste with the sauce and send at once to the
table.
EGGS MORNAY
6 eggs 2 tablespoonfuls of butter 2
tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 pint of milk 1/2 teaspoonful of
salt 1/2 teaspoonful of paprika 4 tablespoonfuls of grated
Parmesan cheese Rub the butter and flour together, add the
milk, stir until boiling, add the salt and paprika, and if
you have it, a teaspoonful of soy; pour half of this sauce
in a shallow granite platter or baking dish. Poach the eggs,
drain them carefully, and put them over the top of the sauce,
cover with the remaining sauce, dust with Parmesan cheese
and run in the oven a moment to brown. EGGS
ZANZIBAR
1 small egg plant 1 thin slice of ham
6 eggs 2 tablespoonfuls of sherry 2 tablespoonfuls of tomato
catsup 2 level tablespoonfuls of butter 1 dash of pepper Cut
the egg plant into slices, season it with salt and pepper,
dip in egg and bread crumbs and fry carefully in deep hot
fat; put this on brown paper in the oven to dry. Broil the
ham, cut it into squares sufficiently small to go neatly on
top of each slice of egg plant. Poach the eggs, and heat the
other ingredients for the sauce. Dish the egg plant on a platter,
put on the ham, and on each piece of ham an egg; baste with
sauce and send to the table.
EGGS MONTE BELLO
6 eggs 2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
2 level tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 pint of strained tomato
1 teaspoonful of onion juice 1/2 teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful
of pepper Put about two quarts of water into a small deep
saucepan; when boiling very hard drop in, one at a time, the
eggs. In dropping them in, the white will fold over the yolk
and make the eggs round. Push them to the back of the stove
to stand for two minutes. Lift them with a skimmer, dip them
in an egg beaten with a tablespoonful of water, dust them
with bread crumbs and fry them in deep hot fat. You cannot
use a frying basket. Just drop them in the fat, and as they
are browned lift them out onto soft paper to drain. Rub the
butter and flour together, add the tomato and seasoning; when
boiling dish the eggs on a heated platter, pour around tomato
sauce and send to the table.
EGGS A LA BOURBON
6 eggs 1/2 pint of stock 1 tablespoonful
of butter 6 tablespoonfuls of grated Parmesan cheese 1/2 teaspoonful
of salt 1 dash of pepper Put the stock in a small saucepan,
poach the eggs in it, two at a time; lift them carefully and
lay them on a hot granite or silver dish. When all are poached,
dust over the cheese and stand them in the hot oven for just
a moment until the cheese is melted. In the meantime boil
the stock until it is reduced one-half, add the butter, baste
it over the eggs and send to the table. This dish may be garnished
with triangular pieces of toast.
EGGS BERNAISE
6 whole eggs 4 yolks of eggs 4 tablespoonfuls
of stock 4 tablespoonfuls of olive oil 1 tablespoonful of
chopped parsley 1 tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar 1 tablespoonful
of butter 1 tablespoonful of flour 1/2 cupful of strained
tomato 1 teaspoonful of onion juice 1/2 teaspoonful of salt
Put the stock, yolks of eggs and olive oil into a saucepan,
stir over hot water until you have a thick, smooth sauce like
mayonnaise; take from the fire, and when slightly cool stir
in the tarragon vinegar and parsley. Rub the butter and flour
together, add the tomato, and when boiling add a palatable
seasoning of salt and pepper. Toast six halves of English
muffins or squares of bread. Heat a platter, butter the toast,
put it on the hot platter, and poach the eggs. Put one poached
egg on each slice of toast, fill the bottom of the dish with
tomato sauce and put a tablespoonful of Bernaise sauce on
top of each egg. These may be garnished with a little chopped
truffle, or a little chopped parsley.
EGGS A LA RORER
Toast rounds of bread, one for each
person. Butter them. Heat, in boiling water, the choke of
a French artichoke, one for each slice of bread. Make sauce
Hollandaise, and put one artichoke bottom on each slice of
bread on a heated platter. Put in the center a poached egg
and pour over the sauce Hollandaise. Garnish the dish with
nicely cooked French or fresh green peas.
EGGS BENEDICT
Separate two eggs. Break the yolks,
add a cupful of milk, a half teaspoonful of salt, one and
a half cupfuls of flour and a tablespoonful of melted butter.
Beat well, add two level teaspoonfuls of baking powder and
fold in the well-beaten whites. Bake on a griddle in large
muffin rings. Broil thin slices of ham. Make a sauce Hollandaise.
Chop a truffle. Poach the required number of eggs. Dish the
muffins, put a square of ham on each, then a poached egg and
cover each egg nicely with sauce Hollandaise. Dust with truffle
and serve at once.
TO HARD-BOIL EGGS
Put the eggs in warm water, bring the
water quickly to the boiling point, then push the kettle to
the back of the stove, where the water will remain at 200
degrees Fahrenheit, for twenty minutes. If these are to be
used for made-over dishes, throw them at once into cold water,
remove the shells, or the yolks will lose their color.
EGGS CREOLE
Put two tablespoonfuls of butter and
four of chopped onions into a saucepan, cook until the onion
is soft, but not brown. Then add four peeled fresh tomatoes
that have been cut into pieces, and three finely chopped green
peppers. Cook this fifteen minutes, and add a level teaspoonful
of salt. Have the eggs hard-boiled, and cut into slices. Put
them into a baking dish, pour over the sauce, re-heat in the
oven, and serve with a dish of boiled rice.
CURRIED EGGS
Peel, and cut into slices, three large
onions. Put them in a saucepan with two tablespoonfuls of
butter. Stand over hot water and cook until the onions are
soft. Add a teaspoonful of curry powder, a clove of garlic
mashed, a saltspoonful of ground ginger, a half teaspoonful
of salt and a tablespoonful of flour; mix thoroughly and add
a half pint of water. Stir until boiling. Have ready six hard-boiled
eggs, cut them into slices, arrange them over a dish of carefully
boiled rice, on a hot platter, strain over the sauce, and
send at once to the table. This dish is made more attractive
by a garnish with sweet Spanish peppers, cut into strips.
EGGS BEAUREGARD
Hard-boil five eggs. Separate the whites
from the yolks. Put the yolks through a sieve. Put the whites
either through a vegetable press, or chop them very fine.
Make a half pint of cream sauce, season it and add the whites.
Have ready a sufficient amount of toast, carefully buttered.
Put this on a heated platter, cover over the cream sauce and
the whites, dust the tops with the yolks, then with salt and
pepper. Garnish the edge of the dish with finely chopped parsley,
and send at once to the table.
EGGS LAFAYETTE
Hard-boil six eggs, chop them, but
not fine. Make a half pint of curry sauce. Put the chopped
eggs over a bed of carefully boiled rice, cover with the curry
sauce, garnish with strips of Spanish pepper and serve. This
dish may be changed by using tomato sauce in place of the
curry sauce.
EGGS JEFFERSON
Select the desired number of good-sized
tomatoes, allowing one to each person. Cut off the blossom
end, scoop out the seeds, stand the tomatoes in a baking pan
in the oven until they are partly cooked. Put a half teaspoonful
of butter and a dusting of salt and pepper into the bottom
of each, and break in one egg. Put these back in the oven
until the eggs are "set." Have ready a round of toasted bread
for each tomato, stand the tomato in the center of the bread,
fill the bottom of the dish with cream sauce, and send to
the table.
EGGS WASHINGTON
Add a half pint of crab meat to a half
pint of cream sauce. Season with salt and pepper. Have ready
either bread pates or pates made from puff paste. Put a tablespoonful
of the crab mixture in the bottom of each. Break in an egg.
Stand in the oven until the egg is "set." Or you may poach
the eggs and slide them into the pate. Pour over the remaining
quantity of crabmeat sauce, and send at once to the table.
EGGS AU GRATIN
Make a pint of cream sauce. Hard-boil
six eggs. Cut them into slices. Put them in the baking dish
and cover with the cream sauce. Dust thickly with cheese,
and brown quickly in the oven.
DEVILED EGGS
Hard-boil twelve eggs. Remove the shells.
Cut the eggs into halves, crosswise. Take out the yolks without
breaking the whites. Press the yolks through a sieve. Add
four tablespoonfuls of finely chopped chicken, tongue or ham.
Add a half teaspoonful of salt, a saltspoonful of pepper and
two tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Rub the mixture. Form
it into balls the size of the yolks and put them into the
places in the whites from which the yolks were taken. Put
two halves together, roll them in tissue paper that has been
fringed at the ends, giving each a twist. If these balls are
made the size of the yolk, and put back into the whites, they
may be placed on a platter, heated, and served on toast, with
cream sauce; then they are very much like the eggs Bernhardt.
EGGS A LA TRIPE
Hard-boil eight eggs. Remove the shells,
cut eggs crosswise in rather thick slices. Cut three small
onions into very thin slices. Separate them into rings, cover
them with boiling water and boil rapidly ten minutes; drain,
then cover them with fresh water and boil until they are tender;
drain again, but save the water. Now mix the eggs and onions
carefully, without breaking. Put two level tablespoonfuls
of butter and two of flour into a saucepan. Mix. Add a grating
of nutmeg, a saltspoonful of black pepper, the juice of a
lemon, and a half-pint of the water in which the onions were
boiled. Bring to the boiling point, add two tablespoonfuls
of cream; then add the eggs and onions. When thoroughly hot,
dish them in a conical form, garnish with triangular pieces
of toast, and serve.
EGGS A L'AURORE
Hard-boil six eggs, cut them into halves
lengthwise, take out the yolks, keeping them whole. Cut the
whites into fine strips. Make a cream sauce. Add to it two
tablespoonfuls of finely chopped sardines or finely chopped
lobster or crab, a tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar. Add
the whites of the eggs, and, when quite hot, add the yolks,
without breaking them. Turn this at once into a heated dish,
garnish the dish with triangular pieces of toast, and send
to the table. Or, if you like, make the sauce, season it and
put a layer into the bottom of the baking-dish, then a layer
of Parmesan cheese, then a layer of the yolks, pressed through
a sieve, and so on, alternating, having the last layer of
the yolks of the eggs. Dust over a few bread crumbs, put here
and there bits of butter, and brown quickly in the oven.
EGGS A LA DAUPHIN
Remove the shells from six hard-boiled
eggs, cut them into halves, lengthwise, take out the yolks,
press them through a sieve. Add four level tablespoonfuls
of melted butter, and half a teaspoonful of salt, a grating
of nutmeg and two tablespoonfuls of Parmesan cheese. Add half
a cupful of cream to a half cupful of sifted bread crumbs.
Mix this with the yolks, rub until smooth, then add one well-beaten
egg, and the yolk of one egg. Cover the bottom of the baking
dish with the mixture forming it in a pyramid and cover with
the chopped whites. Have ready two extra hard-boiled eggs,
take out the yolks, press them through a sieve, all over the
top. Garnish the edges of the dish with triangular pieces
of toasted bread, cover the whole with cream sauce, brown
in the oven, and serve at once.
EGGS A LA BENNETT
6 hard-boiled eggs 2 tablespoonfuls
of butter 1 teaspoonful of anchovy sauce 1 tablespoonful of
finely chopped chives or onion 1/2 cupful of bread crumbs
1/2 teaspoonful of salt Cut the eggs into halves lengthwise;
remove the yolks, rub them with half the butter, salt, onion
and anchovy paste. Fill these back into the whites. Cover
the bottom of a baking dish with ordinary white sauce, stand
in the eggs, put over the bread crumbs, baste them with the
remaining butter, melted, and stand in the oven long enough
to brown.
EGGS BROULLI
Beat four eggs. Add to them four tablespoonfuls
of stock, four tablespoonfuls of cream, a saltspoonful of
salt and half a saltspoonful of pepper. Turn them into a saucepan,
stand in a pan of hot water, stir with an egg-beater until
they are thick and jelly-like. Turn at once into a heated
dish, garnish with toast and send to the table.
SCALLOPED EGGS
4 hard-boiled eggs 2 tablespoonfuls
of butter 2 level tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 pint of milk
1 cupful of finely chopped cold cooked chicken or fish 1 teaspoonful
of salt 1 saltspoonful of pepper Chop the eggs rather fine.
Rub the butter and flour together, add the milk, stir until
boiling, add the salt and pepper. Put a layer of eggs in the
bottom of a casserole, or baking dish, then a layer of the
fish or chicken, then a little white sauce, and so continue
until the ingredients are used. Dust the top thickly with
bread crumbs and bake in a moderate oven until nicely browned.
EGG FARCI
6 hard-boiled eggs 2 cupfuls of mashed
potatoes 1 cupful of finely chopped cold cooked meat 1 tablespoonful
of chopped parsley 1 tablespoonful of butter 1 tablespoonful
of flour 1 gill (a half cupful) of milk 1 level teaspoonful
of salt 1 teaspoonful of onion juice 1 saltspoonful of pepper
Hard-boil the eggs, chop them fine, mix them with the meat,
add the salt, pepper and parsley. Rub the butter and flour
together, add the milk, stir until boiling; add this gradually
to the potatoes. When smooth add the hard-boiled eggs, meat
and parsley. Fill into small custard cups or into shirring
dishes, brush with milk and brown in the oven. These make
a nice supper or luncheon dish.
EGG BALLS
These are used for soup and for garnishing
of vegetable dishes. Hard-boil four eggs, throw them at once
into cold water, remove the shells. Put the yolks through
a sieve, then add a half teaspoonful of salt, a dash of white
pepper and the yolk of one raw egg, or you may take a part
of the white of one egg. Mix thoroughly and make into balls
the size of a marble, using enough flour to prevent sticking
to the hands. Drop these into a kettle of boiling stock, or
into hot fat. Drain on brown paper.
DEVILED EGG SALAD
6 eggs 1 head of lettuce 1 pimiento
1 teaspoonful of onion juice 1/2 teaspoonful of paprika 1/2
cupful of chopped boiled tongue 1 saltspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful
of pepper Hard-boil the eggs, throw them into cold water,
remove the shells, cut them lengthwise. Take out the yolks
without breaking the whites. Rub the yolks through a sieve
into a bowl, then add the tongue and all the seasoning. If
the mixture is dry add a tablespoonful or two of cream or
olive oil. Roll the mixture into balls that will fit the spaces
from which they were taken in the whites, making each ball
round. Arrange the lettuce over a platter, stand the whites
in the lettuce, and at serving time baste thoroughly with
French dressing.
JAPANESE HARD EGGS
1 cupful of rice 1/2 pint of white
sauce 6 eggs 1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley, if you have
it, and a suspicion of onion juice Put the eggs into a saucepan
of cold water, bring to boiling point, and simmer gently twenty
minutes. Wash the rice through several cold waters, sprinkle
it into a kettle of boiling water and boil it for thirty minutes.
Remove the shells, break the eggs while they are hot, cut
them into halves crosswise. Make the cream sauce, and add
the onion juice. When the rice is done, drain, sprinkle it
in the center of a large platter, press the halves of the
eggs down into it, and pour over the cream sauce. Garnish
with the chopped parsley. This takes the place of both meat
and starchy vegetables for either luncheon or supper.
EGGS EN MARINADE
1 dozen eggs 3 very red beets 1 quart
of cider vinegar 24 whole cloves 1 teaspoonful of mustard
seed 1 saltspoonful of celery seed 1 teaspoonful of salt 2
saltspoonfuls of pepper Hard-boil the eggs; plunge them into
cold water and remove the shells. Stick the cloves into the
eggs. Pare the beets, cut them into blocks and boil them in
about a pint of water. To this water add the vinegar, bring
it to boiling point, add salt, pepper and the celery and mustard
seed. Put the eggs into a glass jar and pour over the boiling
vinegar; put on the tops and stand them aside for three weeks.
A tablespoonful of grated horseradish or a half cupful of
nasturtium seeds will improve the flavor and prevent mold.
EGGS A LA POLONAISE
6 eggs 2 level tablespoonfuls of butter
1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley 1 teaspoonful of salt 1
saltspoonful of pepper Hard-boil four of the eggs; when done
remove the shells, cut the eggs into halves lengthwise and
take out the yolks, without breaking the whites. Press the
yolks through a sieve into a bowl, and add the raw yolks of
the remaining two eggs, with the parsley, salt and pepper.
Beat the white of the raw eggs until light, not stiff, then
work them into the yolk mixture. Cover the bottom of a shallow
baking pan with part of this mixture, then fill the spaces
in the whites with some of the remaining mixture. Put the
whites of the eggs together, making them look like whole eggs.
Arrange these in the center of the dish. If you have any of
the yolk mixture left, put it around in a sort of a border.
Pour over a little melted butter, dust thickly with soft bread
crumbs and bake in a quick oven until slightly brown. Serve
plain or with cream sauce.
EGGS A LA HYDE
6 eggs 1/2 can of mushrooms 1 tablespoonful
of grated onion 2 tablespoonfuls of chopped parsley 1/2 cupful
of sweet cream 2 level tablespoonfuls of butter 2 level tablespoonfuls
of flour 1/2 pint of chicken stock or cocoanut milk 1 teaspoonful
of salt 1 saltspoonful of pepper Hard-boil the eggs, and when
done remove the shells and cut the eggs into halves lengthwise,
keeping the whites whole. Remove the yolks, press them through
a sieve, add to them the cream, half the salt and a dash of
cayenne. Mix thoroughly and fill into the whites and arrange
them neatly on a granite or silver platter. Put the butter
into a saucepan, add the onion and flour, then the stock or
cocoanut milk, and the mushrooms; stir, until it boils, add
the remaining salt and pepper; take from the fire and add
the parsley. Pour this over the eggs on the platter, dust
thickly with bread crumbs, run into a quick oven until brown.
EGGS A LA VINAIGRETTE
6 eggs 1 head of lettuce 8 tablespoonfuls
of olive oil 1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley 4 tablespoonfuls
of vinegar 1 tablespoonful of chopped gherkin 1 tablespoonful
of chopped olives 1 tablespoonful of grated onion Hard-boil
the eggs, throw them into cold water; remove the shells and
cut them into slices lengthwise. Wash and dry the lettuce,
arrange it on a small meat platter, put over the top slices
of hard-boiled eggs, letting one slice overlap the other.
Fill the center of the dish with sliced, peeled tomatoes.
Put a half teaspoonful of salt in a soup plate, add a saltspoonful
of pepper and the oil; put in a piece of ice and stir until
the salt is dissolved. Remove the ice, add all the other ingredients
but the parsley, mix thoroughly, pour this over the eggs,
dust with parsley and serve as a supper dish.
EGGS A LA RUSSE
6 eggs 1 small can of caviar (2 tablespoonfuls)
1/2 pint of stock 1 teaspoonful of onion juice 1 dash of pepper
Hard-boil the eggs, remove the shells, cut them into halves
lengthwise; take out the yolks without breaking the whites,
and press them through a sieve, then add the caviar, onion
juice and pepper. Heap these back into the whites. Boil the
stock until reduced one-half, baste the eggs carefully, run
them into the oven until hot, pour over the remaining hot
stock and send to the table.
EGGS LYONNAISE
6 eggs 1 onion 2 level tablespoonfuls
of butter 2 level tablespoonfuls of flour 1/2 pint of milk
1/2 teaspoonful of salt 1 dash of pepper Hard-boil the eggs,
remove the shells, throw them in cold water. Cut the onion
into thin slices; put it, with the butter, into a saucepan,
shake until the onion is tender, then add the flour, milk
and seasoning; stir until boiling. At serving time cut the
eggs into slices crosswise, put them in a shallow baking dish,
cover with cream sauce and run in the oven just a moment until
they are very hot.
EGG CROQUETTES
6 eggs 1/2 pint of milk 2 level tablespoonfuls
of butter 3 level tablespoonfuls of flour 1 teaspoonful of
onion juice 1 tablespoonful of chopped parsley 1/2 saltspoonful
of grated nutmeg 1 teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful of pepper
Hard-boil the eggs and chop them fine. Rub the butter and
flour together, add the milk, stir until you have a thick,
smooth paste. Add all the seasoning to the egg, mix the eggs
into the white sauce and turn out to cool. When cold form
into cylinders, dip in egg beaten with a tablespoonful of
water, roll in bread crumbs and fry in deep hot fat. Serve
with cream sauce.
EGG CHOPS
6 hard-boiled eggs 1/2 pint of finely
chopped cooked ham 1/2 pint of milk 2 level tablespoonfuls
of butter 4 level tablespoonfuls of flour 1 tablespoonful
of chopped parsley 1 teaspoonful of onion juice 1/2 teaspoonful
of salt 1 dash of cayenne 1 dash of white pepper Chop the
eggs very fine, mix them with the ham; add the parsley, onion
juice and pepper. Rub the butter and flour together and add
the milk. Stir until you have a smooth, thick sauce, then
add the salt; mix this with the other ingredients and turn
it out to cool. When cold form into a chop about the size
of an ordinary mutton chop. Dip first in egg beaten with a
tablespoonful of water, then cover carefully with bread crumbs
and fry in deep hot fat. Serve with either tomato or brown
sauce.
PLAIN SCRAMBLED EGGS
Put two tablespoonfuls of butter in
a shallow frying pan. Add a tablespoonful of water to each
egg. Six eggs are quite enough for four people. Add a half
teaspoonful of salt, and a saltspoonful of pepper. Give two
or three beats--enough to break the eggs; turn them into the
frying pan, on the hot butter. Constantly scrape from the
bottom of the pan with a fork, while they are cooking. Serve
with a garnish of broiled bacon and toast.
SCRAMBLED EGGS WITH CHIPPED BEEF
Pull apart a quarter of a pound of
chipped beef, cover with boiling water, let it stand ten minutes,
drain and dry. Put it into a saucepan with two level tablespoonfuls
of butter, four eggs, beaten until they are well mixed, and
a dash of pepper. Stir with a fork until the eggs are "set."
EGGS SCRAMBLED WITH LETTUCE
Remove the outside leaves from one
head of lettuce; wash, dry, and with a very sharp knife cut
them into shreds. Chop sufficient onion to make a tablespoonful.
Put a tablespoonful of butter into a saucepan, add the onion,
shake until the onion is soft, then add six eggs, beaten without
separating until well mixed, but not light. Add a half teaspoonful
of salt, a half saltspoonful of pepper and the shredded lettuce.
Stir with a fork until the eggs are "set," turn at once onto
a heated platter, garnish with triangular pieces of toast
and send to the table.
SCRAMBLED EGGS WITH SHRIMPS
6 eggs 1 can of shrimps or its equivalent
in fresh shrimps 1 green pepper 1/2 pint of strained tomato
1/2 teaspoonful of salt Beat the eggs until well mixed, without
separating. Put the butter in a saucepan, add the pepper,
chopped; shake until the pepper is soft, add the tomato and
all the seasoning, and the shrimps. Bring to boiling point,
push to the back of the stove where it will simmer while you
scramble the eggs. Put the scrambled eggs on toast in the
center of a platter, pour over and around the shrimp mixture
and send to the table.
EGGS SCRAMBLED WITH FRESH TOMATOES
3 tomatoes 4 eggs 1 teaspoonful of
onion juice 1 level teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful of
pepper 2 tablespoonfuls of butter Peel the tomatoes, cut them
into halves and squeeze out the seeds. Cut the tomatoes into
small bits, put them into a saucepan with the salt, pepper
and butter; when these are hot add the eggs, beaten until
well mixed, stir until the eggs are "set," turn into a heated
dish, garnish with toast and send to the table.
EGGS SCRAMBLED WITH RICE AND TOMATO
This is an exceedingly nice dish for
supper where one does not care for meat. Four or six eggs
can be used to each half-pint of cold boiled rice, and either
three fresh tomatoes, chopped, or two-thirds of a cupful of
solid strained tomato. Put a ablespoonful of butter, a half
teaspoonful of salt, a saltspoonful of pepper and the tomatoes
into a saucepan; when hot add the rice, and when the rice
is hot add the eggs, beaten without being very light. As soon
as the eggs are "set" serve this in a vegetable dish covered
with squares of toasted bread. This recipe is also nice with
hard-boiled eggs; proceed as directed, and at last add the
hard-boiled eggs, sliced.
SCRAMBLED EGGS WITH ASPARAGUS TIPS
1 small can of asparagus tips 6 eggs
1 tablespoonful of butter 1/2 teaspoonful of salt 1 dash of
pepper Beat the eggs, add the salt, pepper and butter. Put
them into a saucepan, add at once the asparagus tips and stir
with a fork until the mixture is "set."
EGG FLIP
This dish is exceedingly nice for a
child or an invalid. Separate one egg, beat the white to a
stiff froth, add the yolk and beat again. Heap this in a pretty
saucer, dust lightly with powdered sugar, put in the center
a teaspoonful of brandy, and serve at once. Sherry or Madeira
may be substituted for the brandy.
OMELETS
A plain French omelet is, perhaps,
one of the most difficult of all things to make; that is,
it is the most difficult to have well made in the ordinary
private house. Failures come from beating the eggs until they
are too light, or having the butter too hot, or cooking the
omelet too long before serving. In large families, where it
is necessary to use a dozen eggs, two omelets will be better
than one. A six-egg omelet is quite easily handled. Do not
use milk; it toughens the eggs and gives an unpleasant flavor
to the omelet. An "omelet pan," a shallow frying pan, should
be kept especially for omelets. Each time it is used rub until
dry, but do not wash. Dust it with salt and rub it with brown
paper until perfectly clean. To make an omelet: First, put
a tablespoonful of butter in the middle of the pan. Let it
heat slowly. Break the eggs in a bowl, add a tablespoonful
of water to each egg and give twelve good, vigorous beats.
To each six eggs allow a saltspoonful of pepper, and, if you
like, a tablespoonful of finely chopped parsley. Take the
eggs, a limber knife and the salt to the stove. Draw the pan
over the hottest part of the fire, turn in the eggs, and dust
over a half teaspoonful of salt. Shake the pan so that the
omelet moves and folds itself over each time you draw the
pan towards you. Lift the edge of the omelet, allowing the
thin, uncooked portion of the egg to run underneath. Shake
again, until the omelet is "set." Have ready heated a platter,
fold over the omelet and turn it out. Garnish with parsley,
and send to the table. If one can make a plain French omelet,
it may be converted into many, many kinds.
OMELET WITH ASPARAGUS TIPS
Make a plain omelet from six eggs,
have ready a half pint of cream sauce, and either a can or
a bundle of cooked asparagus. Cut off the tips, preserving
the lower portions for another dish. When the omelet is turned
onto the heated platter, put the asparagus tips at the ends,
cover them with cream sauce, pour the rest of the cream sauce
in the platter, not over the omelet.
OMELET WITH GREEN PEAS
Make a six-egg omelet. Have ready one
pint of cooked peas, or a can of peas, seasoned with salt,
pepper and butter. Just before folding the omelet put a tablespoonful
of peas in the center, fold, and turn out on a heated platter.
Pour the remaining quantity of peas around the omelet, and
send at once to the table. If you like, you may pour over,
also, a half pint of cream sauce.
HAVANA OMELET
Put two tablespoonfuls of butter and
two chopped onions over hot water until the onion is soft
and thoroughly cooked. Peel four tomatoes, cut them into halves
and press out the seeds. Then cut each half into quarters,
add four Spanish peppers cut in strips, a level teaspoonful
of salt and a dash of red pepper. Cook until the tomato is
soft. Make a six-egg omelet. Turn it onto a heated platter,
put the tomato mixture at the ends, and send at once to the
table.
OMELET WITH TOMATO SAUCE
Make a plain omelet with six eggs.
Pour over a half pint of tomato sauce, and send to the table.
OMELET WITH OYSTERS
Drain, wash, and drain again twenty-five
oysters. Throw them into a hot saucepan and shake until the
gills curl. Rub together two level tablespoonfuls of flour
and two of butter. Drain the oysters, put the liquor into
a half-pint cup, add sufficient milk to fill the cup. Add
this to the butter and flour. When boiling, add the oysters,
a level teaspoonful of salt and a dash of red pepper. Make
a six-egg omelet, turn it onto a heated dish, arrange the
oysters around the omelet, pour over the cream sauce, and
send to the table.
OMELET WITH SWEETBREADS
This is a very good way to make sweetbreads
do double duty. Boil a pair of sweetbreads until they are
tender. Remove the membrane, cut them into slices; make a
cream sauce. Add the sweetbreads, and, if you like, a half
can of chopped mushrooms. Make a six-egg omelet, arrange the
slices of sweetbread around the omelet and pour over the cream
sauce.
OMELET WITH TOMATOES
Beat six eggs. Add a half pint of rather
thick stewed tomatoes, a level teaspoonful of salt and a saltspoonful
of pepper. Beat the eggs and tomatoes together, and make precisely
the same as a plain omelet. Do not, however, add water, as
the tomatoes answer the purpose.
OMELET WITH HAM
Mix a half cup of chopped ham with
the eggs after they have been beaten with the water, and finish
the same as a plain omelet.
OMELET WITH CHEESE
Beat six eggs until they are thoroughly
mixed. Add a half cupful of thick cream, four tablespoonfuls
of grated cheese, a saltspoonful of black pepper and a half
teaspoonful of salt. Mix and finish the same as plain omelet.
OMELET WITH FINE HERBS
Beat six eggs until thoroughly mixed.
Add a half cupful of cream, a tablespoonful of finely chopped
parsley, a saltspoonful of pepper and a half teaspoonful of
salt. Finish the same as a plain omelet. Serve on a heated
platter and put over a little thin Spanish sauce.
SPANISH OMELET
Beat six eggs. Add six tablespoonfuls
of water. Add a saltspoonful of pepper, a tablespoonful of
finely chopped parsley, a teaspoonful of onion juice. Put
six thin slices of bacon in the omelet pan. Cook slowly until
all the fat is tried out. Remove the bacon, add a tablespoonful
of chopped onion. Cook until the onion is slightly brown,
turn in the eggs and finish the same as a plain omelet. Turn
onto a heated platter, garnish with red and green peppers,
and, if you like, put two tablespoonfuls of stewed tomatoes
at each end of the omelet.
OMELET JARDINIERE
Chop sufficient chives to make a tablespoonful.
Add a tablespoonful of parsley, a tablespoonful of finely
chopped onion, and, if you have it, a little of the green
tops of celery. Mix this with six eggs, add six tablespoonfuls
of water and beat. Make the same as a plain omelet.
OMELET WITH FRESH MUSHROOMS
This is one of the most delicious of
all the luncheon dishes. Put two tablespoonfuls of butter,
a pound of mushrooms, sliced, a half cup of milk and a teaspoonful
of salt into a saucepan. Cover and cook slowly for twenty
minutes. Make two six-egg omelets. Turn them, side by side,
on a large heated platter, pour over the fresh mushrooms and
serve at once.
OMELET O'BRIEN
Put two tablespoonfuls of butter in
a saucepan with four tablespoonfuls of chopped onion. Cook
until the onion is tender. Then add four chopped Spanish peppers,
two tablespoonfuls of thick tomato, or one whole raw tomato
cut into bits, four sliced cooked okra, a teaspoonful of salt,
a dash of pepper. Let these cook twenty minutes. Make a six-egg
plain omelet, using bacon fat instead of butter for the cooking.
Remove the slices of bacon before they are too hard, as they
must be used for a garnish. Turn the omelet onto a heated
platter, pour around it the pepper mixture, garnish with the
bacon, and send to the table. Canned mushrooms may be added,
if desired.
OMELET WITH POTATOES
4 eggs 1 cupful of mashed potatoes
2 level tablespoonfuls of butter 1 tablespoonful of chopped
parsley 1 level teaspoonful of salt 1 saltspoonful of pepper
Beat the eggs, without separating, until thoroughly mixed;
add them gradually to the mashed potato, beating all the while;
add the salt and pepper. Put the butter into a good-sized
saute or omelet pan; when hot, turn the ingredients into the
pan, and smooth it down with a pallet knife. Let this cook
slowly until nicely browned; fold it over as you would a plain
omelet, and turn onto a heated dish. The parsley may be sprinkled
over the top, or added to the mixture.
SWEET OMELETS OMELET A LA WASHINGTON
Put three eggs into a bowl, and three
into another bowl. Add three tablespoonfuls of water to each,
and beat. Have two omelet pans, in which you have melted butter.
Grate an apple into one bowl, and into the other put a little
salt and pepper. Stand two tablespoonfuls of jelly in a dish
over hot water while you cook the omelets. Proceed as for
plain omelet. The one to which you have added the apple, turn
out on a plate. Before folding the other, put in the center
the softened currant jelly, then fold it and turn it out by
the side of the other omelet. Dust both with powdered sugar,
and send at once to the table. Serve a portion of each.
OMELET WITH RUM
Make a plain omelet with six eggs,
turn it on a heated platter. Dust it with powdered sugar,
and score it across the top with a red-hot poker. Dip four
lumps of sugar into Jamaica rum and put them on the platter.
Put over the omelet four tablespoonfuls of rum; touch a lighted
match to the rum, and carry the omelet to the table, burning.
Baste it with the burning rum until the alcohol is entirely
burned off.
SWISS SOUFFLE
Allow one egg to each person. Have
everything in readiness. The maraschino cherries must be drained
free from the liquor. Separate the eggs. Beat the whites until
they are stiff. Add a level tablespoonful of powdered sugar
to each white, and beat until dry and glossy. Add the yolks
of three eggs. Mix quickly. Add the grated rind of one lemon
and a tablespoonful of lemon juice. Heap this into individual
dishes. Make a tiny little hole in the center and put in a
maraschino cherry, leaving the hole large enough to hold a
tablespoonful of the liquor when the omelet is ready to serve;
dust it with powdered sugar, bake in a quick oven about three
minutes, take it from the oven, pour in the maraschino juice
and send _at once_ to the table. These will fall if baked
too much, but when well made and served quickly, is one of
the daintiest of desserts.
OMELET A LA DUCHESSE
This is a sweet baked omelet, and is
served the same as one would serve an omelet souffle. 6 eggs
1/2 cupful of water 1/2 a lemon's yellow rind, grated 1/2
cupful of thick cream 1/2 cupful of granulated sugar 1 teaspoonful
of vanilla or orange flower water 1 small bit of cinnamon
Put the sugar, water, cinnamon and lemon rind over the fire,
boil until it spins a thread and stand aside to cool. Separate
the eggs; beat the yolks until creamy, and add the cream,
then the strained syrup. Add the vanilla, and when cool fold
in the well-beaten whites. Turn at once into a shallow silver
or granite dish, dust thickly with powdered sugar and bake
in a quick oven until brown.
OMELET SOUFFLE
This is, perhaps, one of the most difficult
of all dishes to make. When, however, you have accomplished
the art, you have one of the most satisfactory desserts. Like
the preceding recipe, it must be made at the last moment and
sent from the oven directly to the table. The eggs must be
beaten to just the right point and the oven must be very hot.
Get everything in readiness before beginning to make the souffle.
Select a bowl, perfectly clean, and arrange the star tube
and pastry bag, if you are going to use one. If not, get out
a baking dish. Sift six tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar.
Separate six eggs. Put three of the yolks aside (as you will
only use three), and beat the other three until creamy. Beat
the whites until they are very stiff but not dry or broken.
Now add three tablespoonfuls of the sifted powdered sugar.
Beat for fully ten minutes. Then add the beaten yolks, the
grated rind of a lemon and at the last a tablespoonful of
lemon juice. Mix carefully and quickly, but thoroughly. Put
four or five tablespoonfuls of this in the bottom of a platter,
or baking dish. Put the remaining quantity quickly in the
pastry bag, and press it out into roses. It is easier to make
it in small rosettes all over the foundation. Dust quickly
with the remaining three tablespoonfuls of sugar. Bake in
a quick oven until golden brown. This will take about five
minutes. Serve immediately. To be just right, this must be
hot to the very center, crisp on top, moist underneath. If
baked too long, the moment the top is touched it will fall,
becoming stringy and unpalatable. Omelet souffles are frequently
flavored with rum, which must be mixed with the sugar. Sometimes
they are sprayed with sherry just as they are taken from the
oven. They may be built up into different forms, and garnished
with candied or maraschino cherries, or chopped nuts.
|