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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Dressed Game and Poultry à la Mode, by
+Harriet A. de Salis
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dressed Game and Poultry à la Mode
+
+Author: Harriet A. de Salis
+
+Release Date: April 14, 2010 [EBook #31982]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY À LA MODE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joseph R. Hauser and The Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+ DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY
+
+
+
+
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+ | WORKS BY MRS. DE SALIS. |
+ | |
+ | |
+ | SAVOURIES À LA MODE. Eighth Edition. Fcp. |
+ | 8vo. 1_s._ |
+ | |
+ | ENTRÉES À LA MODE. Fourth Edition. Fcp. |
+ | 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | SOUPS AND DRESSED FISH À LA MODE. |
+ | Second Edition. Fcp. 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | SWEETS AND SUPPER DISHES À LA MODE. |
+ | Fcp. 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | OYSTERS À LA MODE; or, the Oyster and over |
+ | One Hundred Ways of Cooking it; to which are added a few |
+ | Recipes for Cooking all kinds of Shelled Fish. Second |
+ | Edition. Fcp. 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | DRESSED VEGETABLES À LA MODE. Fcp. |
+ | 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY À LA MODE. |
+ | Fcp. 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | |
+ | London: LONGMANS, GREEN, & CO |
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY
+
+
+ _À LA MODE_
+
+
+ BY
+
+ MRS DE SALIS
+
+
+
+
+ AUTHORESS OF 'SAVOURIES À LA MODE' 'ENTRÉES À LA MODE'
+ 'SOUPS AND DRESSED FISH À LA MODE' 'OYSTERS À LA MODE'
+ 'SWEETS À LA MODE' AND 'VEGETABLES À LA MODE'
+
+
+ 'One loves the pheasant wing
+ And one the leg'
+ POPE
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON
+ LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
+ AND NEW YORK: 15 EAST 16^{th} STREET
+ 1888
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
+ LONDON
+
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+At this the sporting season of the year, I venture to offer to the
+public another of my little series in the form of Dressed Game and
+Poultry. No doubt many of the recipes are well known, but it has been my
+aim to collect from _all_ the culinary preserves such recipes that from
+personal experience I know to be good. All the known and unknown tomes
+on the gourmet's art have been consulted, and I have to thank the
+authors for this assistance to my work, as well as those _cordons bleus_
+from whom I have practically learnt some few of them.
+
+I shall be very pleased to correspond with any of my readers who may
+wish to discourse on matters relative to the dinner table and its
+adjuncts, floral decorations among the number.
+
+ H. A. DE SALIS.
+
+HAMPTON LEA, SUTTON,
+SURREY, 1888.
+
+
+
+
+DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY
+
+À LA MODE.
+
+
+Blackbird Pie.
+
+Stuff the birds with the crumb of a French roll soaked in a little milk,
+which put in a stewpan with 1-1/2 ounces of butter, a chopped shalot,
+some parsley, pepper, salt, a grate of nutmeg, and the yolks of two
+small eggs. Stir over the fire till it becomes a thick paste, and fill
+the insides of the birds with it. Line the bottom of the pie-dish with
+fried collops of rump steak, and place the birds on them neatly. Add
+four hard-boiled yolks of eggs, and pour gravy all over, cover with puff
+paste, and bake for one hour and a quarter.
+
+
+Blanquette of Chicken.
+
+Cut the meat from a cold boiled fowl, in small pieces. Stew down the
+bones in one pint of water, a bouquet garni, add a little salt and white
+pepper to taste. Then strain the stock, add to it three or four peeled
+mushrooms finely minced, and let them cook in this sauce; when done put
+in the pieces of fowl to warm through, thicken with the yolks of two
+eggs. Add lemon juice and serve hot.
+
+
+Blanquette of Chicken aux Concombres.
+
+Boil a chicken and cut it into neat joints. Cut a cucumber in pieces and
+fry in butter, put them in a little stock, which reduce; have reduced
+half a pint of velouté sauce with a few trimmings of cucumber in it.
+Pour this through a tammy over the fowls, set it on the fire, and as
+soon as it bubbles add a liaison of three yolks of eggs, work in a
+little butter and lemon juice, drain the pieces of cucumber in a cloth,
+throw them in, and serve them in an open vol au vent, garnished with
+flowers of puff paste.
+
+
+Capilotade of Fowl or Turkey.
+
+Take the remains of a cold fowl or turkey, and cut it into neat joints.
+Chop up three or four mushrooms, some parsley, a shalot, and a piece of
+butter the size of a walnut, and let all fry together for a short time;
+then moisten with a little good-flavoured stock, and thicken with flour.
+Add salt to taste, let the sauce boil well, put in the pieces of bird
+for a few minutes; take them out, arrange them on a dish, pour the sauce
+over, and serve.
+
+
+Chicken à la Bonne Femme.
+
+Cut up a chicken into joints, warm up three onions and three turnips in
+butter; when brown add the pieces of fowl. Season with salt and pepper,
+sauté over the fire for ten minutes. Then stir in two tablespoonfuls of
+flour, and five minutes after add a tumblerful of stock, a wineglass of
+white wine, a bouquet of mixed herbs, and half a pound of peeled
+tomatoes, with all the pips carefully removed. Cook over a slow fire for
+twenty-five minutes, add about half a pound of mushrooms peeled and cut
+up to the size of a shilling, leave it on the fire for ten minutes; take
+out the bouquet of herbs, season with an ounce of finely-chopped
+parsley, dish up the pieces of chicken in a pyramid, and pour the sauce
+and vegetables over.
+
+
+Braised Drumsticks of Chicken.
+
+Braise the drumsticks, and arrange them uprightly in tent fashion, and
+all around and between the drumsticks should be finely chopped salad.
+Alternate slices of tongue and ham should be placed at the edge of the
+salad, and the border of the dish ornamented with thin rounds of
+beetroot.
+
+
+Chickens Chiringrate.
+
+Cut off the feet of a chicken, break the breastbone flat, but be careful
+not to break the skin. Flour it and fry it in butter, drain all the fat
+out of the pan, but leave the chicken in. Make a farce from half a pound
+of fillet of beef, half a pound of veal, ten ounces of cooked ham, a
+shalot, a bouquet garni, and a piece of carrot, pepper, and salt; cook
+in stock, and then pass it through a sieve, and lay this farce over the
+chicken. After stewing the chicken for a quarter of an hour, make a rich
+gravy from the stock, and add a few mushrooms and two spoonfuls of port
+wine; boil all up well, and pour over and around the chicken.
+
+
+Chicken à la Continental.
+
+Beat up two eggs with butter, pepper, salt, and lemon-juice; then cut up
+the fowls, dip them in the egg paste, and roll them in crumbs and fried
+parsley. Fry in clarified dripping, and pour over the dish any white or
+green vegetable ragoût, made hot; grate Parmesan over all.
+
+
+Chicken à la Davenport.
+
+Stuff a fowl with a forcemeat made of the hearts and livers, an anchovy,
+the yolk of a hard-boiled egg, one onion, a little spice, and a little
+shred veal-kidney fat. Sew up the neck and vent, brown the fowl in the
+oven, then stew it in stock till tender. Serve with white mushroom
+sauce.
+
+
+Chicken à l'Italienne.
+
+Pass a knife under the skin of the back, and cut out the backbone
+without injuring the skin or breaking off the rump, draw out the
+breastbone and break the merrythought; flatten the fowl and put two
+skewers through it. Put it into a marinade of oil, sliced onion,
+eschalot, parsley, thyme, and a bay leaf, spice, pepper, and salt, in
+which let them soak a few hours. Broil them before the fire; when done,
+dish the fowls, garnish them with hot pickle, serve them with a brown
+Italian sauce over, with a few onions in it.
+
+
+Chicken à la Matador.
+
+Cut a chicken into fillets and neat joints. Mince finely a Spanish onion
+and stew it with two ounces of butter, a few drops of lemon, pepper, and
+salt; when it has been stewed for half an hour, pass it through a tammy,
+and mix in with it a good tablespoonful of aspic jelly. Mask the chicken
+with this, and warm up the chicken in the bain-marie.
+
+
+Fillets of Chicken à la Cardinal.
+
+Cook some fillets of chicken in butter, and when done place them in a
+circle round an entrée dish, with a mushroom between each fillet. Fill
+the centre with Allemagne sauce, to which has been added some lobster
+and crayfish butter to make it red. Garnish with crayfish tails if
+handy.
+
+
+Fried Chicken à la Orly.
+
+Cut up a chicken into joints. Season with salt, pepper, parsley, a
+bayleaf, and lemon juice, sprinkle with flour and fry in butter; dip
+some sliced onions into flour and fry. When done, dish up the chicken in
+a pyramid, garnish with the fried onions and cover with tomato sauce.
+
+
+Fried Chicken à la Suisse.
+
+Roast a chicken and cut it into fillets and neat joints. Sprinkle some
+finely minced herbs, mignonette pepper, and salt over them. Let them
+remain for an hour, then dip them in frying batter and fry. Serve with
+fried parsley and tomato purée.
+
+
+Fricassee of Chicken.
+
+American Recipe.
+
+Clean, wash, and cut up the fowls. Lay them in salt and water for half
+an hour. Put them in a saucepan with enough cold water to cover them and
+half a pound of salt pork cut into thin strips. Cover closely and let
+them heat very slowly. Then stew for over an hour, if the fowls _are
+tender_; if not they may take from three to four hours. They must be
+cooked _very slowly_. When tender, add a chopped onion, a shalot,
+parsley, and pepper. Cover closely again, and when it has heated to
+boiling, stir in a teacupful of milk, to which have been added two
+beaten eggs and two tablespoonfuls of flour. Boil up and add an ounce of
+butter. Arrange the chickens neatly in an entrée dish, pour the gravy
+over and serve.
+
+
+Fritôt of Chicken aux Tomates.
+
+Take the remains of a boiled fowl and cut into pieces the size of a
+small cutlet. Shake a little flour over them and put them aside. Prepare
+a batter made of half a pound of Vienna flour, the yolk of one egg, half
+a gill of salad oil, and a gill of light coloured ale. Mix all these
+together lightly till it will mask the tip of your finger, add half a
+pint of purée of tomato, and mix well together. Dip the chicken cutlets
+into this batter, masking them well, and then put them in good lard and
+fry, and place them on a wire sieve as they are cooked, keeping them
+near the fire to keep them hot and crisp. Dish piled in a pyramid with
+tomatoes whole and tomato sauce round.
+
+
+Chicken Nouilles au Parmesan.
+
+Take a large fowl, and when trussed put a lump of butter inside it, and
+cover the breast with fat bacon. Put it into a stewpan with an onion, a
+carrot, a piece of celery; cover with water and boil slowly for fifty
+minutes. Garnish the dish on which it is served with a pint of Nouilles
+boiled in a stewpan of boiling water for twenty minutes, drained, and
+then put into another saucepan with two ounces of butter. Sprinkle in
+two ounces of Parmesan cheese and warm up for five minutes, then garnish
+the fowl with them, and pour over it a pint of rich Béchamel sauce, in
+which two ounces of Parmesan cheese has been mixed. The Nouilles are
+made by mixing half a pound of butter with three eggs till it becomes a
+thick smooth paste, roll it out very thin, cut it into strips an inch
+wide, and place four or five of these on the top of each other, shred
+them in thin slices like Julienne vegetables, and drain them.
+
+
+Chicken Pudding à la Reine.
+
+Take the meat from a cold fowl and pound it in a mortar, after removing
+the skin and sinews. Boil in light stock a couple of good tablespoonfuls
+of rice. When it is done and has soaked up the rice, add the pounded
+chicken to it, with a gill of cream, pepper, and salt. If not moist
+enough, add a little more cream. Butter a plain mould, fill it with the
+rice and chicken, tie a pudding cloth closely over, and put the mould
+into a stewpan of hot water to boil for an hour. The water should only
+reach about three-quarters up the mould. When done, turn it out and
+serve a good white mushroom sauce round it.
+
+
+Chicken and Rice.
+
+Pollo con Arroz (Spanish Recipe).
+
+Cut a fowl into joints, wipe quite dry, and trim neatly. Put a wineglass
+of the best olive oil in a stewpan, let it get hot. Put in the chicken,
+stir and turn the joints and sprinkle with salt. When the chicken is a
+golden brown add some chopped onions, one or two red chillies, and fry
+all together. Meanwhile have ready four tomatoes cut in quarters, and
+two teacupfuls of rice well washed. Mix these with the chicken and pour
+in a very small quantity of broth and stew till the rice is cooked and
+the broth dried up. Sprinkle a little chopped parsley and serve in a
+deep dish without a cover, as the steam must not be kept in.
+
+
+Chicken in Savoury Jelly.
+
+Take a large chicken and roast it. Boil a calf's foot to a strong jelly,
+take out the foot and skim off the fat; beat up the whites of two eggs
+and mix them with a quarter of a pint of white wine vinegar, the juice
+of one lemon, a little salt, a tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar, and a
+claret-glassful of sherry. Put these to the jelly, and when it has
+boiled five or six minutes strain it through a jelly bag till clear.
+Then put a little into an oblong baking tin (big enough for a
+half-quartern loaf), and when it is nearly set put in the chicken with
+its breast downwards; the chicken having been masked all over with white
+sauce, in which aspic has been well mixed, and ornamented with a device
+of truffles cut in stars and kite shapes. When the chicken is in, fill
+up the mould gradually with the remainder of the jelly. Let it stand for
+some hours, or place it on ice before turning it out.
+
+
+Chicken with Spinach.
+
+Poach nicely in the gravy five or six eggs. Dress them on flattened
+balls of spinach round the dish and serve the fowl in the centre,
+rubbing down the liver to thicken the gravy and liquor in which the fowl
+has been stewed, which pour over it for sauce, skimming it well.
+Mushrooms, oysters, and forcemeat balls should be put into the sauce.
+
+
+Chicken Stewed Whole.
+
+Fill the inside of a chicken with large oysters and mushrooms and fasten
+a tape round to keep them in. Put it in a tin pan with a cover, and put
+this into a large boiling pot with boiling water, which must not quite
+reach up to the top of the pan the chicken is in. Keep it boiling till
+the chicken is done, which would be in about an hour's time after it
+begins to simmer. Remove the scum occasionally, and replenish with water
+as it boils away; take all the gravy from it and put it into a small
+saucepan, keeping the chicken warm. Thicken the gravy with butter,
+flour, and add two tablespoonfuls of chopped oysters, the yolks of two
+eggs boiled hard and minced fine, some seasoning, and a gill of cream.
+Boil five minutes and dish the fowls.
+
+
+Côtelettes à l'Ecarlate.
+
+Make a stiff forcemeat from the breast of a fowl or pheasant, or the two
+breasts of partridge or grouse. Cut some slices of tongue into cutlet
+shapes. Take some more tongue, pound and pass it through a sieve and mix
+it with the forcemeat. Season with a little cayenne and mushroom
+flavour. Butter and fill up some cutlet moulds with the forcemeat, and
+steam them in the oven. Then turn out the cutlets and place them on a
+baking sheet. Glaze them and replace them in the oven for a few seconds.
+Dish up alternately a cutlet of tongue with a cutlet of forcemeat; sauce
+the whole with chaud-froid sauce, and garnish with chopped aspic and
+very small red tomatoes.
+
+
+Forced Capon.
+
+Cut the skin of a capon down the breast, carefully slip the knife down
+so as to take out all the meat, and mix it with a pound of beef suet cut
+small. Beat this together in a marble mortar, and take a pint of large
+oysters cut small, two anchovies, a shalot, a bouquet garni, a little
+mignonette pepper, and the yolks of four eggs. Mix all these well
+together, and lay it on the bones; then draw the skin over it, and sew
+up. Put the capon into a cloth, and boil it an hour and a quarter. Stew
+a dozen oysters in good gravy thickened with a piece of butter rolled in
+flour; take the capon out of the cloth, lay it in its dish, and pour the
+sauce over it.
+
+
+Capon à la Nanterre.
+
+Make a stuffing with the liver of the capon, a dozen roasted chestnuts,
+a piece of butter, parsley, green onions, very little garlic, two yolks
+of eggs, salt and pepper. Stuff the capon, and then roast it, covering
+it with buttered paper. When it is cooked, brush it over with the yolk
+of an egg diluted in a little lukewarm batter; sprinkle breadcrumbs over
+all, and let it brown, and serve with a sharp sauce.
+
+
+Braised Ducks à la St. Michel.
+
+Rub some flour and oil over a couple of ducks, and brown them in the
+oven for a short time. Mix together a cup of Chablis wine and a cup of
+broth, season with pepper and salt; braise the ducks till they are
+tender. Chop some mushrooms, chives, and parsley; mix these in the broth
+in which the ducks were braised. Put the ducks to keep warm before the
+fire whilst the sauce 'reduces.' Dredge in a very little flour, and send
+up the ducks with the sauce round them.
+
+
+Duck à la Mode.
+
+Divide two ducks into quarters, and put them in a stewpan, and sprinkle
+over them flour, pepper, and salt. Put into the stewpan several pieces
+of butter, and fry the ducks till a nice brown colour. Remove the frying
+fat, and pour in half a pint of gravy and half a pint of port wine,
+sprinkle in more flour, add a bouquet garni, three minced shalots, an
+anchovy, and a dust of cayenne. Let them stew for twenty minutes, then
+place them on a dish, remove the herbs, clear off the fat, and serve
+with the sauce over them.
+
+
+Braised Duck à la Nivernaise.
+
+Line a braisingpan with slices of bacon, add the duck, cover it with
+bacon, and season with a bouquet of parsley, carrots, thyme, and bay
+leaves; moisten with stock and the same quantity of claret; fix the lid
+very tightly on the pan, and simmer over a slow fire, with hot coals on
+the lid of the stewpan. Cut up some turnips into balls, cook them in
+butter till brown, drain and simmer in brown thickening, moistened with
+a little stock. When the duck is cooked, dish up, and garnish with the
+turnips.
+
+
+Devilled Duck or Teal.
+
+Indian Recipe.
+
+Take a pound of onions, a piece of green ginger, and six chillies.
+Reduce them to a pulp, then add two teaspoonfuls of mustard, pepper,
+salt, cayenne, and chutney, two tablespoonfuls of ketchup, and half a
+bottle of claret. Cut up the duck or teal, and put it into the sauce,
+and let it simmer for a long time--the duck having been previously
+roasted.
+
+
+Duck à la Provence.
+
+Rub the duck over with lemon-juice, fry it in butter for a few minutes;
+sprinkle it with flour; then add sufficient stock to cover it, one
+tablespoonful of ketchup, one carrot; cut up two onions, two cloves, a
+bouquet garni, pepper, and salt. Let this stew for an hour; then take
+out the duck, strain the gravy, and remove all fat, and add plenty of
+mushrooms. Put in some stoned and scalded olives, which boil up for ten
+minutes and dish up with the duck. The olives should have been soaked
+three hours previously.
+
+
+Duck.
+
+Canard à Purée Perto.
+
+Take a pint of freshly shelled peas, boil them in a little thin stock,
+and rub them through a sieve; stew a duck in stock with a little salt, a
+dozen peppercorns, half a clove of garlic, six small onions, a bayleaf,
+and bouquet garni. When done, pass the same through a sieve, and add to
+it the purée of peas; reduce the whole to the consistency of thick
+cream. Serve the duck with the purée over it.
+
+
+Salmi of Duck.
+
+Take the giblets of a duck and the flesh off the carcase, and the bones,
+and stew them in equal quantities of claret and stock, salt, pepper, and
+three shalots. Reduce and simmer till it is thick, then pass through a
+sieve, and take it off the fire before it boils. Cut up the duck into
+neat pieces and lay it in the stewpan with the gravy. Squeeze juice of
+strained orange over it, and serve en pyramide.
+
+
+Stewed Duck and Turnips.
+
+Brown the duck in a stewpan with some butter, peel and cut some young
+turnips into equal sizes, and brown in the same butter; stir in a little
+powdered sugar, reduce some stock to a thin brown sauce, season with
+salt, pepper, a bouquet of parsley, chives, half a head of garlic, and a
+bayleaf. Stew the duck in this sauce, and when half cooked add the
+turnips, turn the duck from time to time, being careful not to break the
+turnips, cook slowly, and skim off all grease and serve.
+
+
+Roast Goose Stuffed with Chestnuts.
+
+Prepare a goose and stuff it with a mixture of minced bacon, the liver,
+salt, pepper, grated nutmeg, and chestnuts, which have been previously
+cooked and peeled. Baste the goose well whilst roasting. When cooked,
+serve with its own gravy, and sprinkle with salt, pepper, and the juice
+of a lemon.
+
+
+Goose à la Royale.
+
+Having boned the goose, stuff it with the following forcemeat:--Twelve
+sage leaves, two onions, and two apples, all shred very fine. Mix with
+four ounces grated bread, four ounces of beef suet, two glasses of port
+wine, a grate of nutmeg, pepper, and salt to taste, the grated peel of a
+lemon, and the beaten yolks of four eggs; sew up the goose and fry in
+butter till a light brown, and put it into two quarts of good stock and
+let it stew for two hours, and till the liquor is nearly consumed; then
+take up the goose, strain the liquor and take off the fat, add a
+spoonful of lemon pickle, the same of browning and port wine, a
+teaspoonful of essence of anchovy, a little cayenne and salt, boil it up
+and pour over the goose.
+
+
+Game and Macaroni.
+
+Put some ounces of macaroni into boiling stock, then add any game cut
+into small joints three parts cooked. Add some lean raw ham, chopped
+mushrooms, pepper, and salt.
+
+
+Game Pie.
+
+Take ten ounces of veal and the same of veal fat, and chop it very fine,
+season with pepper, salt, and cayenne. Arrange this as a lining round a
+china raised pie mould. Fill in with fillets of grouse, pheasant,
+partridge, and hare, strips of tongue, ham, hard-boiled yolks of eggs,
+button mushrooms, pistachio nuts, truffles, and pâté de foie gras; cover
+in with more of the mince, then put a paste on the top for cooking it
+in. Bake from two and a half to three hours. Remove the paste and fill
+the mould up with clarified meat jelly, partly cold; let this set.
+Ornament the top with chopped aspic and alternate slices of lemon and
+cucumber round. Croûtons of red and yellow aspic should be arranged at
+the base of the mould.
+
+
+Game Rissoles au Poulet à la Carême.
+
+Roll out very thin three-quarters of a pound of Brioche paste. Place
+upon it, two inches from the edge, minced fowl or game, prepared as for
+croquets, and rolled up between two teaspoons in balls the size of a
+nutmeg. Place these an inch from each other; egg the paste all round and
+fold the edge of it over the balls of mince. Press it firmly down, and
+with a paste stamp two inches wide cut the rissoles, keeping the mince
+balls exactly in the centre of each. Lay them on a hot tin that the
+paste may rise and fry them in lard not too hot, turning them with a
+skewer. They will become quite round. When of a good golden colour drain
+them and serve directly, and dish up in a pyramid.
+
+
+Salad of Game à la Francatelli.
+
+Boil eight eggs hard; shell them, and cut a thin slice off the bottom of
+each, cut each into four lengthwise. Make a very thin flat border of
+butter about one inch from the edge of the dish the salad is to be
+served on, fix the pieces of egg upright close to each other, the yolk
+outside, or alternately the white and yolk, lay in the centre a layer of
+fresh salad, and, having cut a freshly roasted young grouse into eight
+or ten pieces, prepare a sauce as follows: Put a spoonful of eschalots
+finely chopped in a basin, one ditto of castor sugar, the yolk of one
+egg, a teaspoonful of chopped parsley, tarragon, and chervil, and a
+little salt. Mix in by degrees four spoonfuls of oil and two of white
+vinegar. When well mixed put it on ice, and when ready to serve up whip
+a gill of cream, which lightly mix with it. Then lay the inferior parts
+of the grouse on the salad, sauce over so as to cover each piece, then
+lay over the salad and the remainder of the grouse, sauce over, and
+serve. The eggs can be ornamented with a little dot of radish or
+beetroot on the point. Anchovy and gherkin, cut into small diamonds, may
+be placed between.
+
+
+Grouse in Aspic.
+
+Roast a brace of grouse, and skin them, and mask them with brown sauce
+in which aspic has been mixed. Cut some pistachio kernels into pretty
+shapes and ornament the birds. Take a large square tin mould (a baking
+tin will do), pour in a layer of pale aspic, and when it is all but cold
+place the grouse on it breast downward, one turned one way and one the
+other, then gradually fill it up with the aspic, and put on ice. Turn
+out and decorate the base with chopped aspic, truffles, parsley, and
+tomatoes.
+
+
+Croustades of Grouse à la Diable.
+
+Cut some fillets of grouse into cutlet shapes, also some slices of fried
+bread; sprinkle the latter with grated Parmesan cheese. Put the fillets
+of grouse on the cheesed bread. Mask them with a purée of tomatoes and a
+tiny dust of cayenne, then add a little more grated Parmesan, a little
+parsley, some breadcrumbs, and little pieces of butter. Salamander over
+and serve hot.
+
+
+Grouse à l'Ecossaise.
+
+Take a brace of grouse; put three ounces of good dripping or butter
+inside each, but not in the crop. Put them down to roast, and baste till
+cooked. Have a slice of toast in the pan under them just before they are
+cooked. Parboil the liver, pound with butter, salt, and cayenne, and
+spread it on the toast.
+
+
+Grouse à la Financière.
+
+Take a brace of grouse; boil the livers for a few minutes, and pound
+them in a mortar with three ounces of butter, a little salt, pepper, a
+grate of nutmeg, one tablespoonful of breadcrumbs, and three or four
+mushrooms. Stuff the grouse with this, truss and roast them, and baste
+plentifully. Take some sauce espagnole, add a few mushrooms and a dust
+of cayenne. Let all boil up together and serve with the grouse.
+
+
+Friantine of Grouse.
+
+Cut with two cutters, one larger than the other, twelve thin flat pieces
+of pastry, put on the centre of the largest a tablespoonful of quenelle
+meat and spread it out; in the centre of this put a tablespoonful of the
+breast of a grouse, cut up with two ounces of lean ham. Mix well and put
+it into a stewpan with three-quarters of a pint of white cream sauce.
+Warm up and let it get cold. Cover this with the smaller sized pieces of
+pastry, having wetted the inside of each with yolk of egg to make them
+adhere to the lowest pastry, press down tightly with the smallest
+cutters, and cut the bottom pastry to the size of the smaller cutter.
+Egg and breadcrumb. Arrange them in a frying basket and fry in boiling
+lard a nice brown. Serve garnished with fried parsley.
+
+
+Grouse Kromesquis.
+
+Take the remains of cold grouse and mince it very fine. Mix with it a
+couple of tablespoonfuls of grated ham or tongue. Divide into small
+sausage shapes, dip each in batter, fry a pale golden colour and serve
+very hot, garnished with crisped parsley.
+
+
+Grouse Marinaded.
+
+German Recipe.
+
+Hang the birds as long as possible, then pluck and draw them and wipe
+their insides with a soft cloth. Mince an onion; take about a dozen
+peppercorns, twenty juniper berries, three bayleaves, and put these into
+a gill of vinegar. Let the grouse soak in this for three days, turning
+them two or three times daily, and pouring the marinade over them. Stuff
+the birds with turkey forcemeat and lard the breasts. Place them in
+front of a clear fire, baste constantly, and serve with slices of lemon
+round the dish.
+
+
+Grouse au Naturel.
+
+Grouse should be wiped inside, but never washed. Have a brisk fire, and
+when the bird is trussed, place it before a brisk fire, and before it is
+taken down the breast should be basted with a little butter, and frothed
+and browned before it is sent up. A good sized grouse requires nearly
+three-quarters of an hour to cook it. Serve fried breadcrumbs and bread
+sauce with grouse.
+
+
+Grouse Pie.
+
+Take two or three grouse, cut off the wings and legs, and tuck the
+drumsticks in through a slit in the thigh; singe the birds; split them
+in halves; season them with pepper and salt. Place some pieces of very
+tender beefsteak at the bottom of a pie dish, add chopped mushrooms,
+parsley, shalot, and two teaspoonfuls of chutnee sauce, and sprinkle
+over the steak. Place the halves of the grouse neatly on the top; add a
+little more seasoning; moisten with sufficient gravy made from the
+necks, legs, and wings. Cover with puff paste, and bake for about an
+hour and a half.
+
+
+Pressed Grouse.
+
+Boil a brace of grouse till very tender; season, and then take away all
+the meat and pull it out very fine, removing all skin. Add to the liquor
+in which they were boiled a tablespoonful of gelatine for each three
+pounds of grouse, and keep stirring it in the boiling liquor till it is
+quite dissolved; place the grouse in a deep tin basin, and pour the
+liquor over it whilst hot; stir it well, so that the meat may become
+thoroughly saturated with the liquor, then turn a plate over it, put on
+a heavy weight, let it get cold, and turn out. It may be made ornamental
+by boiling eggs hard, halving them, and putting the flat side on the
+basin or mould in which the grouse has to be pressed.
+
+
+Grouse Salad.
+
+Cut up a brace of cold grouse, and let them marinade in two
+tablespoonfuls of salad oil and the juice of a lemon, with a little salt
+and pepper, and let them remain in this for three hours. Pound the yolk
+of a hard-boiled egg very smooth, and mix it well with the yolk of a raw
+egg, a teaspoonful of salt, a little pepper, a dust of cayenne, and half
+a teaspoonful of finely-chopped onion, pouring in gradually drop by drop
+some fine salad oil; stir constantly, and, as it thickens, add a little
+tarragon vinegar, then add more oil and vinegar till there is enough
+sauce. Put some shred lettuce on a dish, place some marinaded grouse on
+it, pour the dressing over, and garnish with fillets of anchovies,
+slices of hard-boiled eggs, and sprigs of chervil. Chop up some savoury
+jelly, and place round it like a wreath.
+
+
+Scallops of Grouse à la Financière.
+
+Take a brace of grouse, remove the skin, take off all the flesh, and
+scrape the flesh into very fine shreds. Chop up all the bones and necks,
+and put them into a saucepan with an onion, five sprigs of thyme, three
+of parsley, and a small carrot; cover with water, and let it boil slowly
+for three hours, skimming when it boils. Make a mixture of about half a
+pint of stock and two ounces of butter, and let boil. When the stock
+boils take 3-1/4 ounces of fine Vienna flour, and stir it well over the
+fire for about three minutes; then add the yolks of three eggs, stirring
+over the fire again. Take it then from the saucepan, and place it on a
+plate to get cool; then pound the shredded grouse till quite fine, using
+a gill of cream; now pass it through a fine sieve. Take a plain round
+mould, holding a pint and a half, butter it, and ornament with truffles
+cut in devices. Cut up three or four mushrooms, and mix in with the
+grouse panada, and fill the mould. Place buttered paper over it, and let
+it steam for half an hour; then turn out and let it get cold, and when
+cold cut it into a number of scallops of the same size. Egg and
+breadcrumb them, dip them in clarified butter, and fry a pale gold
+colour, and serve on a border of mashed potatoes. Make a sauce as
+follows:--Boil one glass of Marsala in half a pint of brown sauce for
+five minutes; place in the centre of them some mushrooms, truffles, and
+cockscombs, and pour sauce over these, but do not put the sauce over the
+scallops.
+
+
+Grouse Soufflé.
+
+Take the breasts of two grouse already cooked, pound them in a mortar
+with two ounces of fresh butter and a very small piece of onion. Pass
+them through a sieve, add four eggs, beat the whites to a stiff froth,
+season with a little salt and dust of cayenne. Place it in a soufflé
+dish, and bake it in a quick oven.
+
+
+Timbale of Grouse à la Vitellius.
+
+Simmer a slice of tongue in a stewpan till nearly cooked. Cut it up into
+fine dice, and put it back into the saucepan with four truffles, four
+tomatoes, and an ounce of butter; add a little cornflour to thicken it.
+Moisten with half a pint of stock and a gill of claret. Reduce this,
+skim off all the fat; then add some finely-minced grouse, a sprig of
+parsley, and six anchovies which have been soaked in milk. Warm these
+over a slow fire, but do not let them boil; when done, pour into a fancy
+mould lined with light puff paste. Bake, turn out, and serve very hot,
+garnished with crisped parsley.
+
+
+To Cook Hare.
+
+The great object in cooking a hare is to keep it as moist as possible,
+and therefore the hare must not be put too close to the fire in the
+first stage of roasting. Prepare a stuffing of quarter of a pound of
+beef suet, chopped finely, two ounces of uncooked ham, a teaspoonful of
+chopped parsley, and two teaspoonfuls of dried mixed savoury herbs; add
+to this a quarter of the rind of a lemon, chopped very fine, a dust of
+cayenne pepper, salt, five ounces of breadcrumbs, and two whole eggs.
+Pound this in the mortar. The liver may be minced and pounded in with
+these ingredients if fresh. Place the stuffing in the hare, and place at
+a distance from the fire; have plenty of dripping melted in the dripping
+pan, and basting should go on and be continued from the very first. Then
+as the hare is getting on, baste with good milk, and then baste well
+with butter; put the hare near the fire so as to froth the butter, and
+at the same time dredge the hare with some flour, so as to get a good
+brown colour, and serve good rich gravy _round_ it with half a glass of
+port wine in a tureen, and currant jelly should be handed with it.
+
+
+Hare Cutlets à la Chef.
+
+Take a freshly-killed hare, save the blood, paunch and skin it. Roast
+it, then cut off the fillets and cut them aslant and flatten them. Put
+the bones of the hare into a saucepan with two onions sliced, one
+good-sized carrot, a tiny piece of garlic, two cloves, and a bouquet
+garni, and one bayleaf. Moisten with a glass of white wine, and let all
+this steep and stew for an hour; then pass through a sieve, add a
+quarter of a boiled Spanish onion, and thicken with the blood of the
+hare. Make some hare stuffing, and moisten with some of the sauce, and
+make it into cutlets. To form cutlets similar to the fillet cutlets,
+place them in a frying-pan, and let them poach in water. Place the hare
+fillets and the stuffing cutlets in the pan and fry to a good colour in
+clarified butter. Put a small piece of the small bones of the hare in
+every cutlet and dish them in a crown. Fill the centre with a mixture of
+small onions, mushrooms, and small pieces of bacon, cut into dice which
+have been stewed in some of the sauce. Hand red currant jelly with this
+dish.
+
+
+Hare en Daube.
+
+French Recipe.
+
+The hare must not be too high; cut it into pieces as for jugged hare.
+Rub into a stewpan a bit of bacon cut into squares; put the hare into
+it, together with thyme, bayleaf, spices, salt, pepper, and as much
+garlic as will go on the point of a knife. Add a little bacon rind
+blanched and cut into the shape of lozenges. When the whole has a
+uniform colour, moisten with a good glass of white wine, put on a close
+lid, and stew for four hours upon hot cinders. When ready to be served,
+pour away the lard, the spice, and the fat, and add a little essence of
+ham, and send to table hot.
+
+
+Hare Derrynane Fashion.
+
+Take three or four eggs, a pint of new milk, a couple of handfuls of
+flour, three yolks. Make them into a batter, and when the hare is
+roasting baste it well, repeating the operation till the batter thickens
+and forms a coating all over the hare. This should be allowed to brown
+but not to burn.
+
+
+Filet de Lièvre à la Muette.
+
+Cut a hare into fillets and stew them with a mince of chickens' livers,
+truffles, shalots in a rich brown gravy with a tumblerful of champagne
+in it.
+
+
+Gâteaux de Lièvre.
+
+Mince the best parts of a hare with a little mutton suet. Season the
+mince highly with herbs and good stock. Pound it in a mortar with some
+red currant jelly and make up into small cakes with raw eggs. Flour and
+fry them and dish them in a pyramid.
+
+
+Hare à la Matanzas.
+
+Paunch, skin, and clean a hare marinaded in vinegar for a couple of days
+with four onions sliced, three shalots, a couple of sprigs of parsley,
+pepper and salt. After two days take the hare out and drain it. Farce it
+with a stuffing made of the flesh of a chicken, three whole eggs, the
+liver, and a slice of bacon, all finely chopped, mixed and seasoned with
+pepper, salt, and a bouquet garni. Now put the hare in a stewpan with
+slices of bacon all over it, some sliced carrots, two onions stuck with
+cloves, and half a pint of consommé. Put some live coals on the lid of
+the saucepan and let it cook for three hours.
+
+
+Hare à la Mode.
+
+Skin the hare and cut it up in into joints and lard with fine fillets of
+bacon; place in an earthenware pot, with some slices of salt pork,
+chopped bacon, salt, mixed spice, a piece of butter, and half a pint of
+port wine; lay two or three sheets of buttered paper over it; fix on the
+lid tightly and simmer over a slow fire. When nearly done, stir in the
+blood, boil up and serve.
+
+
+Jugged Hare.
+
+Have a wide-mouthed stone jar, and put into it some good brown gravy
+free from fat. Next cut up the hare into neat joints; fry these joints
+in a little butter to brown them a little. Have the jar made hot by
+placing it in the oven, and have a cloth ready to tie over its mouth.
+Put the joints already browned into the jar, and let it stand for
+fifteen minutes on the dresser. After this has stood some time untie the
+jar and add the gravy, with a dust of cinnamon, six cloves, two
+bayleaves, and the juice of half a lemon. The gravy should have onion
+made in it, and should be thickened with a little arrowroot. A
+wineglassful of port should be added, and a good spoonful of red currant
+jelly should be dissolved in it. Next place the jar up to its neck in a
+large saucepan of boiling water, only taking care the jar is well tied
+down. Let it remain in the boiling water from an hour to an hour and a
+half. Stuffing balls, made with the same as the stuffing for roast hare,
+rolled into small balls the size of marbles and thrown into boiling fat,
+should be served with it.
+
+
+To Roast Landrail.
+
+This bird should be trussed like a snipe, and roasted quickly at a brisk
+but not a fierce fire for about fifteen or sixteen minutes. It should be
+dished on fried breadcrumbs, and gravy served in a tureen.
+
+
+Croustade of Larks.
+
+Bone two dozen larks, season, and put into each a piece of pâté de foie
+gras (truffled). Roll the larks up into a ball, put them in a pudding
+basin, season them with salt and pepper, and pour three ounces of
+clarified butter over them, and bake in a hot oven for a quarter of an
+hour. Dish them in a fried bread croustade, made by cutting the crust
+from a stale loaf about eight inches long, which must be scooped out in
+the centre and fried in hot lard or butter till it is a good brown.
+Drain it, and then place it in the centre of a dish, sticking it there
+with a little white of egg. Put it into the oven to get hot; then put
+the larks into it, and let it get cold. Garnish with truffles and aspic
+jelly.
+
+
+Larks à la Macédoine.
+
+Take a dozen larks, fill them with forcemeat made of livers, a little
+veal and fat bacon, a dessertspoonful of sweet herbs; pepper and salt to
+taste, and pound all well together in a mortar, and then stuff the birds
+with it. Lay the larks into a deep dish, pour over them a pint of good
+gravy, and bake in a moderate oven for a quarter of an hour. Have a
+pyramid of mashed potatoes ready, and arrange the larks round it, and
+garnish with a macédoine of mixed vegetables.
+
+
+Lark Pie.
+
+Pluck, singe, and flatten the backs of two dozen larks, pound the trail
+and livers in a mortar with scraped bacon and a little thyme, stuff the
+larks with this, and wrap each in a slice of fat bacon. Line a plain
+mould with paste, fill it with the larks, sprinkle them with salt and
+pepper, spread butter all over them, and add two small bayleaves; cover
+with paste, and bake for two hours and a quarter. Can be eaten hot or
+cold. It must be turned out of the mould.
+
+
+Salmi of Larks à la Macédoine, cold.
+
+Take a dozen larks, bone and stuff them with pâté de foie gras, and make
+them as nearly as possible of the same size and shape. Make half a pint
+of brown sauce, adding a glass of sherry, a little mushroom ketchup, and
+an ounce of glaze; boil together, and reduce one half, adding a couple
+of spoonfuls of tomato juice; pass through a sieve, and, when nearly
+cold, add a gill of melted aspic. Mask the larks, and place them in a
+sauté pan, and cook them; take them out and remove neatly any surplus
+sauce, and dish them in the entrée dish in a circle. Take the contents
+of a tin of macédoine of vegetables boiled tender in a quart of water,
+add a dust of salt, a saltspoonful of sugar, and a piece of butter the
+size of a walnut; strain off, and, when cold, toss them in two
+tablespoonfuls of liquid aspic jelly. This macédoine should be piled up
+high and served in the centre. Garnish with chopped aspic round the
+larks, and sippets of aspic beyond this.
+
+
+Lark Puffs.
+
+Make some puff paste, and take half a dozen larks, and brown them in a
+stewpan with a little butter; then take them out and drain them, and put
+into the body of each bird a small lump of fresh butter, a little piece
+of truffle, pepper and salt, and a tablespoonful of thick cream. Truss
+each lark, and wrap it in a slice of fat bacon; cover it with puff
+paste rolled out to the thickness of a quarter of an inch, and shape it
+neatly; put the puffs in a buttered tin, and bake in a brisk oven for
+ten minutes.
+
+
+Leveret à la Minute.
+
+Skin, draw, and cut a leveret into joints; toss in a saucepan with
+butter, salt, pepper, and a bouquet garni. When nearly cooked, add some
+chopped mushrooms, eschalots, parsley, a tablespoonful of flour, a gill
+of stock, and a gill of claret; as soon as it boils, pour into a dish
+and serve.
+
+
+Leveret à la Noël.
+
+Take a leveret, cut off the fillets and toss them in the oven in a
+sauté-pan in butter; when cold, slice these fillets in shreds as for
+Julienne vegetables. Shred likewise some truffles, mushrooms, and
+tongue, and bind these together with two tablespoonfuls of good stock,
+in which a glass of port has been put, two cloves, the peel of a Seville
+orange, and a few mushrooms; thicken with butter and flour and tammy.
+Make some game forcemeat with the legs, and with it line some little
+moulds; fill up the empty space with the shredded game and vegetables
+and then cover with a layer of forcemeat. Poach these moulds in a deep
+sauté-pan, and when done dish them up round a ragoût composed of
+truffles, mushrooms, quenelles, and cockscombs. Sauce the entrée with
+gravy made from the bones and thickened. This entrée may be served cold,
+when it should be mixed with aspic, and garnished with it also.
+
+
+Salmi of Moor Fowl or Wild Duck.
+
+Carve the birds very neatly, and strip every particle of skin and fat
+from the legs, wings, and breasts, braise the bodies well and put them
+with the skin and other trimmings into a very clean stewpan. Add two or
+three sliced shalots, a bayleaf, a small blade of mace and a few
+peppercorns, then pour in a pint of good veal gravy, and boil briskly
+till reduced nearly half, strain the gravy, pressing the bones well,
+skim off the fat, add a dust of cayenne and squeeze in a few drops of
+lemon; heat the game very gradually in it, but it must not be allowed to
+boil. Place sippets of fried bread round the dish, arrange the birds in
+a pyramid, give the same a boil and pour over. A couple of wineglasses
+of port or claret should be mixed with the gravy.
+
+
+Ortolans in Cases.
+
+Bone as many ortolans as are required, have ready about three rashers of
+bacon chopped fine, which must be put into a sauté-pan with two shalots,
+one bayleaf, a bouquet garni, half a teaspoonful of black pepper and
+salt to taste. These must be fried till coloured; then add half a pound
+of calf's liver, cut small, and fried till brown; next place them in a
+mortar and pound them well, add the yolks of three hard boiled eggs and
+some truffle cuttings, pound again, and pass through a sieve; stuff the
+ortolans with this forcemeat, roll them up, and place them in a
+well-oiled paper case, and then bake in a quick oven. Pour over each
+case before serving a gravy made from the bones and trimmings of the
+birds, half a pint of rich gravy and a glass of claret, which should be
+reduced one half: send to table as hot as possible.
+
+
+Ortolans à la Périgourdine.
+
+Cover the ortolans with slices of bacon, and cook them in a bain-marie
+moistened with stock and lemon juice. Take as many truffles as there are
+ortolans, scoop out the centres and boil them in champagne (Saumur will
+do). When done, pour a little purée of game into each truffle, add the
+ortolans, warm for a few seconds in the oven, and serve.
+
+
+Ortolans aux Truffes.
+
+Take as many even large-sized truffles as ortolans; make a large round
+hole in the middle of each truffle, and put in it a little chicken
+forcemeat. Cut off the heads, necks, and feet of the birds, season with
+salt and pepper, and lay each bird on its back in one of the truffles.
+Arrange them in a stewpan, lay thin slices of bacon over them, pour over
+them some good stock, into which a gill of Madeira has been poured, and
+then simmer them very gently for twenty-five minutes. Dish the ortolans
+on toast, and strain the gravy over them.
+
+
+Partridges à la Barbarie.
+
+Truss the birds, and stuff them with chopped truffles and rasped bacon,
+seasoned with salt and pepper and a tiny dust of cayenne. Cut small
+pieces of truffles in the shape of nails; make holes with a penknife in
+the breasts of the birds; widen the holes with a skewer, and fill them
+with the truffles; let this decoration be very regular. Put them into a
+stewpan with slices of bacon round them, and good gravy poured in enough
+to cover the birds. When they have been stewed for twenty minutes glaze
+them; dish them up with a Financière sauce (see 'Entrées à la Mode').
+
+
+Partridge Blancmanger aux Truffes.
+
+Boil a brace of partridges and let them get cold. Melt about a pint of
+aspic jelly and take a plain round quart mould and pour about a gill of
+aspic jelly into it to mask it by turning the mould round and round in
+the hands till the inside has been entirely covered by the jelly, pour
+away any that does not adhere, and place the mould on ice at once. Cut a
+few large truffles in slices and ornament the bottom of the mould with a
+star, pour on about two tablespoonfuls of a little cold liquid aspic.
+Put into a stewpan a pint of aspic and whisk it till it becomes white as
+cream, then mask the mould with this; pour in enough to half fill it,
+then turn it round and round, covering all the inside of the mould,
+pouring out any superfluity. Skin the partridges and cut off all the
+meat and chop it up: then pound it with a gill of cream in the mortar,
+and then rub through a fine wire sieve. Place this in a large stewpan,
+add half a pint of cream, and mix it with the partridge meat. Collect
+the aspic jelly, melt it, and whip it up and add it to the partridge;
+then fill the mould with this and pour in a little liquid aspic; place
+on ice. To serve this, dip it into warm water the same as a mould of
+jelly, turn it out, and garnish with aspic croûtons alternately with
+very small tomatoes; around the top arrange a wreath of chervil.
+
+
+Partridges à la Béarnaise.
+
+Wipe the inside of the partridges with a damp cloth. Cut off the heads,
+and truss the legs like boiled fowls. Put them into a stewpan with two
+tablespoonfuls of oil and a piece of garlic the size of a pea, and shake
+them over a clear fire till slightly browned all over. Then pour over
+them two tablespoonfuls of strong stock, one glassful of sherry, and two
+tablespoonfuls of preserved tomatoes, with a little salt and plenty of
+pepper. Simmer all gently together until the partridges are done enough,
+and serve very hot. The sauce should be highly seasoned.
+
+
+Blanquette of Partridge aux Champignons.
+
+Raise the flesh of a cold partridge, take off the skin; cut the flesh
+into scallops; put some velouté sauce in a stewpan with half a basket of
+mushrooms skinned and sliced. Reduce the sauce till very thick, adding
+enough cream to make it white. Throw it over the partridge scallops, to
+which add a few mushrooms.
+
+
+Broiled Partridges.
+
+Take off the heads and prepare them as if for the spit. Break down the
+breast bone and split them entirely up the back and lay them flat. Shred
+an eschalot as fine as possible and mix it with breadcrumbs. Dip the
+partridges in clarified butter and cover inside and outside with the
+crumbs. Broil them over a clear fire, turning them frequently for a
+quarter of an hour, and serve them up with mushroom sauce.
+
+
+Chartreuse of Partridges.
+
+Boil some carrots and turnips separately, and cut them into pieces two
+inches long and three quarters of an inch in diameter. Braise a couple
+of small summer cabbages, drain well, and stir over the fire till quite
+dry; then roll them on a cloth and cut them into pieces about two inches
+long and an inch thick. Roast a brace of partridges, and cut them into
+neat joints. Butter a plain entrée mould, line it at the bottom and the
+sides with buttered paper to form a sort of wall, then fill it up with
+cabbage and the pieces of partridge in alternate layers. Steam the
+chartreuse to make it hot, turn it out of the mould upon an entrée dish,
+and garnish with turnips, carrots, and French beans. Send good brown
+sauce to table with it.
+
+
+Partridges aux Choux.
+
+Truss a brace of partridges for boiling, and mince about half a pound of
+fat bacon or pork, and put it into a saucepan on the fire; when it is
+boiling, immerse the birds quickly, and sauté them till nicely coloured.
+Have ready a small savoy, which has been well washed and drained, chop
+it up and place it in the saucepan with the partridges, a bouquet garni,
+two pork sausages, pepper and salt to taste; add about half a pint of
+stock, and let all simmer together for two and a half hours. When ready
+to serve, remove the bouquet garni, and serve the chopped cabbage round
+the birds, and the sausages split and divided into four pieces each.
+
+
+Cold Glazed Fillets of Partridge.
+
+Roast a brace of partridges, fillet them, pound the meat from the
+carcases in a mortar with truffles and mushrooms; simmer the bones in
+some vin de Grave, with truffle trimmings, shalots, and a bayleaf, which
+reduce on the fire to about three-quarters the quantity; squeeze through
+a cloth, add two tablespoonfuls of clear stock to it, and stir half of
+it into the pounded meat; mix it thoroughly, and stir it until it boils;
+pass it through a tammy, and leave to get cold. Arrange the fillets,
+with a tomato cut the same shape between each one, in a circle round an
+entrée dish; fill the centre with the purée, cover the whole with the
+remainder of the sauce, and garnish with croûtons of aspic jelly.
+
+
+Partridges à la Cussy.
+
+Remove all the bones from the birds except the thigh bones and legs,
+stuff them with a forcemeat composed of chopped sweetbread, mushrooms,
+truffles, and cockscombs which have been boiled; sew up the birds to
+their original shape, hold them over hot coals till the breasts are
+quite firm, and cover them with buttered paper. Line a stewpan with a
+slice of ham, two or three onions, carrots, a bouquet garni, a little
+scraped bacon, the partridge bones which have been pounded, salt, and
+pepper; moisten with stock. As soon as the vegetables get soft, add the
+partridges, and simmer over a slow fire. When done, dish up the birds,
+pass the sauce through a tammy, skim off the fat, reduce, and add a few
+truffles or slices of mushrooms, and pour over the partridges.
+
+
+Partridges with Mushrooms.
+
+Take a brace of birds, and prepare about half a pound of button
+mushrooms, and place them in a stewpan with an ounce and a half of
+melted butter; add a slight sprinkling of salt and cayenne, and let them
+simmer for about nine minutes, then turn out all into a plate, and when
+quite cold put it into the bodies of the partridges; sew and truss them
+securely and roast them in the usual way, and serve either mushroom
+sauce round them, or they can be served up with their own gravy only,
+and bread sauce handed.
+
+
+Partridge Pie.
+
+Cut the breasts and legs off two or three birds, sprinkle them with
+pepper and salt, and cook them in the oven smothered in butter, and
+covered with a buttered paper. Pound the carcases, and make them into
+good gravy, but do not thicken it.
+
+Take the livers of the birds with an equal quantity of calf's liver,
+mince both, and toss them in butter over the fire for a minute or two;
+then pound them in a mortar with an equal quantity of bacon, two shalots
+parboiled, with pepper, salt, powdered spice, and sweet herbs to taste.
+When well pounded, pass it through a sieve; put a layer of forcemeat
+into a pie-dish, arrange the pieces of partridge on it, filling up the
+interstices with the forcemeat; then pour in as much gravy as is
+required, put on the paste cover, and bake for an hour. When done, a
+little more boiling hot gravy may be introduced through the hole in the
+centre of the crust. A little melted aspic jelly may be added to the
+gravy.
+
+
+Partridge Pudding.
+
+Take a brace of well-kept partridges, cut them into neat joints and skin
+them; line a quart pudding basin with suet crust, place a thinnish slice
+of rump steak at the bottom of the dish cut into pieces, put in the
+pieces of partridge, season with pepper and salt, and pour in about a
+pint of good dark stock well clarified from fat, then put on the cover
+and boil in the usual way.
+
+
+Partridges à la Reine.
+
+Truss a brace of partridges for boiling, fill them with good game
+forcemeat, with two or three truffles cut up in small pieces, and tie
+thin slices of fat bacon over them. Slice a small carrot into a stewpan
+with an onion, four or five sticks of celery, two or three sprigs of
+parsley, and an ounce of fresh butter. Place the partridges on these,
+breasts uppermost, pour over them half a pint of good stock, cover with
+a round of buttered paper, and simmer as gently as possible till the
+partridges are done enough. Strain the stock, free it carefully from
+grease, thicken it with a little flour and as much browning as is
+necessary; flavour with a little cayenne, half a dozen drops of essence
+of anchovy, and a tablespoonful of sherry. Stir this sauce over a gentle
+fire till it is on the point of boiling, then pour it over the
+partridges already dished up on toast, and serve instantly.
+
+
+Salmi of Partridge à la Chasseur.
+
+Take a couple of cold roast partridges--they should be rather
+under-cooked--cut into neat joints, removing all skin and sinew, and lay
+the pieces in a stewpan with four tablespoonfuls of salad oil, six
+tablespoonfuls of claret, the strained juice of a lemon, salt, pepper,
+and cayenne to taste.
+
+Simmer gently for a few minutes till the salmi is hot throughout, then
+serve directly. Garnish with fried sippets.
+
+
+Scalloped Partridges.
+
+Take the fillets of a brace of partridges, sauté them in butter till
+firm, drain them, and put in some good game stock and two tablespoonfuls
+of Allemagne sauce; when boiling put in the scalloped partridges, with
+two or three peeled mushrooms, a small piece of butter, and the juice of
+half a lemon. Dish up the scallops in a circle, and fill the same in the
+centre.
+
+
+Partridges à la Sierra Morena.
+
+Take a brace of partridges properly trussed; cut into dice one inch
+thick a little less than half a pound of bacon, and put them in the
+stewpan; cut two large onions in quarters, take six whole black peppers,
+a little salt, one bayleaf, half a gill of vinegar, one gill of port
+wine, one gill of water, one tablespoonful of salad oil, and put all
+these ingredients into the stewpan; put on the lid, and cover the
+stewpan with half a sheet of brown kitchen paper; put the stewpan on a
+slow fire to stew for two hours; then take out the partridges and dish
+them and put round some of the quarters of onions which have been
+stewed. Pass the gravy through a sieve and send to table.
+
+
+Partridge Soufflé.
+
+Roast a partridge, chop and pound the flesh in a mortar with a few
+spoonfuls of Béchamel sauce and a small piece of butter. Season well;
+mix with this four eggs, and strain the whole through a sieve into a
+basin. Beat the whites of the eggs stiffly, and mix lightly with the
+purée. Put all into the soufflé dish, and let it bake in the oven for
+twenty minutes. Cover the top with a piece of paper to prevent its
+burning.
+
+
+Partridge Soufflé.
+
+Another way.
+
+Skin a brace of cold roast partridges, cut off all the meat, and pound
+it in a mortar with the birds' livers; warm up in a saucepan with a
+little reduced stock, and pass through a tammy. Break up the bones and
+put them into a saucepan with a good brown sauce and stock, and reduce
+till nearly a glaze; add the partridge purée and half an ounce of
+butter, two yolks of eggs, and the two whites whipped, which must be
+stirred in gradually; pour into a soufflé dish, and bake as soon as the
+soufflé has risen sufficiently. Serve it _at once_.
+
+
+Perdreaux en Surprise.
+
+Take two roasted partridges, cut out the whole of the breasts in a
+square piece, so as to make a square aperture, clean away all the
+spongy substance from the interior, and make a _salpicon_ to be put
+inside the birds as follows:--Cut into very small dice the flesh taken
+out of the birds, also some truffles and pepper and salt. Put these into
+a little velouté sauce, and with this stuff the birds. Dip them into
+eggs and breadcrumbs put some bits of butter all over, and fry them of a
+nice colour. Dish up and serve with Espagnole sauce.
+
+
+Stewed Partridges.
+
+Lard a brace of partridges, and place them in a stewpan with onions,
+carrots, rashers of bacon, a bouquet garni, and equal quantities of
+stock and light claret, and simmer over a slow fire, skimming
+constantly. When done, dish up the partridges, reduce the sauce, and
+pass through a sieve and pour over the birds.
+
+
+Partridge à la Toussenel.
+
+Take a brace of partridges, stuff them with the livers of the birds
+minced up together with butter and some truffles which have been cooked
+in champagne; wrap each bird up in a figleaf or vineleaf, and over these
+place a sheet of buttered paper. Then put the birds on the spit, and
+roast till about three-fourths cooked; then take off the spit, and under
+the four members of each bird spread a mixture of breadcrumb worked into
+a farce with pepper, butter, parsley, shalot, and grated nutmeg. Replace
+the birds on the spit, and let them finish roasting, basting them
+continually alternately with broth and champagne. These drippings, to
+which the grated peel of one lemon and the juice of a Seville orange are
+added, form the sauce to be served with it.
+
+
+Partridge Tartlets.
+
+Bouchées de Perdreaux.
+
+Take the breasts of two cooked partridges, about six ounces, and cut
+into very small pieces. Mince two ounces of lean ham, one truffle, and
+six mushrooms; stir this mixture into a gill of white sauce. Butter nine
+small moulds, line them neatly with this mixture, smooth well over with
+a hot wet knife, fill in with minced partridge, coat them neatly over
+the top with the quenelle meat, steam them for twenty minutes; dish on a
+circle of mashed potato, pour good white sauce over and round them, and
+serve French beans or tomatoes in the centre.
+
+
+Partridge à la Vénitienne.
+
+Put a brace of partridges into a stewpan with butter, two glasses of
+Chablis, and two glasses of stock, add a bouquet garni, very little
+garlic, two cloves, salt and pepper; let them simmer gently. Take them
+off when done, pass the gravy through a sieve, add a little butter and
+flour to thicken it, a small piece of glaze, a little cayenne and salt.
+Pour the sauce over the partridges, and cover over all with two
+spoonfuls of grated Parmesan cheese; put a few breadcrumbs and pieces of
+clarified butter on this, and set the whole on a baking sheet in the
+oven. Brown the birds well, and serve with sauce espagnole or sauce
+piquante.
+
+
+Pintail.
+
+This bird should be roasted at a clear quick fire, well floured when
+first laid down, turned briskly, and basted with butter _constantly_. It
+takes about twenty-five minutes to roast, and then it should be laid
+down before the fire for two or three more, when it will yield a very
+rich gravy. Score the breast, and sprinkle a little cayenne on it, and
+send cut lemon up to table to hand with it.
+
+
+Boiled Pheasant.
+
+Cover with buttered paper and simmer as gently as possible till it is
+done enough. Pour either celery, horseradish, oyster, or soubise sauce
+over it, and serve more in a tureen.
+
+
+Boudins of Pheasant à la Richelieu.
+
+Take a cold pheasant and pick the meat from it; remove the skin and
+sinews, and pound the flesh in a mortar to a smooth paste. Mix its
+weight with the same quantity of pounded potatoes or panada and six
+ounces of fresh butter. Mix these thoroughly, pound them together, and
+season highly with salt and cayenne, and a trifle of mace. Bind together
+with the yolks of four eggs, one at a time, two tablespoonfuls of white
+sauce, and last of all two tablespoonfuls of boiled onions chopped
+small. Spread this mixture out on a dish, and make it up into small
+cutlets about three inches long, two inches wide, and a quarter of an
+inch thick. Drop these carefully into very hot water, and poach them
+gently for a few minutes. The water must not boil. Take them up, drain,
+and let them get cold; then egg and breadcrumb them, and fry them in hot
+butter a nice pale colour. Make a gravy by peeling and frying four
+onions in butter till lightly browned, dredge an ounce of flour over
+them, and pour upon them half a pint of stock, a glassful of claret, the
+bones of the pheasant, and pepper and salt. Simmer over fire for twenty
+minutes, strain through sieve, and it is ready for use. Serve the
+boudins in a circle with the gravy round.
+
+
+Pheasant à la Bonne Femme.
+
+Put a well-hung pheasant in a buttered stewpan with three ounces of good
+beef dripping and six ounces of ham cut into dice. Let the pheasant fry
+over fire till it is nicely and lightly browned, then add a
+tablespoonful of chutnee and three large Spanish onions cut in rings;
+cover the saucepan, and let it simmer till all are cooked. Take up the
+bird and put it on a dish, beat the onions over the fire for ten
+minutes, season with pepper and salt, and serve round the pheasant.
+
+
+Pheasant à la Brillat-Savarin.
+
+Hang a pheasant till tender, pluck, draw, and lard it carefully. Bone
+and draw two woodcocks, keep the trail separate, throw away the
+gizzards, chop up the meat with beef marrow which has been cooked by
+steam, scraped bacon, pepper, salt, mixed herbs and truffles; fill the
+pheasant with this stuffing, which fix in with a piece of bread the
+shape of a cork and tie it round with fine thread. Lay a thick slice of
+bread two inches broader than the pheasant in the dripping pan; pound
+the tail of the woodcock in a mortar with truffles, add anchovy, a
+little scraped bacon, and a lump of fresh butter; spread a thick layer
+on the bread, roast the pheasant over it so as to catch all the dripping
+and dish up on it.
+
+
+Crème of Pheasants à la Moderne.
+
+Take two pheasants, remove the skin from the breast, and cut from each
+the two large fillets and the two under ones; remove every particle of
+the white flesh that did not come away with the fillets, leaving the
+legs and pinions on the carcases.
+
+Spread each fillet on a board and with a knife scrape the flesh from the
+skin of the fillet. When the flesh is removed from the four large
+fillets and from the four smaller ones, and little remnants gathered
+from the carcases, place them in a mortar and pour in a gill of cream
+and pound well for a few minutes, then rub through clean wire sieve,
+place it back in the mortar and keep adding, a gill at a time, more
+cream until one pint of cream is used up; now take two plain cylinder
+moulds, well buttered and ornamented according to fancy with truffles
+(or small dariole moulds may be used), fill carefully and place a piece
+of buttered paper on the top of the mould or moulds, and place them in a
+stewpan with about a pint of boiling water and let them simmer very
+gently for twenty minutes and turn out. Make a sauce to serve with this
+dish of the carcases, &c., mixed with rich Béchamel sauce, and when
+dished there should be a garnish of peas, mushrooms, or shred truffles.
+
+
+Pheasant Cutlets.
+
+Take a well-hung young pheasant, cut it when prepared into neat joints.
+Take out the bones carefully and shape the joints into cutlets; flatten
+these with the cutlet-bat, season rather highly and cover them thickly
+with egg and finely-grated breadcrumbs. Put the bones and trimmings into
+a saucepan with a carrot, a turnip, an onion, a handful of parsley, a
+bouquet garni, a bayleaf, pepper, salt, and as much water as will cover
+them. Let them stew slowly till the flavour of the herbs is drawn out,
+then thicken gravy and strain. Fry the cutlets in hot fat till a bright
+brown. Serve on a hot dish in a circle with one of the small bones stuck
+into each cutlet; pour the gravy round.
+
+
+Galantine of Pheasant à la Mode.
+
+Bone a pheasant, cut off the legs and press what is left of the leg
+inside, and cut away any sinews. Take three-quarters of a pound of
+sausage meat, a dozen oysters, three or four truffles, a slice of
+tongue, and three rashers of fat bacon. Cut the truffles into _small_
+dice, also the tongue and bacon. Mix all together with the sausage meat,
+adding a little cayenne pepper, half a teaspoonful of herbs mixed, half
+an ounce of melted gelatine, and two yolks of eggs. Mix well together,
+and spread over the pheasant evenly. Then roll it up lengthways and
+tightly in a cloth and place it in saucepan to boil for an hour, then
+take it out and remove the cloth carefully. To serve this dish, cut it
+up into thin slices and dish them in a circle, letting one piece overlap
+the other uniformly all round. Place a little cress salad compressed
+into a ball on the top, and at the base a few croûtons of aspic jelly at
+an equal distance apart, and a little chopped aspic between. Sprinkle a
+little over the salad ball at the top.
+
+
+Fritôt of Crème of Pheasant.
+
+Take eight tartlet tins, not too large, butter them, and fill about
+three parts full of crème of pheasant and place them in the oven for a
+few minutes. When quite firm to the touch, remove them from oven, and
+when cold dip each one into a light batter and fry in clean lard of a
+light brown. The batter should be made with half a pound of Vienna
+flour, the half of a yolk of egg, a dessertspoonful of salad oil, and a
+gill of pale ale. Mix all these together lightly till it will mask the
+point of one's finger; if too thick, add a drop or two more ale. Serve
+with brown or mushroom sauce. Send this dish very hot to table.
+
+
+Partridge à la Crème.
+
+See Pheasant ditto.
+
+
+Fritôt of Partridge à la Crème.
+
+See Pheasant ditto.
+
+
+Pheasant and Macaroni.
+
+Pull the flesh with two forks from a cold roast pheasant. Put the bones
+and trimmings into a saucepan with enough water to cover them, and let
+them simmer till it is much reduced. Add two shalots, a little salt and
+pepper, a grate of nutmeg, a gill of mushroom ketchup and the same of
+Marsala. Thicken with flour and butter, and let all simmer gently for
+twenty minutes; strain it, and put it back into the saucepan for it to
+boil up. Just before the pheasant is to be served, put the meat into the
+gravy and let it warm through without boiling. After it is dished, place
+round it some macaroni made as follows:--Have two pints of boiling
+water, into which plunge four ounces of macaroni, add pepper and salt,
+and simmer gently for twenty minutes. Drain it, and put it into a pint
+of good stock, with a little salt, a teaspoonful of unmixed mustard and
+a dust of cayenne. Let it all boil till the macaroni is tender, then add
+a tablespoonful of Parmesan cheese and an ounce of butter. Toss it over
+fire till all is well mixed, then serve.
+
+
+Pheasant Pie with Oysters.
+
+Boil a pheasant till almost done; it will finish cooking in the pie.
+Make as much gravy as the size of the bird will require, add half a cup
+of milk, season and thicken it. Make a good pie-crust, and then put the
+pieces of pheasant in a pie-dish, which must be hot. Scatter some raw
+oysters among the pieces of pheasant, pour over all enough gravy to fill
+the dish to the depth of one inch, and cover it with the crust, which
+must be pressed against the edge so that it will adhere. Let it bake for
+half an hour. After it is cooked, pour in remainder of the gravy in the
+slit in the top of the crust.
+
+
+Pheasant des Rois.
+
+Have a pound of the best preserved truffles, such as can be obtained at
+Benoist's, in Wardour Street, stew them in a mixture of a quarter of a
+pound of butter, a large tablespoonful of finest Lucca oil, and half a
+pound of bacon fat scraped into shreds. Thoroughly cook the truffles, so
+that a silver fork can be stuck into them without pushing hard. Stuff a
+pheasant with them and sew it up. Cover the breast with a slice of fat
+bacon, and put two or three slices beneath it. Place round the pheasant
+pieces of veal and ham cut into small cubes the size of dice, add a few
+carrots, an onion or two, salt and pepper. Pour on it a claretglassful
+of Chablis, cover the saucepan, place it on a slow fire and use the
+salamander, then let it stew for an hour. When ready to serve, strain
+the same, removing all grease, and pour over the bird.
+
+
+Pheasant à la Sainte Alliance.
+
+An expensive dish.
+
+Take a well-hung cock pheasant and truss it for roasting. Farce it with
+a stuffing made of two woodcocks' flesh and internals (or snipes')
+finely minced with two ounces of fresh butter, some salt, pepper, and a
+pinch of cayenne, a bouquet garni finely powdered, and as many chopped
+truffles as will be required to fill the pheasant. Truss the bird and
+roast, basting it well with fresh butter. Whilst roasting, lay in the
+pan a round of toast, upon which a little of the stuffing has been
+spread, and serve the bird on it. Bread sauce and brown gravy should be
+handed round with it.
+
+
+Salmi of Pheasant.
+
+Half roast a pheasant, and when it is nearly cold cut it into neat
+joints, removing the skin. Put the bones and trimmings into a saucepan
+with an ounce of fresh butter, a bayleaf, and a bouquet garni, and stir
+these over a slow fire till lightly brown, then pour over half a pint of
+Espagnole sauce and a glassful of claret. Let all simmer for a quarter
+of an hour. Strain the gravy, skim it carefully, add a pinch of cayenne
+and the juice of half a lemon, then put it back into the saucepan with
+the pieces of game. Heat these up slowly. When cooked, dish up and pour
+the hot sauce over them and garnish with fried sippets. A little orange
+juice and a lump of sugar is an improvement to the sauce.
+
+
+Pheasant Stewed with Cabbage.
+
+Truss a pheasant for boiling. Divide a large cabbage into quarters, soak
+them after cutting off the stalks, plunge them into boiling water and
+boil for about ten minutes. Take them out, drain them and press all the
+water from them, then put them into the stewpan. Lay the pheasant well
+in the cabbage, add six ounces of good bacon, half a pound of Bologna
+sausage, three pork sausages, some parsley, a bayleaf, a bouquet garni,
+one carrot, an onion stuck with four cloves, a shalot, and some pepper.
+Pour in as much stock as will cover the whole, and cover the pan closely
+and bring to a boil and let it simmer slowly for an hour. Then take out
+the bird and the meat and keep them warm whilst the cabbage is drained,
+peppered, and salted, and steamed over fire till dry. Then place it on
+a dish, arrange the pheasant on it and all the other adjuncts round it.
+Serve poivrade sauce in a tureen.
+
+
+Pheasant Stuffed with Oysters.
+
+Truss a pheasant for roasting and fill it with forcemeat made of two
+dozen oysters pounded in the mortar, with a tablespoonful of brown
+breadcrumbs, half an ounce of fresh butter, a dessertspoonful of lemon
+juice, a boned anchovy, and a little cayenne. Mix these ingredients
+thoroughly and bind them with the yolk of an egg. Cover the bird with
+thin slices of fat bacon tied on securely, and roast before a clear
+fire. When done, dish up with clear gravy, and hand bread sauce in a
+tureen with it.
+
+
+Pheasant Stuffed with Tomatoes.
+
+Truss a pheasant for roasting, and fill it with a forcemeat made of six
+tomatoes pounded in the mortar, with a tablespoonful of breadcrumbs, a
+shalot, a mushroom, half a clove of garlic, a teaspoonful of parsley,
+and half an ounce of butter, pepper and salt to taste. Bind together
+with the yolk of an egg. Cover the bird with slices of bacon and roast
+before a clear fire. Mushroom or tomato sauce may be served in a tureen
+with it. Partridge and grouse are also very delicious stuffed in this
+way.
+
+
+Pheasant en Surprise.
+
+Take a pheasant, remove the skin from the breast and take away all the
+meat, removing any gristle there may be, and place it in a mortar. Have
+ready half a pint of good cream, and begin by pouring half the quantity
+over the pheasant and pound together for a few minutes, then rub it
+through a clean wire sieve. When passed, put it back into the mortar,
+add the remainder of the cream gradually into the fowl, stirring it
+round so that they blend together perfectly. Fill a mould with this
+mixture and twist a bit of buttered paper round the top; then fold a
+sheet of paper several times and place it in a stewpan, put about half a
+pint of boiling water into the stewpan, or more according to size of it,
+and let all simmer gently for twenty minutes. Add a little salt and a
+dust of cayenne pepper. Turn this out and mix with it half a pint of
+white aspic jelly. Have ready some very clear aspic jelly, and colour it
+red. Take a pretty shaped jelly mould, pour in a little of the red aspic
+to about rather more than a quarter of the mould. When this is cool, put
+in the pheasant and aspic mixture, and place on ice for four hours; when
+properly frozen, turn out, and garnish the top with a wreath of fresh
+chervil leaves. Serve chopped aspic in little mounds round the base
+alternately with mounds of mayonnaise salad or tomatoes.
+
+
+Pheasant à la Suisse.
+
+Take the remains of a cold pheasant, cut it into neat joints. Salt and
+pepper these highly, and strew over it finely chopped onion and
+parsley. Cover them with oil, and squeeze over them the juice of a
+lemon. Turn the pieces every now and then, and let them remain till they
+have imbibed the flavour, then dip the pieces in a batter made of four
+ounces of flour, with as much milk added as will make a thick batter.
+Stir into it half a wineglassful of brandy and an egg, the white and
+yolk beaten to a froth. This batter should rest for an hour in a warm
+place before using. Fry the pieces of chicken in the batter, and send it
+up piled on a dish garnished with fried parsley.
+
+
+Pheasant à la Tregothran.
+
+Bone a pheasant and stuff it with the meat from four woodcocks or six
+snipe, cut it up, and chop up some truffles and make it into forcemeat.
+Fry the trail of the woodcock or snipe in a little butter, and place on
+little rounds of fried bread and arrange round the dish. Stew the bones
+of the woodcocks or snipe to make the gravy, reduce it, and add a glass
+of Marsala to the broth and serve in a boat.
+
+
+Pheasant à la Victoria.
+
+Take a quarter of a pound of bacon, cut it up in pieces (frying the
+bacon first), add a small clove of garlic, a small shalot, a bayleaf,
+half a carrot, half a turnip, half a dozen stewing oysters, and salt and
+pepper to taste. Stew over the fire, and when cooked pound it all
+together with a few more oysters and pass through a wire sieve. Stuff a
+pheasant with this, and place it in a stewpan with carrots and turnips;
+let all stew till tender, well basting it with its own stock. Serve
+with rich Espagnole sauce or oyster sauce on a croustade of potato.
+
+
+Pigeons à la Duchesse.
+
+Split a couple of pigeons in halves, remove the breast bones and beat
+them flat, sauté them with two ounces of butter, pepper and salt. Press
+them flat between two plates with a weight on them, and when the pigeons
+are cold spread the quenelle meat over the cut side of the birds; then
+egg and breadcrumb them and fry in fat. Dish in a circle with brown
+sauce round and a macédoine of vegetables in the centre.
+
+
+Pigeons à la Financière.
+
+Take four pigeons, truss and braise them in stock, then glaze them, dish
+them up against a block of fried bread. Pour round half a pint of
+Financière sauce, and garnish with small quenelles of forcemeat,
+truffles, mushrooms, and cockscombs in the centre.
+
+
+Pigeons à la Merveilleuse.
+
+Blanch a brace of pigeons, and beat the backs so as to spread out the
+breasts, boil them in equal quantities of stock and Chablis, season with
+salt and pepper, a sprig of parsley, two shalots, and two cloves; when
+cooked, take them out of the stewpan, and cook some mushrooms, twelve
+shelled crayfish, and a little flour in the sauce of the pigeons, boil
+for half an hour, reduce and thicken the sauce with yolks of egg and
+cream, season with finely chopped parsley and pour over the pigeons,
+and serve garnished with the heads of the crayfish.
+
+
+Ballotines of Pigeon à la Moderne.
+
+Take four boned pigeons, cut them lengthways in two, and make a farce of
+half a pound of pork sausage meat, half a spoonful of chopped truffles,
+the same of mushrooms, a few pieces of tongue cut into dice shapes, a
+bouquet garni, pepper and salt, and one yolk of an egg, all well mixed
+together. Then divide it into eight equal parts, and fill the halves of
+the pigeons with it; make them into round balls, cutting off the feet.
+Tie each piece of pigeon in a little bit of calico, and braise them till
+nicely tender. Then let them cool, tie them up tightly, and let them get
+quite cold; place one of the feet in each ballotine, and arrange them on
+a sauté-pan. Take off the calico, make them hot and glaze them, and
+serve with mushrooms and peas, and with a rich brown sauce over them.
+
+
+Pigeons en Poqueton.
+
+Put some pâté de foie gras forcemeat, or any other forcemeat, into a
+small stewpan, and spread it all over at the bottom and sides, rubbing
+the stewpan first with butter. Put in a couple of pigeons trussed for
+roasting, some sweetbreads and tongue cut into neat pieces, and some
+button mushrooms; arrange all these tastily in the pan, place some more
+forcemeat on the top, cover it over with slices of bacon, and bake it in
+a gentle oven. Before closing it, pour some good gravy inside. The
+pigeons should be seasoned with pepper and salt, and just rubbed with
+garlic. When it is cooked, take it from the oven, and turn it carefully
+out into its dish, and pour a very rich sauce over it.
+
+
+Pigeon en Ragoût de Crevettes.
+
+Prepare a couple of pigeons, cut them in half, and put them in a stewpan
+with a glass of Sauterne, half a pint of stock, a sprig of parsley, two
+cloves, pepper, salt, and a shalot; simmer till cooked, strain the
+gravy. Now put an ounce of butter with a dozen button mushrooms and two
+or three dozen skinned prawns into a saucepan with a tablespoonful of
+flour and the gravy the pigeons were stewed in; simmer this for half an
+hour, then thicken it with a gill of cream and two yolks of eggs, add
+some finely chopped parsley and a grate of nutmeg. Dish up the pigeons
+with the mushrooms and prawns in the centre.
+
+
+Pigeons au Soleil.
+
+Take a couple of roasted pigeons and put them into a marinade of an
+ounce of butter, four shalots, an onion, and a carrot cut up into dice,
+a little parsley, a bayleaf, a little thyme, and a clove; put them into
+a stewpan and fry till they are of a light brown, then moisten with a
+little vinegar and water. When they have simmered for half an hour in
+the marinade let them cool, drain, and put them into a batter made of
+four spoonfuls of flour, a little salt, a little olive oil, and moisten
+with a sufficient quantity of water and two beaten whites of eggs; then
+fry them a good colour, and serve up with fried parsley in the middle,
+with a poivrade or piquant sauce around.
+
+
+Pigeons à la Soussell.
+
+Bone four pigeons, and make a forcemeat of some fillet of veal, some ham
+fat, some grated breadcrumbs, mushrooms, truffles, a shalot, a bouquet
+garni, a little cayenne, pepper and salt, mixed with butter cooked over
+the fire and then pounded in a mortar; put some of this forcemeat into
+the pigeons and stew them gently for half an hour. Take the pigeons out
+and mask them well with more of the forcemeat, brush some beaten egg
+over each, and put them in the fryingpan and fry them in good dripping.
+Take the gravy they were stewed in, skim off all fat, thicken well with
+a liaison of cream and eggs, season with a little pepper and salt, and
+mix all together. Make a mound of spinach purée in the centre of the
+dish, and place the pigeons around, standing up against the purée. Take
+some very small boiled tomatoes, of a good shape, make a wreath round
+the base, place a few button mushrooms on the top of the spinach, and
+pour the sauce all round.
+
+
+Grey Plovers Cooked in Brandy.
+
+After trussing the plovers, flatten them and warm them in a stewpan with
+a little melted bacon fat, a bouquet garni, two onions, three mushrooms,
+and two or three truffles (the latter may be left out). As soon as they
+begin to colour, add half a pint of brandy and toss over a quick fire
+till the brandy is in flames; as soon as the flames go out, moisten with
+gravy and simmer over a slow fire. When the birds are done, skim off all
+grease, add the juice of a lemon, and serve hot.
+
+
+Golden Plover.
+
+Trim, truss, leaving the inside in, cover with fat bacon, and roast or
+bake for twenty minutes. Put a piece of well-buttered toast one-third of
+an inch thick to catch the trails. Dress grey plovers exactly the same.
+
+
+Golden Plover aux Champignons.
+
+Take three golden plover, chop up the trails with parsley, shalots,
+salt, pepper, and scraped bacon, and stuff the plover with it; cover the
+breasts with slices of bacon and roast. When done, serve on stewed
+mushrooms.
+
+
+Fried Plover with English Truffles.
+
+Truss three plover for roasting, lay them breast downwards in a stewpan
+with plenty of butter, enough to entirely cover the breasts. Put in nine
+or ten well-washed raw truffles pared very thin and cut into slices
+about the size of a florin. Add a bayleaf, pepper and salt. Stir over a
+brisk fire for ten minutes, then pour in a pint of stock mixed with a
+spoonful of flour and a glass of sherry. Simmer by side of fire for
+twenty minutes, skimming carefully. Dish up the birds, and then boil the
+sauce till it is thick and smooth, add the strained juice of a lemon, a
+lump of sugar, and a few drops of some XL colouring, and pour over the
+birds.
+
+
+Stuffed Pullet.
+
+Bone the pullet, stuff with forcemeat made with minced veal, egg, ham,
+onions, foie gras, and mushrooms. First warm the veal, onion, and ham
+in melted butter, then add the mushrooms and foie gras, moisten with
+stock and boil. Stir in two yolks of eggs and a teaspoonful of lemon
+juice before taking off the fire, season with a little salt, pepper, and
+a pinch of nutmeg. After stuffing the fowl with this mixture, sew it up,
+turn the skin of the neck half over the head and cut off part of the
+comb, which will give it the appearance of a turtle's head. Blanch and
+singe four chickens' feet, cut off the claws and stick two where the
+wings ought to be and two in the thighs, so as to look like turtle's
+feet. Stew the pullet with a little ham, onions, and carrots, tossed
+previously in butter, moisten with stock, skim occasionally. When done,
+cut the string where it is sewn, lay it on its back in a dish, garnish
+the breast with sliced truffles cut in fancy shapes, and place a
+crayfish tail to represent the turtle's tail.
+
+Velouté sauce may be handed with this dish, or it may be eaten cold and
+garnished with aspic.
+
+
+Quails à la Beaconsfield.
+
+Put, having trussed, six quails in a stewpan wrapped in slices of bacon.
+Moisten with two spoonfuls of stock, a bouquet garni, two bayleaves and
+a clove, pepper and salt to taste. Stew them for twenty minutes over a
+very slow fire. Drain them well, make a purée of peas in which a
+tablespoonful of aspic jelly has been mixed. Mask each quail with the
+purée, dish them in a crown shape with little rolls of bacon in front of
+each, have a few truffles or mushrooms cooked and placed in the centre,
+and pour over the quails a rich brown sauce.
+
+
+Quails en Caisse.
+
+Bone six quails and halve them, take the bones and trimmings and stew
+them in some stock with two carrots, one onion, one shalot, a bayleaf, a
+small piece of lean ham, a small piece of parsley, pepper and salt. This
+must be reduced, and then strained. Make a forcemeat of the quails'
+livers, a small piece of calf's liver, and half their quantity of bacon.
+Put these into a sauté-pan with a couple of shalots and an ounce of
+butter, and toss them over the fire for five minutes, then pass this
+mixture through a sieve. Have the paper cases ready oiled, and place at
+the bottom a layer of this farce, having already stuffed the half quails
+with it. The stuffed half quails, rolled, must now be put into the cases
+with a thin slice of very fat bacon over them. They must now be baked in
+the oven for about twelve minutes. Remove the bacon, and pour over the
+gravy, which must be thickened with flour rolled in butter. Strew a
+little very nicely minced parsley over each case.
+
+
+Compôte of Quails.
+
+Take six quails, cut the claws off, and truss them with the legs inside.
+Cut eight pieces of bacon rolled up like corks, blanch them to draw out
+any salt, and fry them till they are of a light brown; take them out and
+put in the quails, which must be stewed till they begin to be of a light
+brown, then remove them. Make a thickening with flour and butter, and
+put it into a good gill of veal stock; add a bouquet garni, some small
+onions and mushrooms. Skim the sauce well, and strain it over the
+quails, then dish the bacon, mushrooms, and small onions, and send up
+hot.
+
+
+Quails and Green Peas.
+
+Cook the quails in a stewpan with a slice of veal and a slice of ham,
+carrots, onions, and a bouquet garni; cover with rashers of bacon and
+buttered paper; place hot coals on the lid, and, when done, dish up the
+quails with green peas in the centre which have been cooked in butter.
+
+
+Boudins of Rabbit à la Reine.
+
+Cut the meat from a young very fine rabbit, which put into some reduced
+Béchamel sauce. When cold, roll it into large boudins the shape of
+sausages, egg and breadcrumb, and fry. Serve under them velouté sauce.
+
+
+Boiled Rabbit à la Maintenon.
+
+Cut a young rabbit into neat joints, and put them in a stewpan with
+enough white stock just to cover them; add a bouquet garni, a stick of
+celery, a shalot, an onion, a few peppercorns, a carrot, and six
+mushrooms. Let all simmer slowly for half an hour, or it might be a
+little longer, then take them up and drain them; then cut as many pieces
+of white foolscap paper as there are pieces of rabbit, butter them,
+sprinkle the pieces of rabbit, and lay on each a little piece of fat
+bacon, then roll them in the paper and broil over a fire till the bacon
+has had time to cook. Serve in the papers. Thicken the gravy in the
+usual way, and serve it in a tureen.
+
+
+Galantine of Rabbit.
+
+Take a couple of young rabbits, bone, and lay them on a linen cloth; lay
+over them a good meat stuffing seasoned to taste, putting over this
+stuffing, which should be laid on about the thickness of a crown, first
+a layer of ham cut in slices, and then a layer of hard eggs. Cover these
+layers with a little forcemeat, roll up the meat, taking care not to
+displace the layers, and cover it with thin slices of fat bacon,
+wrapping the whole in a cloth; wind some packthread round it and let it
+boil three hours in stock, adding salt and coarse pepper, some roots and
+onions, a large bunch of parsley, shalots, a clove of garlic, cloves,
+thyme, bayleaves, and basil. Allow this to cool, take off the cloth, and
+serve cold.
+
+
+Gibelotte de Lapin.
+
+Cut a rabbit into pieces. Sauté it in two ounces of butter, add an
+onion, two shalots, and a pint of poivrade sauce; put it in the oven for
+one hour, being careful not to burn it. Small pieces of cauliflower and
+croûtons of fried bread should garnish this dish.
+
+
+Fillets of Rabbit with Cucumber Sauce.
+
+Cut two cucumbers into thin slices and soak them in vinegar, with
+pepper, salt, and a bayleaf, for two hours, then half roast the rabbit,
+take the skin off, and fillet it. Make a sauce of white stock, and put
+the pieces of rabbit into it with the cucumber until it is quite done.
+Arrange the pieces of rabbit in a circle, put the cucumber in the
+middle, and pour the sauce over the fillets. Fried sippets should
+garnish this dish.
+
+
+Fricandeau of Rabbit.
+
+Take the fleshy portion of a good-sized rabbit, lard the flesh and lay
+it in a deep baking dish, cover it with some highly flavoured stock.
+Place a piece of buttered paper over the dish, and bake in a moderate
+oven till it is tender, basting it frequently. Lift the rabbit out and
+keep it hot whilst the gravy is boiling to thicken. Spread a teacupful
+of good tomato sauce on a hot dish, lay the rabbit on it, hold a
+salamander over the larding to crisp it, and pour the gravy over all.
+
+
+Rabbit Fritters.
+
+Cut the meat from a cold rabbit into small pieces, put them in a
+pie-dish and sprinkle over them parsley, chives, thyme, and a clove of
+garlic, all chopped very fine, salt, pepper, and a bayleaf; pour over
+all a glass of Chablis and the juice of a lemon. Let the pieces of
+rabbit soak in this for two hours, then take them out, dredge them well
+over with flour, and throw them into boiling fat till of a nice golden
+colour. Remove and drain them, pile them high in an entrée dish, and
+pour round the following sauce. Take the liquor the rabbit has been
+soaked in, add half a pint of stock and a little thickening of flour and
+butter, and let it boil well. Then strain through a sieve, put in a
+tablespoonful of piccalilli chopped fine, or some chutnee, give another
+boil, and serve.
+
+
+Rabbit Klösse.
+
+Take a cold dressed rabbit, mince all the meat, mix in with it an equal
+quantity of bread soaked in milk squeezed dry. Cut two slices of bacon
+into small squares, and fry slowly. Add the minced meat and stir in two
+eggs, and let it cook a few minutes. Turn it out on a dish to cool, and
+add one more egg. Form it into balls the size of an egg, then drop them
+into boiling water, and boil until set. Lift them out very tenderly,
+pile them up in a pyramid on a dish, and garnish them with fried
+potatoes. Send a sharp sauce to table with them.
+
+
+Rabbits en Papillote.
+
+Mince up some parsley, mushrooms, shalot, a clove of garlic, a slice of
+bacon, with salt and pepper to taste. Mix this in a little gravy on the
+fire to form a paste. Cut a rabbit into neat fillets and joints. Cover
+each with the paste, then wrap a thin slice of fat bacon and fix each
+piece neatly in an oiled paper. Cook them slowly in the oven, and serve
+in papers.
+
+
+Rabbit Pie à la Provençale.
+
+Take two small rabbits, cut them into joints, and lay them in a saucepan
+with two carrots, two onions, a clove of garlic, a bunch of herbs, and a
+pound of pickled pork (the belly). Boil in a very little water for half
+an hour, take out the rabbits and drain them, also drain the pork and
+place it at the bottom of a well-buttered pie-dish, and then lay the
+pieces of rabbit on it. Pour on a wine-glassful of Sauterne or vin de
+Grave, and strew over it some Spanish pimento. Pour in some good batter,
+and bake in a quick oven for half an hour. Reduce the liquor in which it
+was cooked and add the strained juice of a lemon. The sauce should be
+handed with it.
+
+
+Rabbit Pilau.
+
+Cut up a young rabbit into ten or twelve pieces. Rub each piece into a
+savoury pudding made as follows. Extract the juice of two onions, mix a
+teaspoonful of salt with it, half a teaspoonful of powdered ginger, and
+the juice of a lemon. Boil half a pound of rice in a quart of broth till
+it is half cooked. Have ready four ounces of good dripping, and fry the
+pieces of rabbit in it, with two sliced onions. When they are brown
+remove them. Place the meat into a deep jar. Lay the onions on it and
+cover with the rice, add four cloves, eight peppercorns, some salt, and
+a little lemon peel cut very thinly, and pour half a pint of milk over;
+place some folds of paper over the jar and bake in the oven, adding a
+little broth when the rabbit is half cooked. When done, pile the rice on
+a dish, and lay the pieces of rabbit on the top and serve very quickly.
+
+
+Rabbit Pudding.
+
+Cut a rabbit into ten or twelve pieces, put these into a stewpan with a
+little pepper and salt, pour on as much boiling water as will cover
+them, and let them simmer for half an hour. Take them up and put in
+their place the head and liver of rabbit with some bacon rind and simmer
+for an hour, strain and skim it, and let it get cool. Line a pie-dish
+with suet crust, and then put in the pieces of rabbit with four ounces
+of fat bacon cut into narrow strips, pour in a cupful of the cool gravy,
+lay on the cover, and boil in the usual way. N.B.--The brains may be
+mixed in with the liver.
+
+
+Rabbit à la Tartare.
+
+Bone a rabbit, cut it into pieces, and let it marinade for six hours in
+parsley, mushrooms, a clove of garlic, chives, all chopped very fine,
+with pepper, salt, and the best salad oil. Dip each piece of rabbit in
+breadcrumbs and broil, sprinkling the pieces with the marinade. Serve
+Tartare sauce over it or with it.
+
+
+The Wanderer's Rabbit.
+
+No. 1.
+
+Divide a rabbit into pieces of convenient size, put them into a saucepan
+in which half a dozen slices of bacon are cooking. As soon as the meat
+is beginning to brown, pour a wineglass and a half of brandy into the
+saucepan, and set fire to it. When the fire has burnt out, add a little
+pepper, salt, a bayleaf, and a bit of thyme, and let it simmer by the
+side of the fire till the brandy has nearly dried up, then serve.
+
+
+The Wanderer's Rabbit.
+
+No. 2.
+
+Divide a couple of rabbits into quarters, adding plenty of pepper and
+salt. Slightly fry them in a saucepan in bacon fat and flour. Add
+sufficient stock and two glasses of Sauterne, and let it stew on a
+moderate fire. When done, squeeze an orange over the dish just before
+serving up.
+
+
+Stewed Roebuck Cutlets.
+
+Sprinkle the cutlets with salt and pepper, cook them in a saucepan with
+melted butter. When half done, turn them, add a little flour, moisten
+with equal quantities of white wine and stock, season with chopped
+eschalots, parsley, and blanched mushrooms; remove the cutlets when
+done, place them round an entrée dish, reduce the sauce, pass it through
+a tammy, and pour over the cutlets.
+
+
+Snipe à la Minute.
+
+Pluck three snipes and truss them for roasting. Put the snipes head
+downwards in a saucepan with two ounces of melted butter, two finely
+chopped shalots, a dessertspoonful of chopped parsley, pepper and salt
+to taste. Shake the saucepan over the fire till the birds are lightly
+browned, pour over them as much good stock and sherry as will just cover
+them. Add the strained juice of half a lemon and a small piece of finely
+grated crust. Simmer till birds are done, dish them, and pour over them
+some good strong beef gravy, and serve quickly.
+
+
+Snipe Pie.
+
+Take eight snipe for a moderately sized pie; cut them into neat pieces.
+Make a forcemeat of ham, chicken, tongue, seasoned with a little sweet
+herbs, pepper, salt, cayenne, some breadcrumbs, and mushrooms chopped
+fine. Mix all together with the yolks of a couple of eggs, then place in
+the pie-dish a layer of snipe, then forcemeat, then snipe again, and
+then forcemeat, till the dish is full. Pour in some good gravy, and put
+it in the oven to bake. When it is done, raise the paste cover and pour
+in some more gravy. This pie may be eaten hot or cold.
+
+
+Snipe Pie à la Danoise.
+
+Parboil the birds in broth and Chablis, seasoned with pepper, salt, a
+grated onion, and a grate of nutmeg. Make a forcemeat of finely scraped
+beef, say one pound, also four ounces of fat pork. Pound and mix well
+together with a little butter and the crumb of a roll soaked in broth,
+season with grated onion, pepper, mushrooms and gherkins chopped fine,
+and add a little broth. Line a dish with this forcemeat, put in the
+snipe, and bake it for an hour to an hour and fifteen minutes. Serve
+with a sauce made of half a pint of good stock, a gill of Chablis, a
+little water, and a piece of butter rolled in flour, and stirred till
+smooth; when it begins to boil slice in pickled gherkins.
+
+
+Snipe Raised Pie (Hot).
+
+Cut four snipes in two lengthwise, remove the gizzards, put the trails
+aside, and season the birds with salt and cayenne. Fry the birds in
+butter for ten minutes and then stand them to drain in the cool till
+wanted. Make a forcemeat of four ounces of calf's liver, four ditto fat
+bacon cut small, melt the latter over a quick fire, and then add the
+liver and season the mixture with pepper, salt, and herbs. When these
+are cooked, let them get cold, and then pound them in the mortar with
+the trails of the birds. Now pass all through a sieve. Line a buttered
+pie-mould with raised crust paste, and put in a layer of the forcemeat
+at the bottom of the mould, leaving it hollow in the centre. Put half
+the pieces of snipe in a circle upon the forcemeat, and place a little
+ball of forcemeat upon them, put in the rest of the birds and put a
+layer of forcemeat over all. Fill the hollow in the centre with bread
+which has been covered with fat bacon, put the pastry cover on, and
+bake. When done, take off the cover, remove bread and fill its place
+with scallopped truffles. Pour good brown sauce over all, pile truffles
+on the top, and serve. This can also be made in a china raised pie-case.
+
+
+Snipe Soufflé.
+
+Roast three or four snipe, remove all the meat from the bones, put it
+into a mortar, and pound it well with two ounces of cooked rice, one
+ounce of butter, a little pepper and salt, and one gill and a half of
+glaze. Pass through hair sieve and add the yolks of four eggs whipped to
+a stiff froth; put it into a mould and bake in a quick oven. Serve with
+a good gravy round, made from the bones and trimmings, the juice of half
+a lemon, and a glass of port wine; thicken with butter and cornflour.
+
+
+Snipes à la Superlative.
+
+Make a forcemeat of three ounces of fat bacon, three ounces of fowl's
+liver, and cut both into pieces an inch square. Fry the bacon over a
+sharp fire, move it about constantly, and in three or four minutes add
+the liver. When it is half done, mince it with the bacon, season, and
+add half a clove of garlic and pound all smoothly in a mortar. Pass
+through wire sieve. When quite cold, roll out half of it with a little
+flour, form it into a thick band, and arrange it in a circle at the
+bottom of a dish. Take four partially roasted snipes, split them open
+down the back, and spread the forcemeat a quarter of an inch thick over
+the inside of each. Place the birds in the middle of the dish, and cover
+them with some of the forcemeat, smooth with a hot knife and put the
+dish into a quick oven, wipe away all fat, pour truffle sauce over the
+snipe, and serve.
+
+
+Teal Pudding.
+
+Take three teal, season the birds with salt and cayenne, and divide them
+into neat pieces. Cut up a pound of rump steak into pieces about an inch
+in size, season, and dredge them lightly with flour. Line a
+pudding-basin with good suet paste rolled out to half an inch thickness.
+Place in a layer of steak and a layer of teal, and repeat till the dish
+is full, then fill in with three-quarters of a pint of good gravy, and
+put the cover on in the usual way. Plunge it into boiling water and keep
+it boiling till done. Serve it in the basin it is cooked in, with a
+napkin pinned round it.
+
+
+Salmi of Teal.
+
+Put in a stewpan three ounces of butter and one good spoonful of flour,
+let them melt together, stirring till it becomes a nice brown; add by
+degrees a gill of good stock and as much red wine, two whole shalots
+(taken out after), a full bouquet, pepper, and a little salt; put in the
+body and bones of the bird, from which you have previously detached the
+limbs and meat. Let all boil slowly for half an hour, pass all through
+colander, and put gravy alone back in stewpan on the fire, and just when
+on the point of boiling put in the pieces of teal and take the stewpan
+off the fire; add a little lemon juice, put the lid on, and leave it on
+the hob for half an hour.
+
+
+Stewed Teal.
+
+Truss the birds, putting aside the hearts, livers, and gizzards, and
+dredge them with flour, then place them in a saucepan with a piece of
+butter, and let them brown equally, taking care of the gravy which oozes
+from them. Let them get cold, then carve them in such a way that the
+wings and legs can be taken off with a piece of breast adhering to it.
+Break the bodies of the birds into small pieces, and stew them with the
+livers, &c., in as much stock as will cover them, till the gravy becomes
+good and strong, then strain it, season with cayenne, salt, a glassful
+of claret, and a little Seville orange juice. Directly it begins to
+boil, put in the fleshy portion of the birds and let simmer till they
+are thoroughly heated, but do not let the gravy boil. Cut slices of
+bread large enough for a leg and wing to lie upon, fry till lightly
+browned, arrange them neatly, and pour sauce over them. Garnish with
+sliced lemon.
+
+
+Devilled Turkey Drumsticks.
+
+Score the drumsticks down parallel with the bone, and insert in the
+slices thus made a mixture made with one ounce of butter, a good
+teaspoonful of French mustard, a little cayenne, and a salt-spoonful of
+black pepper. Mix all this thoroughly together and spread the mixture
+into the cuts, then rub the drumsticks with butter, and grill over a
+fierce fire.
+
+
+Turkey en Daube.
+
+Put slices of bacon in a braising-pan, lard the breast and thighs of a
+turkey trussed for boiling, and place the turkey on the slices of bacon;
+put into the pan a slice of ham and a calf's foot broken into small
+pieces, with the trimmings of the turkey, two onions stuck with four
+cloves, three carrots, and a bouquet garni. Put slices of bacon over the
+turkey, put some melted butter over, and cover with three rounds of
+buttered paper and let it simmer for five hours; take it from the fire
+and leave it for half an hour, strain the gravy and boil it down. Beat
+an egg into a saucepan, and pour the jellied gravy into this, whip it
+well, then put it on the fire, bring it to the boil, and then draw it to
+the side of the fireplace, cover it with the lid with hot coals on it,
+and let it remain for half an hour; strain again, and with this jelly
+cover the turkey.
+
+
+Venison Cutlets.
+
+Trim the cutlets the same as you would mutton cutlets, melt a little
+butter on a plate, dip each cutlet in the butter, and dust them slightly
+with flour, then in beaten egg, and roll them in breadcrumbs. Fry them
+in hot lard for ten minutes, take them out of the lard and lay them on a
+flat dish covered with paper; put them before the fire for a few minutes
+to free them from grease. Dish them up, and pour Financière sauce round
+the cutlets.
+
+
+Venison Cutlets à l'Américaine.
+
+Cut the cutlets very small, and arrange them en couronne. Make an
+Espagnole sauce, and flavour it with bayleaves, garlic, half a pound of
+red currant jelly, and a glass of Madeira.
+
+
+Haricot of Venison.
+
+Take a neck or shoulder of venison, and cut the meat of the shoulder in
+pieces two inches square and the neck in thick cutlets. Fry these pieces
+with two ounces of butter in a stewpan over a brisk fire until they are
+browned, then pour off all grease, shake in a little flour, and stir
+together, moisten with sufficient stock to cover the meat, season with
+pepper and salt, and stir over fire till it boils. Remove it then to the
+corner of the stove to allow it to throw up its scum, which remove. Wash
+and scrape three carrots, and with a vegetable scoop cut out all the
+pink from the carrots in round balls, and boil them in water for half an
+hour. Cut out some balls of turnip in the same manner, and boil for
+fifteen minutes. Strain the vegetables and add them to the stew, with a
+glass of port wine and two ounces of red currant jelly. When the meat
+and vegetables are thoroughly cooked, and the stew well skimmed, dish it
+up very quickly.
+
+
+Venison Pasty.
+
+Stew the venison, remove all the bones, sinew, and skin, cutting off the
+fat and putting it aside. Make the paste in the usual way, and cover the
+edge and sides of a pasty dish: then put in the pieces of venison,
+packing it closely together, pepper and salt it well. Cover it with the
+paste and then bake it, which will take about four hours. Pour in at the
+top three-quarters of a pint of venison gravy which has been made from
+the bones and trimmings, two shalots, a gill of port wine, and a
+tablespoonful of ketchup.
+
+
+Venison Puffs.
+
+Cut some cold venison into very thin shavings, mix a tablespoonful of
+red currant jelly with some rich brown sauce, and put on the venison
+pieces. Have ready some light puff paste, roll it out thin and divide it
+in pieces, put some of the meat in each, and form them into puffs. Brush
+with white of egg, and bake quickly a delicate brown colour.
+
+
+Salmis of Widgeon.
+
+Take two widgeon that have been cooked, cut them up into neat pieces,
+break up the bones and put them into brown stock with some minced
+shalots, pepper and salt, and let them simmer very slowly for half an
+hour, then add a glass of port wine, half a teaspoonful of Clarence's
+cayenne sauce, and a squeeze of orange. Let it all boil up for about a
+quarter of an hour, and add an ounce of butter into which a little flour
+has been rubbed; let it thicken, then strain, pour the gravy over the
+cold pieces of bird, and bring slowly to the boil and serve with fried
+sippets. Some button mushrooms added to the gravy are a great
+improvement. Widgeon may be cooked in as many ways as teal, using the
+same recipes, substituting widgeon for teal.
+
+
+Fillets of Wild Ducks with Olives.
+
+Roast a couple of wild ducks and cut off the fillets in the usual way,
+score the skin, dish the fillets in a circle and put into the centre
+some stoned olives. Send clear brown gravy in a tureen with them.
+
+
+Wild Fowl with Bigarade Sauce.
+
+Roast a couple of wild fowl, cut off flesh from each side of the breast,
+and from sides under the wings. Score the skin, and dish the fillets in
+a circle with a little Bigarade sauce poured over them.
+
+
+Woodcock à la Chasseur.
+
+Truss a brace of cocks and put them down before a clear fire for fifteen
+minutes, then take them away and cut them into neat joints. Put the
+inferior pieces with three minced shalots, a bouquet garni, and half a
+head of garlic into a saucepan with a wineglassful of good gravy,
+another of wine, a tablespoonful of mushroom ketchup, and the strained
+juice of half a lemon, and let all simmer for ten minutes. Remove the
+gizzards from the trail, and pound them in a mortar with a piece of
+shalot, a little butter, pepper, and salt, and then rub through a sieve
+and spread them upon small pieces of fried bread cut into the shape of
+hearts. Put the joints of the woodcocks into a separate saucepan, strain
+the gravy on them, and let them heat gently; they must not boil. Place
+them on a dish, put the fried bread with the trail round them, pour the
+gravy over all, and serve hot.
+
+
+Woodcock à la Lucullus.
+
+Roast the woodcocks in the usual way, and catch the trail on a toast.
+Whilst the birds are still under-dressed, pour over them a little melted
+butter with which the yolk of an egg and a little cream has been mixed.
+Sprinkle grated breadcrumbs over, brown with a salamander, and serve
+with brown gravy.
+
+
+Woodcock à la Périgueux.
+
+Truss a brace of woodcocks, cover them with layers of bacon and put them
+into a stewpan with as much richly flavoured stock as will barely cover
+them, and add a glassful of Madeira. Let them simmer till done enough,
+drain, dish them, and pour over some Périgueux sauce.
+
+
+Woodcock à la Provençale.
+
+Fillet a brace of woodcock, soak them in salad oil seasoned with black
+pepper, some cloves, and a pounded head of garlic. Place the bones on a
+stewpan with some salad oil, six shalots, a head of garlic, a bayleaf,
+and a bouquet garni. When brown, add a dessert-spoonful of flour, a
+tumblerful of Chablis, and a pint of stock. Reduce to half the quantity,
+and pass through a tammy. Sauté the fillets in warm oil; when done,
+place them in a circle on an entrée dish with a fried bread sippet
+between each, stir a little lemon juice into the sauce, and pour over
+the fillets.
+
+
+Woodcock en Surprise.
+
+Take two livers of fowls and the trails of some cold woodcocks. Chop
+very finely two shalots, a sprig of parsley, and eight flap mushrooms,
+and fry in butter. When nearly cooked, put in the trail and livers to
+fry with the vegetables. After, pound all together in a mortar, and
+season with salt and pepper. Cut some neat slices of bread about two
+inches square, and fry them a pale colour, then spread on them the liver
+and trail forcemeat. Place them into the oven to colour, then dish them
+up with the woodcocks made into a salmi over them, with a good rich
+brown sauce flavoured with claret round.
+
+
+Salmi of Woodcocks à la Lucullus.
+
+Take three woodcocks, which must be roasted very under-done. Take out
+the trail, and add to it either three fowl livers or their equivalent in
+pâté de foie gras. Make a farce with a dozen mushrooms chopped very
+fine, a shalot, a sprig of parsley, both chopped fine. Fry these in a
+little butter, then add the trails and livers or pâté de foie gras to
+fry with them; when done, pound all in a mortar and season with salt,
+pepper, and a dust of cayenne. As three woodcocks will give six fillets,
+cut six bits of bread of the same size and fry them of a nice colour.
+Then spread the farce equally divided over the six croustades, put them
+into the oven, and when of a good colour put them between each of the
+fillets. Make the sauce from the bones and cuttings of the birds, add
+six spoonfuls of Espagnole sauce and a glass of Marsala. The fillets
+should be kept in the hot sauce whilst the croustades are cooking, so as
+to prevent their getting dry, then warm them up without boiling, as
+boiling would spoil the dish.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+Blackbird pie, 1
+
+Blanquette of chicken, 1
+ -- -- -- aux concombres, 2
+
+
+Capilotade of fowl, 2
+
+Chicken, blanquette of, 1, 2
+ -- à la bonne femme, 2
+ -- drumsticks, braised, 3
+ -- chiringrate, 3
+ -- à la Continental, 4
+ -- à la Davenport, 4
+ -- à l'Italienne, 4
+ -- à la Matador, 5
+ -- à la Cardinal, fillets of, 5
+ -- fried à la Orly, 5
+ -- -- à la Suisse, 5
+ -- fricassee, 6
+ -- fritôt aux tomates, 6
+ -- nouilles au Parmesan, 7
+ -- pudding à la Reine, 7
+ -- rice, 8
+ -- in savoury jelly, 8
+ -- with spinach, 9
+ -- stewed whole, 9
+
+Capon fried, 10
+ -- à la Nanterre, 11
+
+Côtelettes à l'Ecarlate, 10
+
+
+Ducks braised, 11
+ -- à la mode, 11
+ -- à la Nivernaise, 12
+ -- devilled, 12
+
+Ducks à la Provence, 12
+ -- à purée perto, 13
+ -- salmi of, 13
+ -- stewed with turnips, 13
+
+
+Game and macaroni, 14
+ -- pie, 15
+ -- rissoles, 15
+ -- salad of, 16
+
+Goose stuffed with chestnuts, 14
+ -- à la Royale, 14
+
+Grouse in aspic, 16
+ -- croustades of, au diable, 17
+ -- à l'Ecossais, 17
+ -- à la Financière, 17
+ -- friantine of, 18
+ -- kromesquis, 18
+ -- marinaded, 18
+ -- au naturel, 19
+ -- pie, 19
+ -- pressed, 20
+ -- salad, 20
+ -- scallops of, à la Financière 21
+ -- soufflé, 22
+ -- timbale of, 22
+
+
+Hare, to cook, 22
+ -- cutlets à la chef, 23
+ -- en daube, 24
+ -- Derrynane fashion, 24
+ -- à la Matanzas, 25
+ -- à la mode, 25
+ -- jugged, 26
+
+
+Landrail, 26
+
+Larks, croustade of, 26
+ -- à la Macédoine, 27
+ -- pie, 27
+ -- puffs, 29
+ -- salmi of, cold, 28
+
+Leveret à la minute, 29
+ -- à la Noël, 29
+
+Lièvre, filet de, à la Muette, 24
+ -- gâteaux de, 25
+
+
+Moorfowl, salmi of, 30
+
+
+Ortolans in cases, 30
+ -- à la Périgourdine, 31
+ -- aux truffes, 31
+
+
+Partridges à la Barbarie, 31
+ -- blancmanger and truffles, 32
+ -- à la Béarnaise, 33
+ -- blanquette of, 33
+ -- broiled, 33
+ -- chartreuse of, 34
+ -- aux choux, 34
+ -- cold fillets of, 35
+ -- à la Cussy, 35
+ -- with mushrooms, 36
+ -- pie, 38
+ -- pudding, 37
+ -- à la Reine, 37
+ -- salmi of, au chasseur, 38
+ -- scalloped, 38
+ -- à la Sierra Morena, 38
+ -- soufflé, 39
+ -- stewed, 40
+ -- à la Toussenel, 40
+ -- tartlets, 41
+ -- à la Vénitienne, 41
+
+Pintail, 42
+
+Pheasant, boiled, 42
+
+Pheasants, boudins of, 42
+ -- à la bonne femme, 43
+ -- à la Brillat-Savarin, 43
+ -- crème of, à la moderne, 44
+ -- cutlets, 45
+ -- galantine of, 45
+ -- fritôt, 46
+ -- and macaroni, 46
+ -- pie with oysters, 47
+ -- des Rois, 48
+ -- à la Sainte-Alliance, 48
+ -- salmi of, 49
+ -- stewed with cabbage, 49
+ -- stuffed with oysters, 50
+ -- -- -- tomatoes, 50
+ -- en surprise, 51
+ -- à la Suisse, 51
+ -- à la Tregothran, 52
+ -- à la Victoria, 52
+
+Pigeons à la duchesse, 53
+ -- à la financière, 53
+ -- à la merveilleuse, 53
+ -- ballotines of, 54
+ -- en poqueton, 54
+ -- en ragoût de crevettes, 55
+ -- au soleil, 55
+ -- à la Soussel, 56
+
+Plovers in brandy, 56
+ -- golden, 57
+ -- -- aux champignons, 57
+ -- aux truffes, 57
+
+Pullet, stuffed, 57
+
+
+Quails à la Beaconsfield, 58
+ -- en caisse, 59
+ -- compôte of, 59
+ -- and green peas, 60
+
+
+Rabbit, boudins of, 60
+ -- à la Maintenon, 60
+ -- galantine of, 61
+ -- gibelotte of, 61
+ -- fillets of, with cucumber, 61
+ -- fricandeau of, 62
+ -- fritters, 62
+ -- klösse, 63
+ -- en papillote, 63
+ -- pie à la Provençale, 63
+ -- pilau, 64
+ -- pudding, 64
+ -- à la Tartare, 65
+ -- à la Wanderer, 65
+
+Roebuck cutlets, 66
+
+
+Snipe à la minute, 66
+ -- pie, 66
+ -- -- à la Danoise, 67
+ -- hot raised, 67
+ -- soufflé, 68
+ -- à la superlative, 68
+
+
+Teal, devilled, 12
+ -- pudding, 69
+
+Teal, salmi of, 69
+ -- stewed, 70
+
+Turkey drumsticks, devilled, 70
+ -- en daube, 71
+
+
+Venison cutlets, 71, 72
+ -- haricot, 72
+ -- pastry, 72
+ -- puffs, 72
+
+
+Widgeon, salmi of, 73
+
+Wild ducks, fillets of, 74
+
+Wildfowl à la Bigarade, 74
+
+Woodcock au chasseur, 74
+ -- à la Lucullus, 75
+ -- à la Périgueux, 75
+ -- en surprise, 75
+ -- salmi à la Lucullus, 76
+
+
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
+ LONDON
+
+
+
+
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+ | Transcriber's Notes: |
+ | Left inconsistent hyphenation in place |
+ | Page 44: Changed trail to tail |
+ | Index: Corrected page number for Pigeons à la financière |
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Dressed Game and Poultry à la Mode, by
+Harriet A. de Salis
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY À LA MODE ***
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Dressed Game and Poultry A la Mode, by Mrs De Salis.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Dressed Game and Poultry à la Mode, by
+Harriet A. de Salis
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dressed Game and Poultry à la Mode
+
+Author: Harriet A. de Salis
+
+Release Date: April 14, 2010 [EBook #31982]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY À LA MODE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joseph R. Hauser and The Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 326px;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="326" height="500" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<h1>DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY</h1>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+
+
+<div><br /><br /></div>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr>
+ <td align="center"><span style="font-size: 125%">WORKS BY MRS. DE SALIS.</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">SAVOURIES À LA MODE.
+ Eighth Edition. Fcp. 8vo. 1<i>s.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">ENTRÉES À LA MODE.
+ Fourth Edition. Fcp. 8vo. 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">SOUPS AND DRESSED FISH À LA MODE.
+ Second Edition. Fcp. 8vo. 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> </td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">SWEETS AND SUPPER DISHES À LA MODE.
+ Fcp. 8vo. 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">OYSTERS À LA MODE; or, the Oyster and over
+ One Hundred Ways of Cooking it; to which are added a few
+ Recipes for Cooking all kinds of Shelled Fish. Second
+ Edition. Fcp. 8vo. 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">DRESSED VEGETABLES À LA MODE.
+ Fcp. 8vo. 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY À LA MODE.
+ Fcp. 8vo. 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="center">London: LONGMANS, GREEN, &amp; CO</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<div><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h1>DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY<br />
+<span style="font-size: 60%"><i>À LA MODE</i></span></h1>
+
+<div><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><span style="font-size: 75%">BY</span><br />
+MRS DE SALIS</h3>
+
+<h5>AUTHORESS OF 'SAVOURIES À LA MODE' 'ENTRÉES À LA MODE'<br />
+'SOUPS AND DRESSED FISH À LA MODE' 'OYSTERS À LA MODE'<br />
+'SWEETS À LA MODE' AND 'VEGETABLES À LA MODE'<br /></h5>
+
+<div><br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'One loves the pheasant wing<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And one the leg'<br /></span>
+<span class="i28"><span class="smcap">Pope</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<div><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h4>
+LONDON<br />
+LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.<br />
+AND NEW YORK: 15 EAST 16<span style="vertical-align: super">th</span> STREET<br />
+1888<br />
+<br />
+<i>All rights reserved</i><br />
+</h4>
+
+
+<div><br /><br /></div>
+
+<h6>
+PRINTED BY<br />
+SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE<br />
+LONDON<br />
+</h6>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>At this the sporting season of the year, I venture to offer to the
+public another of my little series in the form of Dressed Game and
+Poultry. No doubt many of the recipes are well known, but it has been my
+aim to collect from <i>all</i> the culinary preserves such recipes that from
+personal experience I know to be good. All the known and unknown tomes
+on the gourmet's art have been consulted, and I have to thank the
+authors for this assistance to my work, as well as those <i>cordons bleus</i>
+from whom I have practically learnt some few of them.</p>
+
+<p>I shall be very pleased to correspond with any of my readers who may
+wish to discourse on matters relative to the dinner table and its
+adjuncts, floral decorations among the number.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">
+H. A. DE SALIS.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">Hampton Lea, Sutton,</span><br />
+<span class="sig3"><span class="smcap">Surrey</span>, 1888.</span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h2><a name="DRESSED_GAME_AND_POULTRY" id="DRESSED_GAME_AND_POULTRY"></a>DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY</h2>
+<h4>À LA MODE.</h4>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h3>Blackbird Pie.</h3>
+
+<p>Stuff the birds with the crumb of a French roll soaked in a little milk,
+which put in a stewpan with 1-1/2 ounces of butter, a chopped shalot,
+some parsley, pepper, salt, a grate of nutmeg, and the yolks of two
+small eggs. Stir over the fire till it becomes a thick paste, and fill
+the insides of the birds with it. Line the bottom of the pie-dish with
+fried collops of rump steak, and place the birds on them neatly. Add
+four hard-boiled yolks of eggs, and pour gravy all over, cover with puff
+paste, and bake for one hour and a quarter.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Blanquette of Chicken.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the meat from a cold boiled fowl, in small pieces. Stew down the
+bones in one pint of water, a bouquet garni, add a little salt and white
+pepper to taste. Then strain the stock, add to it three or four peeled
+mushrooms finely minced, and let<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> them cook in this sauce; when done put
+in the pieces of fowl to warm through, thicken with the yolks of two
+eggs. Add lemon juice and serve hot.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Blanquette of Chicken aux Concombres.</h3>
+
+<p>Boil a chicken and cut it into neat joints. Cut a cucumber in pieces and
+fry in butter, put them in a little stock, which reduce; have reduced
+half a pint of velouté sauce with a few trimmings of cucumber in it.
+Pour this through a tammy over the fowls, set it on the fire, and as
+soon as it bubbles add a liaison of three yolks of eggs, work in a
+little butter and lemon juice, drain the pieces of cucumber in a cloth,
+throw them in, and serve them in an open vol au vent, garnished with
+flowers of puff paste.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Capilotade of Fowl or Turkey.</h3>
+
+<p>Take the remains of a cold fowl or turkey, and cut it into neat joints.
+Chop up three or four mushrooms, some parsley, a shalot, and a piece of
+butter the size of a walnut, and let all fry together for a short time;
+then moisten with a little good-flavoured stock, and thicken with flour.
+Add salt to taste, let the sauce boil well, put in the pieces of bird
+for a few minutes; take them out, arrange them on a dish, pour the sauce
+over, and serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chicken à la Bonne Femme.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut up a chicken into joints, warm up three onions and three turnips in
+butter; when brown add the pieces of fowl. Season with salt and pepper,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+sauté over the fire for ten minutes. Then stir in two tablespoonfuls of
+flour, and five minutes after add a tumblerful of stock, a wineglass of
+white wine, a bouquet of mixed herbs, and half a pound of peeled
+tomatoes, with all the pips carefully removed. Cook over a slow fire for
+twenty-five minutes, add about half a pound of mushrooms peeled and cut
+up to the size of a shilling, leave it on the fire for ten minutes; take
+out the bouquet of herbs, season with an ounce of finely-chopped
+parsley, dish up the pieces of chicken in a pyramid, and pour the sauce
+and vegetables over.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Braised Drumsticks of Chicken.</h3>
+
+<p>Braise the drumsticks, and arrange them uprightly in tent fashion, and
+all around and between the drumsticks should be finely chopped salad.
+Alternate slices of tongue and ham should be placed at the edge of the
+salad, and the border of the dish ornamented with thin rounds of
+beetroot.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chickens Chiringrate.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut off the feet of a chicken, break the breastbone flat, but be careful
+not to break the skin. Flour it and fry it in butter, drain all the fat
+out of the pan, but leave the chicken in. Make a farce from half a pound
+of fillet of beef, half a pound of veal, ten ounces of cooked ham, a
+shalot, a bouquet garni, and a piece of carrot, pepper, and salt; cook
+in stock, and then pass it through a sieve, and lay this farce over the
+chicken. After stewing the chicken for a quarter of an hour, make a rich
+gravy from the stock, and add a few mushrooms and two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> spoonfuls of port
+wine; boil all up well, and pour over and around the chicken.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chicken à la Continental.</h3>
+
+<p>Beat up two eggs with butter, pepper, salt, and lemon-juice; then cut up
+the fowls, dip them in the egg paste, and roll them in crumbs and fried
+parsley. Fry in clarified dripping, and pour over the dish any white or
+green vegetable ragoût, made hot; grate Parmesan over all.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chicken à la Davenport.</h3>
+
+<p>Stuff a fowl with a forcemeat made of the hearts and livers, an anchovy,
+the yolk of a hard-boiled egg, one onion, a little spice, and a little
+shred veal-kidney fat. Sew up the neck and vent, brown the fowl in the
+oven, then stew it in stock till tender. Serve with white mushroom
+sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chicken à l'Italienne.</h3>
+
+<p>Pass a knife under the skin of the back, and cut out the backbone
+without injuring the skin or breaking off the rump, draw out the
+breastbone and break the merrythought; flatten the fowl and put two
+skewers through it. Put it into a marinade of oil, sliced onion,
+eschalot, parsley, thyme, and a bay leaf, spice, pepper, and salt, in
+which let them soak a few hours. Broil them before the fire; when done,
+dish the fowls, garnish them with hot pickle, serve them with a brown
+Italian sauce over, with a few onions in it.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Chicken à la Matador.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut a chicken into fillets and neat joints. Mince finely a Spanish onion
+and stew it with two ounces of butter, a few drops of lemon, pepper, and
+salt; when it has been stewed for half an hour, pass it through a tammy,
+and mix in with it a good tablespoonful of aspic jelly. Mask the chicken
+with this, and warm up the chicken in the bain-marie.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Fillets of Chicken à la Cardinal.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook some fillets of chicken in butter, and when done place them in a
+circle round an entrée dish, with a mushroom between each fillet. Fill
+the centre with Allemagne sauce, to which has been added some lobster
+and crayfish butter to make it red. Garnish with crayfish tails if
+handy.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Fried Chicken à la Orly.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut up a chicken into joints. Season with salt, pepper, parsley, a
+bayleaf, and lemon juice, sprinkle with flour and fry in butter; dip
+some sliced onions into flour and fry. When done, dish up the chicken in
+a pyramid, garnish with the fried onions and cover with tomato sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Fried Chicken à la Suisse.</h3>
+
+<p>Roast a chicken and cut it into fillets and neat joints. Sprinkle some
+finely minced herbs, mignonette pepper, and salt over them. Let them
+re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>main for an hour, then dip them in frying batter and fry. Serve with
+fried parsley and tomato purée.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Fricassee of Chicken.</h3>
+
+<h5>American Recipe.</h5>
+
+<p>Clean, wash, and cut up the fowls. Lay them in salt and water for half
+an hour. Put them in a saucepan with enough cold water to cover them and
+half a pound of salt pork cut into thin strips. Cover closely and let
+them heat very slowly. Then stew for over an hour, if the fowls <i>are
+tender</i>; if not they may take from three to four hours. They must be
+cooked <i>very slowly</i>. When tender, add a chopped onion, a shalot,
+parsley, and pepper. Cover closely again, and when it has heated to
+boiling, stir in a teacupful of milk, to which have been added two
+beaten eggs and two tablespoonfuls of flour. Boil up and add an ounce of
+butter. Arrange the chickens neatly in an entrée dish, pour the gravy
+over and serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Fritôt of Chicken aux Tomates.</h3>
+
+<p>Take the remains of a boiled fowl and cut into pieces the size of a
+small cutlet. Shake a little flour over them and put them aside. Prepare
+a batter made of half a pound of Vienna flour, the yolk of one egg, half
+a gill of salad oil, and a gill of light coloured ale. Mix all these
+together lightly till it will mask the tip of your finger, add half a
+pint of purée of tomato, and mix well together. Dip the chicken cutlets
+into this batter, masking them well, and then put them in good lard and
+fry, and place them on a wire sieve as they are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> cooked, keeping them
+near the fire to keep them hot and crisp. Dish piled in a pyramid with
+tomatoes whole and tomato sauce round.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chicken Nouilles au Parmesan.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a large fowl, and when trussed put a lump of butter inside it, and
+cover the breast with fat bacon. Put it into a stewpan with an onion, a
+carrot, a piece of celery; cover with water and boil slowly for fifty
+minutes. Garnish the dish on which it is served with a pint of Nouilles
+boiled in a stewpan of boiling water for twenty minutes, drained, and
+then put into another saucepan with two ounces of butter. Sprinkle in
+two ounces of Parmesan cheese and warm up for five minutes, then garnish
+the fowl with them, and pour over it a pint of rich Béchamel sauce, in
+which two ounces of Parmesan cheese has been mixed. The Nouilles are
+made by mixing half a pound of butter with three eggs till it becomes a
+thick smooth paste, roll it out very thin, cut it into strips an inch
+wide, and place four or five of these on the top of each other, shred
+them in thin slices like Julienne vegetables, and drain them.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chicken Pudding à la Reine.</h3>
+
+<p>Take the meat from a cold fowl and pound it in a mortar, after removing
+the skin and sinews. Boil in light stock a couple of good tablespoonfuls
+of rice. When it is done and has soaked up the rice, add the pounded
+chicken to it, with a gill of cream, pepper, and salt. If not moist
+enough, add a little more cream. Butter a plain mould, fill it with the
+rice and chicken, tie a pudding cloth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> closely over, and put the mould
+into a stewpan of hot water to boil for an hour. The water should only
+reach about three-quarters up the mould. When done, turn it out and
+serve a good white mushroom sauce round it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chicken and Rice.</h3>
+
+<h5>Pollo con Arroz (Spanish Recipe).</h5>
+
+<p>Cut a fowl into joints, wipe quite dry, and trim neatly. Put a wineglass
+of the best olive oil in a stewpan, let it get hot. Put in the chicken,
+stir and turn the joints and sprinkle with salt. When the chicken is a
+golden brown add some chopped onions, one or two red chillies, and fry
+all together. Meanwhile have ready four tomatoes cut in quarters, and
+two teacupfuls of rice well washed. Mix these with the chicken and pour
+in a very small quantity of broth and stew till the rice is cooked and
+the broth dried up. Sprinkle a little chopped parsley and serve in a
+deep dish without a cover, as the steam must not be kept in.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chicken in Savoury Jelly.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a large chicken and roast it. Boil a calf's foot to a strong jelly,
+take out the foot and skim off the fat; beat up the whites of two eggs
+and mix them with a quarter of a pint of white wine vinegar, the juice
+of one lemon, a little salt, a tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar, and a
+claret-glassful of sherry. Put these to the jelly, and when it has
+boiled five or six minutes strain it through a jelly bag till clear.
+Then put a little into an oblong baking tin (big enough for a
+half-quartern loaf),<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> and when it is nearly set put in the chicken with
+its breast downwards; the chicken having been masked all over with white
+sauce, in which aspic has been well mixed, and ornamented with a device
+of truffles cut in stars and kite shapes. When the chicken is in, fill
+up the mould gradually with the remainder of the jelly. Let it stand for
+some hours, or place it on ice before turning it out.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chicken with Spinach.</h3>
+
+<p>Poach nicely in the gravy five or six eggs. Dress them on flattened
+balls of spinach round the dish and serve the fowl in the centre,
+rubbing down the liver to thicken the gravy and liquor in which the fowl
+has been stewed, which pour over it for sauce, skimming it well.
+Mushrooms, oysters, and forcemeat balls should be put into the sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chicken Stewed Whole.</h3>
+
+<p>Fill the inside of a chicken with large oysters and mushrooms and fasten
+a tape round to keep them in. Put it in a tin pan with a cover, and put
+this into a large boiling pot with boiling water, which must not quite
+reach up to the top of the pan the chicken is in. Keep it boiling till
+the chicken is done, which would be in about an hour's time after it
+begins to simmer. Remove the scum occasionally, and replenish with water
+as it boils away; take all the gravy from it and put it into a small
+saucepan, keeping the chicken warm. Thicken the gravy with butter,
+flour, and add two tablespoonfuls of chopped oysters, the yolks of two
+eggs boiled hard and minced fine, some seasoning, and a gill of cream.
+Boil five minutes and dish the fowls.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Côtelettes à l'Ecarlate.</h3>
+
+<p>Make a stiff forcemeat from the breast of a fowl or pheasant, or the two
+breasts of partridge or grouse. Cut some slices of tongue into cutlet
+shapes. Take some more tongue, pound and pass it through a sieve and mix
+it with the forcemeat. Season with a little cayenne and mushroom
+flavour. Butter and fill up some cutlet moulds with the forcemeat, and
+steam them in the oven. Then turn out the cutlets and place them on a
+baking sheet. Glaze them and replace them in the oven for a few seconds.
+Dish up alternately a cutlet of tongue with a cutlet of forcemeat; sauce
+the whole with chaud-froid sauce, and garnish with chopped aspic and
+very small red tomatoes.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Forced Capon.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the skin of a capon down the breast, carefully slip the knife down
+so as to take out all the meat, and mix it with a pound of beef suet cut
+small. Beat this together in a marble mortar, and take a pint of large
+oysters cut small, two anchovies, a shalot, a bouquet garni, a little
+mignonette pepper, and the yolks of four eggs. Mix all these well
+together, and lay it on the bones; then draw the skin over it, and sew
+up. Put the capon into a cloth, and boil it an hour and a quarter. Stew
+a dozen oysters in good gravy thickened with a piece of butter rolled in
+flour; take the capon out of the cloth, lay it in its dish, and pour the
+sauce over it.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Capon à la Nanterre.</h3>
+
+<p>Make a stuffing with the liver of the capon, a dozen roasted chestnuts,
+a piece of butter, parsley, green onions, very little garlic, two yolks
+of eggs, salt and pepper. Stuff the capon, and then roast it, covering
+it with buttered paper. When it is cooked, brush it over with the yolk
+of an egg diluted in a little lukewarm batter; sprinkle breadcrumbs over
+all, and let it brown, and serve with a sharp sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Braised Ducks à la St. Michel.</h3>
+
+<p>Rub some flour and oil over a couple of ducks, and brown them in the
+oven for a short time. Mix together a cup of Chablis wine and a cup of
+broth, season with pepper and salt; braise the ducks till they are
+tender. Chop some mushrooms, chives, and parsley; mix these in the broth
+in which the ducks were braised. Put the ducks to keep warm before the
+fire whilst the sauce 'reduces.' Dredge in a very little flour, and send
+up the ducks with the sauce round them.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Duck à la Mode.</h3>
+
+<p>Divide two ducks into quarters, and put them in a stewpan, and sprinkle
+over them flour, pepper, and salt. Put into the stewpan several pieces
+of butter, and fry the ducks till a nice brown colour. Remove the frying
+fat, and pour in half a pint of gravy and half a pint of port wine,
+sprinkle in more flour, add a bouquet garni, three minced shalots, an
+anchovy, and a dust of cayenne. Let them stew for twenty minutes, then
+place them on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> a dish, remove the herbs, clear off the fat, and serve
+with the sauce over them.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Braised Duck à la Nivernaise.</h3>
+
+<p>Line a braisingpan with slices of bacon, add the duck, cover it with
+bacon, and season with a bouquet of parsley, carrots, thyme, and bay
+leaves; moisten with stock and the same quantity of claret; fix the lid
+very tightly on the pan, and simmer over a slow fire, with hot coals on
+the lid of the stewpan. Cut up some turnips into balls, cook them in
+butter till brown, drain and simmer in brown thickening, moistened with
+a little stock. When the duck is cooked, dish up, and garnish with the
+turnips.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Devilled Duck or Teal.</h3>
+
+<h5>Indian Recipe.</h5>
+
+<p>Take a pound of onions, a piece of green ginger, and six chillies.
+Reduce them to a pulp, then add two teaspoonfuls of mustard, pepper,
+salt, cayenne, and chutney, two tablespoonfuls of ketchup, and half a
+bottle of claret. Cut up the duck or teal, and put it into the sauce,
+and let it simmer for a long time&mdash;the duck having been previously
+roasted.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Duck à la Provence.</h3>
+
+<p>Rub the duck over with lemon-juice, fry it in butter for a few minutes;
+sprinkle it with flour; then add sufficient stock to cover it, one
+tablespoonful of ketchup, one carrot; cut up two onions, two cloves, a
+bouquet garni, pepper, and salt. Let this stew for an hour; then take
+out the duck, strain the gravy, and remove all fat, and add plenty of
+mushrooms. Put in some stoned and scalded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> olives, which boil up for ten
+minutes and dish up with the duck. The olives should have been soaked
+three hours previously.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Duck.</h3>
+
+<h5>Canard à Purée Perto.</h5>
+
+<p>Take a pint of freshly shelled peas, boil them in a little thin stock,
+and rub them through a sieve; stew a duck in stock with a little salt, a
+dozen peppercorns, half a clove of garlic, six small onions, a bayleaf,
+and bouquet garni. When done, pass the same through a sieve, and add to
+it the purée of peas; reduce the whole to the consistency of thick
+cream. Serve the duck with the purée over it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Salmi of Duck.</h3>
+
+<p>Take the giblets of a duck and the flesh off the carcase, and the bones,
+and stew them in equal quantities of claret and stock, salt, pepper, and
+three shalots. Reduce and simmer till it is thick, then pass through a
+sieve, and take it off the fire before it boils. Cut up the duck into
+neat pieces and lay it in the stewpan with the gravy. Squeeze juice of
+strained orange over it, and serve en pyramide.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Stewed Duck and Turnips.</h3>
+
+<p>Brown the duck in a stewpan with some butter, peel and cut some young
+turnips into equal sizes, and brown in the same butter; stir in a little
+powdered sugar, reduce some stock to a thin brown sauce, season with
+salt, pepper, a bouquet of parsley, chives, half a head of garlic, and a
+bayleaf. Stew the duck in this sauce, and when half cooked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> add the
+turnips, turn the duck from time to time, being careful not to break the
+turnips, cook slowly, and skim off all grease and serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Roast Goose Stuffed with Chestnuts.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare a goose and stuff it with a mixture of minced bacon, the liver,
+salt, pepper, grated nutmeg, and chestnuts, which have been previously
+cooked and peeled. Baste the goose well whilst roasting. When cooked,
+serve with its own gravy, and sprinkle with salt, pepper, and the juice
+of a lemon.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Goose à la Royale.</h3>
+
+<p>Having boned the goose, stuff it with the following forcemeat:&mdash;Twelve
+sage leaves, two onions, and two apples, all shred very fine. Mix with
+four ounces grated bread, four ounces of beef suet, two glasses of port
+wine, a grate of nutmeg, pepper, and salt to taste, the grated peel of a
+lemon, and the beaten yolks of four eggs; sew up the goose and fry in
+butter till a light brown, and put it into two quarts of good stock and
+let it stew for two hours, and till the liquor is nearly consumed; then
+take up the goose, strain the liquor and take off the fat, add a
+spoonful of lemon pickle, the same of browning and port wine, a
+teaspoonful of essence of anchovy, a little cayenne and salt, boil it up
+and pour over the goose.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Game and Macaroni.</h3>
+
+<p>Put some ounces of macaroni into boiling stock, then add any game cut
+into small joints three parts cooked. Add some lean raw ham, chopped
+mushrooms, pepper, and salt.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Game Pie.</h3>
+
+<p>Take ten ounces of veal and the same of veal fat, and chop it very fine,
+season with pepper, salt, and cayenne. Arrange this as a lining round a
+china raised pie mould. Fill in with fillets of grouse, pheasant,
+partridge, and hare, strips of tongue, ham, hard-boiled yolks of eggs,
+button mushrooms, pistachio nuts, truffles, and pâté de foie gras; cover
+in with more of the mince, then put a paste on the top for cooking it
+in. Bake from two and a half to three hours. Remove the paste and fill
+the mould up with clarified meat jelly, partly cold; let this set.
+Ornament the top with chopped aspic and alternate slices of lemon and
+cucumber round. Croûtons of red and yellow aspic should be arranged at
+the base of the mould.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Game Rissoles au Poulet à la Carême.</h3>
+
+<p>Roll out very thin three-quarters of a pound of Brioche paste. Place
+upon it, two inches from the edge, minced fowl or game, prepared as for
+croquets, and rolled up between two teaspoons in balls the size of a
+nutmeg. Place these an inch from each other; egg the paste all round and
+fold the edge of it over the balls of mince. Press it firmly down, and
+with a paste stamp two inches wide cut the rissoles, keeping the mince
+balls exactly in the centre of each. Lay them on a hot tin that the
+paste may rise and fry them in lard not too hot, turning them with a
+skewer. They will become quite round. When of a good golden colour drain
+them and serve directly, and dish up in a pyramid.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Salad of Game à la Francatelli.</h3>
+
+<p>Boil eight eggs hard; shell them, and cut a thin slice off the bottom of
+each, cut each into four lengthwise. Make a very thin flat border of
+butter about one inch from the edge of the dish the salad is to be
+served on, fix the pieces of egg upright close to each other, the yolk
+outside, or alternately the white and yolk, lay in the centre a layer of
+fresh salad, and, having cut a freshly roasted young grouse into eight
+or ten pieces, prepare a sauce as follows: Put a spoonful of eschalots
+finely chopped in a basin, one ditto of castor sugar, the yolk of one
+egg, a teaspoonful of chopped parsley, tarragon, and chervil, and a
+little salt. Mix in by degrees four spoonfuls of oil and two of white
+vinegar. When well mixed put it on ice, and when ready to serve up whip
+a gill of cream, which lightly mix with it. Then lay the inferior parts
+of the grouse on the salad, sauce over so as to cover each piece, then
+lay over the salad and the remainder of the grouse, sauce over, and
+serve. The eggs can be ornamented with a little dot of radish or
+beetroot on the point. Anchovy and gherkin, cut into small diamonds, may
+be placed between.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Grouse in Aspic.</h3>
+
+<p>Roast a brace of grouse, and skin them, and mask them with brown sauce
+in which aspic has been mixed. Cut some pistachio kernels into pretty
+shapes and ornament the birds. Take a large square tin mould (a baking
+tin will do), pour in a layer of pale aspic, and when it is all but cold
+place the grouse on it breast downward, one turned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> one way and one the
+other, then gradually fill it up with the aspic, and put on ice. Turn
+out and decorate the base with chopped aspic, truffles, parsley, and
+tomatoes.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Croustades of Grouse à la Diable.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut some fillets of grouse into cutlet shapes, also some slices of fried
+bread; sprinkle the latter with grated Parmesan cheese. Put the fillets
+of grouse on the cheesed bread. Mask them with a purée of tomatoes and a
+tiny dust of cayenne, then add a little more grated Parmesan, a little
+parsley, some breadcrumbs, and little pieces of butter. Salamander over
+and serve hot.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Grouse à l'Ecossaise.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a brace of grouse; put three ounces of good dripping or butter
+inside each, but not in the crop. Put them down to roast, and baste till
+cooked. Have a slice of toast in the pan under them just before they are
+cooked. Parboil the liver, pound with butter, salt, and cayenne, and
+spread it on the toast.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Grouse à la Financière.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a brace of grouse; boil the livers for a few minutes, and pound
+them in a mortar with three ounces of butter, a little salt, pepper, a
+grate of nutmeg, one tablespoonful of breadcrumbs, and three or four
+mushrooms. Stuff the grouse with this, truss and roast them, and baste
+plentifully. Take some sauce espagnole, add a few mushrooms and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> a dust
+of cayenne. Let all boil up together and serve with the grouse.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Friantine of Grouse.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut with two cutters, one larger than the other, twelve thin flat pieces
+of pastry, put on the centre of the largest a tablespoonful of quenelle
+meat and spread it out; in the centre of this put a tablespoonful of the
+breast of a grouse, cut up with two ounces of lean ham. Mix well and put
+it into a stewpan with three-quarters of a pint of white cream sauce.
+Warm up and let it get cold. Cover this with the smaller sized pieces of
+pastry, having wetted the inside of each with yolk of egg to make them
+adhere to the lowest pastry, press down tightly with the smallest
+cutters, and cut the bottom pastry to the size of the smaller cutter.
+Egg and breadcrumb. Arrange them in a frying basket and fry in boiling
+lard a nice brown. Serve garnished with fried parsley.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Grouse Kromesquis.</h3>
+
+<p>Take the remains of cold grouse and mince it very fine. Mix with it a
+couple of tablespoonfuls of grated ham or tongue. Divide into small
+sausage shapes, dip each in batter, fry a pale golden colour and serve
+very hot, garnished with crisped parsley.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Grouse Marinaded.</h3>
+
+<h5>German Recipe.</h5>
+
+<p>Hang the birds as long as possible, then pluck and draw them and wipe
+their insides with a soft<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> cloth. Mince an onion; take about a dozen
+peppercorns, twenty juniper berries, three bayleaves, and put these into
+a gill of vinegar. Let the grouse soak in this for three days, turning
+them two or three times daily, and pouring the marinade over them. Stuff
+the birds with turkey forcemeat and lard the breasts. Place them in
+front of a clear fire, baste constantly, and serve with slices of lemon
+round the dish.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Grouse au Naturel.</h3>
+
+<p>Grouse should be wiped inside, but never washed. Have a brisk fire, and
+when the bird is trussed, place it before a brisk fire, and before it is
+taken down the breast should be basted with a little butter, and frothed
+and browned before it is sent up. A good sized grouse requires nearly
+three-quarters of an hour to cook it. Serve fried breadcrumbs and bread
+sauce with grouse.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Grouse Pie.</h3>
+
+<p>Take two or three grouse, cut off the wings and legs, and tuck the
+drumsticks in through a slit in the thigh; singe the birds; split them
+in halves; season them with pepper and salt. Place some pieces of very
+tender beefsteak at the bottom of a pie dish, add chopped mushrooms,
+parsley, shalot, and two teaspoonfuls of chutnee sauce, and sprinkle
+over the steak. Place the halves of the grouse neatly on the top; add a
+little more seasoning; moisten with sufficient gravy made from the
+necks, legs, and wings. Cover with puff paste, and bake for about an
+hour and a half.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Pressed Grouse.</h3>
+
+<p>Boil a brace of grouse till very tender; season, and then take away all
+the meat and pull it out very fine, removing all skin. Add to the liquor
+in which they were boiled a tablespoonful of gelatine for each three
+pounds of grouse, and keep stirring it in the boiling liquor till it is
+quite dissolved; place the grouse in a deep tin basin, and pour the
+liquor over it whilst hot; stir it well, so that the meat may become
+thoroughly saturated with the liquor, then turn a plate over it, put on
+a heavy weight, let it get cold, and turn out. It may be made ornamental
+by boiling eggs hard, halving them, and putting the flat side on the
+basin or mould in which the grouse has to be pressed.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Grouse Salad.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut up a brace of cold grouse, and let them marinade in two
+tablespoonfuls of salad oil and the juice of a lemon, with a little salt
+and pepper, and let them remain in this for three hours. Pound the yolk
+of a hard-boiled egg very smooth, and mix it well with the yolk of a raw
+egg, a teaspoonful of salt, a little pepper, a dust of cayenne, and half
+a teaspoonful of finely-chopped onion, pouring in gradually drop by drop
+some fine salad oil; stir constantly, and, as it thickens, add a little
+tarragon vinegar, then add more oil and vinegar till there is enough
+sauce. Put some shred lettuce on a dish, place some marinaded grouse on
+it, pour the dressing over, and garnish with fillets of anchovies,
+slices of hard-boiled eggs, and sprigs of chervil. Chop up some savoury
+jelly, and place round it like a wreath.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Scallops of Grouse à la Financière.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a brace of grouse, remove the skin, take off all the flesh, and
+scrape the flesh into very fine shreds. Chop up all the bones and necks,
+and put them into a saucepan with an onion, five sprigs of thyme, three
+of parsley, and a small carrot; cover with water, and let it boil slowly
+for three hours, skimming when it boils. Make a mixture of about half a
+pint of stock and two ounces of butter, and let boil. When the stock
+boils take 3-1/4 ounces of fine Vienna flour, and stir it well over the
+fire for about three minutes; then add the yolks of three eggs, stirring
+over the fire again. Take it then from the saucepan, and place it on a
+plate to get cool; then pound the shredded grouse till quite fine, using
+a gill of cream; now pass it through a fine sieve. Take a plain round
+mould, holding a pint and a half, butter it, and ornament with truffles
+cut in devices. Cut up three or four mushrooms, and mix in with the
+grouse panada, and fill the mould. Place buttered paper over it, and let
+it steam for half an hour; then turn out and let it get cold, and when
+cold cut it into a number of scallops of the same size. Egg and
+breadcrumb them, dip them in clarified butter, and fry a pale gold
+colour, and serve on a border of mashed potatoes. Make a sauce as
+follows:&mdash;Boil one glass of Marsala in half a pint of brown sauce for
+five minutes; place in the centre of them some mushrooms, truffles, and
+cockscombs, and pour sauce over these, but do not put the sauce over the
+scallops.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Grouse Soufflé.</h3>
+
+<p>Take the breasts of two grouse already cooked, pound them in a mortar
+with two ounces of fresh butter and a very small piece of onion. Pass
+them through a sieve, add four eggs, beat the whites to a stiff froth,
+season with a little salt and dust of cayenne. Place it in a soufflé
+dish, and bake it in a quick oven.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Timbale of Grouse à la Vitellius.</h3>
+
+<p>Simmer a slice of tongue in a stewpan till nearly cooked. Cut it up into
+fine dice, and put it back into the saucepan with four truffles, four
+tomatoes, and an ounce of butter; add a little cornflour to thicken it.
+Moisten with half a pint of stock and a gill of claret. Reduce this,
+skim off all the fat; then add some finely-minced grouse, a sprig of
+parsley, and six anchovies which have been soaked in milk. Warm these
+over a slow fire, but do not let them boil; when done, pour into a fancy
+mould lined with light puff paste. Bake, turn out, and serve very hot,
+garnished with crisped parsley.</p>
+
+
+<h3>To Cook Hare.</h3>
+
+<p>The great object in cooking a hare is to keep it as moist as possible,
+and therefore the hare must not be put too close to the fire in the
+first stage of roasting. Prepare a stuffing of quarter of a pound of
+beef suet, chopped finely, two ounces of uncooked ham, a teaspoonful of
+chopped parsley, and two teaspoonfuls of dried mixed savoury herbs;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> add
+to this a quarter of the rind of a lemon, chopped very fine, a dust of
+cayenne pepper, salt, five ounces of breadcrumbs, and two whole eggs.
+Pound this in the mortar. The liver may be minced and pounded in with
+these ingredients if fresh. Place the stuffing in the hare, and place at
+a distance from the fire; have plenty of dripping melted in the dripping
+pan, and basting should go on and be continued from the very first. Then
+as the hare is getting on, baste with good milk, and then baste well
+with butter; put the hare near the fire so as to froth the butter, and
+at the same time dredge the hare with some flour, so as to get a good
+brown colour, and serve good rich gravy <i>round</i> it with half a glass of
+port wine in a tureen, and currant jelly should be handed with it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Hare Cutlets à la Chef.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a freshly-killed hare, save the blood, paunch and skin it. Roast
+it, then cut off the fillets and cut them aslant and flatten them. Put
+the bones of the hare into a saucepan with two onions sliced, one
+good-sized carrot, a tiny piece of garlic, two cloves, and a bouquet
+garni, and one bayleaf. Moisten with a glass of white wine, and let all
+this steep and stew for an hour; then pass through a sieve, add a
+quarter of a boiled Spanish onion, and thicken with the blood of the
+hare. Make some hare stuffing, and moisten with some of the sauce, and
+make it into cutlets. To form cutlets similar to the fillet cutlets,
+place them in a frying-pan, and let them poach in water. Place the hare
+fillets and the stuffing cutlets in the pan and fry to a good colour in
+clarified butter. Put a small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span> piece of the small bones of the hare in
+every cutlet and dish them in a crown. Fill the centre with a mixture of
+small onions, mushrooms, and small pieces of bacon, cut into dice which
+have been stewed in some of the sauce. Hand red currant jelly with this
+dish.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Hare en Daube.</h3>
+
+<h5>French Recipe.</h5>
+
+<p>The hare must not be too high; cut it into pieces as for jugged hare.
+Rub into a stewpan a bit of bacon cut into squares; put the hare into
+it, together with thyme, bayleaf, spices, salt, pepper, and as much
+garlic as will go on the point of a knife. Add a little bacon rind
+blanched and cut into the shape of lozenges. When the whole has a
+uniform colour, moisten with a good glass of white wine, put on a close
+lid, and stew for four hours upon hot cinders. When ready to be served,
+pour away the lard, the spice, and the fat, and add a little essence of
+ham, and send to table hot.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Hare Derrynane Fashion.</h3>
+
+<p>Take three or four eggs, a pint of new milk, a couple of handfuls of
+flour, three yolks. Make them into a batter, and when the hare is
+roasting baste it well, repeating the operation till the batter thickens
+and forms a coating all over the hare. This should be allowed to brown
+but not to burn.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Filet de Lièvre à la Muette.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut a hare into fillets and stew them with a mince of chickens' livers,
+truffles, shalots in a rich brown gravy with a tumblerful of champagne
+in it.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Gâteaux de Lièvre.</h3>
+
+<p>Mince the best parts of a hare with a little mutton suet. Season the
+mince highly with herbs and good stock. Pound it in a mortar with some
+red currant jelly and make up into small cakes with raw eggs. Flour and
+fry them and dish them in a pyramid.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Hare à la Matanzas.</h3>
+
+<p>Paunch, skin, and clean a hare marinaded in vinegar for a couple of days
+with four onions sliced, three shalots, a couple of sprigs of parsley,
+pepper and salt. After two days take the hare out and drain it. Farce it
+with a stuffing made of the flesh of a chicken, three whole eggs, the
+liver, and a slice of bacon, all finely chopped, mixed and seasoned with
+pepper, salt, and a bouquet garni. Now put the hare in a stewpan with
+slices of bacon all over it, some sliced carrots, two onions stuck with
+cloves, and half a pint of consommé. Put some live coals on the lid of
+the saucepan and let it cook for three hours.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Hare à la Mode.</h3>
+
+<p>Skin the hare and cut it up in into joints and lard with fine fillets of
+bacon; place in an earthenware pot, with some slices of salt pork,
+chopped bacon, salt, mixed spice, a piece of butter, and half a pint of
+port wine; lay two or three sheets of buttered paper over it; fix on the
+lid tightly and simmer over a slow fire. When nearly done, stir in the
+blood, boil up and serve.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Jugged Hare.</h3>
+
+<p>Have a wide-mouthed stone jar, and put into it some good brown gravy
+free from fat. Next cut up the hare into neat joints; fry these joints
+in a little butter to brown them a little. Have the jar made hot by
+placing it in the oven, and have a cloth ready to tie over its mouth.
+Put the joints already browned into the jar, and let it stand for
+fifteen minutes on the dresser. After this has stood some time untie the
+jar and add the gravy, with a dust of cinnamon, six cloves, two
+bayleaves, and the juice of half a lemon. The gravy should have onion
+made in it, and should be thickened with a little arrowroot. A
+wineglassful of port should be added, and a good spoonful of red currant
+jelly should be dissolved in it. Next place the jar up to its neck in a
+large saucepan of boiling water, only taking care the jar is well tied
+down. Let it remain in the boiling water from an hour to an hour and a
+half. Stuffing balls, made with the same as the stuffing for roast hare,
+rolled into small balls the size of marbles and thrown into boiling fat,
+should be served with it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>To Roast Landrail.</h3>
+
+<p>This bird should be trussed like a snipe, and roasted quickly at a brisk
+but not a fierce fire for about fifteen or sixteen minutes. It should be
+dished on fried breadcrumbs, and gravy served in a tureen.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Croustade of Larks.</h3>
+
+<p>Bone two dozen larks, season, and put into each a piece of pâté de foie
+gras (truffled). Roll the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> larks up into a ball, put them in a pudding
+basin, season them with salt and pepper, and pour three ounces of
+clarified butter over them, and bake in a hot oven for a quarter of an
+hour. Dish them in a fried bread croustade, made by cutting the crust
+from a stale loaf about eight inches long, which must be scooped out in
+the centre and fried in hot lard or butter till it is a good brown.
+Drain it, and then place it in the centre of a dish, sticking it there
+with a little white of egg. Put it into the oven to get hot; then put
+the larks into it, and let it get cold. Garnish with truffles and aspic
+jelly.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Larks à la Macédoine.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a dozen larks, fill them with forcemeat made of livers, a little
+veal and fat bacon, a dessertspoonful of sweet herbs; pepper and salt to
+taste, and pound all well together in a mortar, and then stuff the birds
+with it. Lay the larks into a deep dish, pour over them a pint of good
+gravy, and bake in a moderate oven for a quarter of an hour. Have a
+pyramid of mashed potatoes ready, and arrange the larks round it, and
+garnish with a macédoine of mixed vegetables.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Lark Pie.</h3>
+
+<p>Pluck, singe, and flatten the backs of two dozen larks, pound the trail
+and livers in a mortar with scraped bacon and a little thyme, stuff the
+larks with this, and wrap each in a slice of fat bacon. Line a plain
+mould with paste, fill it with the larks, sprinkle them with salt and
+pepper, spread butter all over them, and add two small bayleaves; cover<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+with paste, and bake for two hours and a quarter. Can be eaten hot or
+cold. It must be turned out of the mould.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Salmi of Larks à la Macédoine, cold.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a dozen larks, bone and stuff them with pâté de foie gras, and make
+them as nearly as possible of the same size and shape. Make half a pint
+of brown sauce, adding a glass of sherry, a little mushroom ketchup, and
+an ounce of glaze; boil together, and reduce one half, adding a couple
+of spoonfuls of tomato juice; pass through a sieve, and, when nearly
+cold, add a gill of melted aspic. Mask the larks, and place them in a
+sauté pan, and cook them; take them out and remove neatly any surplus
+sauce, and dish them in the entrée dish in a circle. Take the contents
+of a tin of macédoine of vegetables boiled tender in a quart of water,
+add a dust of salt, a saltspoonful of sugar, and a piece of butter the
+size of a walnut; strain off, and, when cold, toss them in two
+tablespoonfuls of liquid aspic jelly. This macédoine should be piled up
+high and served in the centre. Garnish with chopped aspic round the
+larks, and sippets of aspic beyond this.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Lark Puffs.</h3>
+
+<p>Make some puff paste, and take half a dozen larks, and brown them in a
+stewpan with a little butter; then take them out and drain them, and put
+into the body of each bird a small lump of fresh butter, a little piece
+of truffle, pepper and salt, and a tablespoonful of thick cream. Truss
+each lark, and wrap it in a slice of fat bacon; cover it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> with puff
+paste rolled out to the thickness of a quarter of an inch, and shape it
+neatly; put the puffs in a buttered tin, and bake in a brisk oven for
+ten minutes.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Leveret à la Minute.</h3>
+
+<p>Skin, draw, and cut a leveret into joints; toss in a saucepan with
+butter, salt, pepper, and a bouquet garni. When nearly cooked, add some
+chopped mushrooms, eschalots, parsley, a tablespoonful of flour, a gill
+of stock, and a gill of claret; as soon as it boils, pour into a dish
+and serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Leveret à la Noël.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a leveret, cut off the fillets and toss them in the oven in a
+sauté-pan in butter; when cold, slice these fillets in shreds as for
+Julienne vegetables. Shred likewise some truffles, mushrooms, and
+tongue, and bind these together with two tablespoonfuls of good stock,
+in which a glass of port has been put, two cloves, the peel of a Seville
+orange, and a few mushrooms; thicken with butter and flour and tammy.
+Make some game forcemeat with the legs, and with it line some little
+moulds; fill up the empty space with the shredded game and vegetables
+and then cover with a layer of forcemeat. Poach these moulds in a deep
+sauté-pan, and when done dish them up round a ragoût composed of
+truffles, mushrooms, quenelles, and cockscombs. Sauce the entrée with
+gravy made from the bones and thickened. This entrée may be served cold,
+when it should be mixed with aspic, and garnished with it also.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Salmi of Moor Fowl or Wild Duck.</h3>
+
+<p>Carve the birds very neatly, and strip every particle of skin and fat
+from the legs, wings, and breasts, braise the bodies well and put them
+with the skin and other trimmings into a very clean stewpan. Add two or
+three sliced shalots, a bayleaf, a small blade of mace and a few
+peppercorns, then pour in a pint of good veal gravy, and boil briskly
+till reduced nearly half, strain the gravy, pressing the bones well,
+skim off the fat, add a dust of cayenne and squeeze in a few drops of
+lemon; heat the game very gradually in it, but it must not be allowed to
+boil. Place sippets of fried bread round the dish, arrange the birds in
+a pyramid, give the same a boil and pour over. A couple of wineglasses
+of port or claret should be mixed with the gravy.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Ortolans in Cases.</h3>
+
+<p>Bone as many ortolans as are required, have ready about three rashers of
+bacon chopped fine, which must be put into a sauté-pan with two shalots,
+one bayleaf, a bouquet garni, half a teaspoonful of black pepper and
+salt to taste. These must be fried till coloured; then add half a pound
+of calf's liver, cut small, and fried till brown; next place them in a
+mortar and pound them well, add the yolks of three hard boiled eggs and
+some truffle cuttings, pound again, and pass through a sieve; stuff the
+ortolans with this forcemeat, roll them up, and place them in a
+well-oiled paper case, and then bake in a quick oven. Pour over each
+case before serving a gravy made from the bones and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> trimmings of the
+birds, half a pint of rich gravy and a glass of claret, which should be
+reduced one half: send to table as hot as possible.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Ortolans à la Périgourdine.
+</h3>
+<p>Cover the ortolans with slices of bacon, and cook them in a bain-marie
+moistened with stock and lemon juice. Take as many truffles as there are
+ortolans, scoop out the centres and boil them in champagne (Saumur will
+do). When done, pour a little purée of game into each truffle, add the
+ortolans, warm for a few seconds in the oven, and serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Ortolans aux Truffes.</h3>
+
+<p>Take as many even large-sized truffles as ortolans; make a large round
+hole in the middle of each truffle, and put in it a little chicken
+forcemeat. Cut off the heads, necks, and feet of the birds, season with
+salt and pepper, and lay each bird on its back in one of the truffles.
+Arrange them in a stewpan, lay thin slices of bacon over them, pour over
+them some good stock, into which a gill of Madeira has been poured, and
+then simmer them very gently for twenty-five minutes. Dish the ortolans
+on toast, and strain the gravy over them.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridges à la Barbarie.</h3>
+
+<p>Truss the birds, and stuff them with chopped truffles and rasped bacon,
+seasoned with salt and pepper and a tiny dust of cayenne. Cut small
+pieces of truffles in the shape of nails; make holes with a penknife in
+the breasts of the birds; widen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> the holes with a skewer, and fill them
+with the truffles; let this decoration be very regular. Put them into a
+stewpan with slices of bacon round them, and good gravy poured in enough
+to cover the birds. When they have been stewed for twenty minutes glaze
+them; dish them up with a Financière sauce (see 'Entrées à la Mode').</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridge Blancmanger aux Truffes.</h3>
+
+<p>Boil a brace of partridges and let them get cold. Melt about a pint of
+aspic jelly and take a plain round quart mould and pour about a gill of
+aspic jelly into it to mask it by turning the mould round and round in
+the hands till the inside has been entirely covered by the jelly, pour
+away any that does not adhere, and place the mould on ice at once. Cut a
+few large truffles in slices and ornament the bottom of the mould with a
+star, pour on about two tablespoonfuls of a little cold liquid aspic.
+Put into a stewpan a pint of aspic and whisk it till it becomes white as
+cream, then mask the mould with this; pour in enough to half fill it,
+then turn it round and round, covering all the inside of the mould,
+pouring out any superfluity. Skin the partridges and cut off all the
+meat and chop it up: then pound it with a gill of cream in the mortar,
+and then rub through a fine wire sieve. Place this in a large stewpan,
+add half a pint of cream, and mix it with the partridge meat. Collect
+the aspic jelly, melt it, and whip it up and add it to the partridge;
+then fill the mould with this and pour in a little liquid aspic; place
+on ice. To serve this, dip it into warm water the same as a mould of
+jelly, turn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> it out, and garnish with aspic croûtons alternately with
+very small tomatoes; around the top arrange a wreath of chervil.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridges à la Béarnaise.</h3>
+
+<p>Wipe the inside of the partridges with a damp cloth. Cut off the heads,
+and truss the legs like boiled fowls. Put them into a stewpan with two
+tablespoonfuls of oil and a piece of garlic the size of a pea, and shake
+them over a clear fire till slightly browned all over. Then pour over
+them two tablespoonfuls of strong stock, one glassful of sherry, and two
+tablespoonfuls of preserved tomatoes, with a little salt and plenty of
+pepper. Simmer all gently together until the partridges are done enough,
+and serve very hot. The sauce should be highly seasoned.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Blanquette of Partridge aux Champignons.</h3>
+
+<p>Raise the flesh of a cold partridge, take off the skin; cut the flesh
+into scallops; put some velouté sauce in a stewpan with half a basket of
+mushrooms skinned and sliced. Reduce the sauce till very thick, adding
+enough cream to make it white. Throw it over the partridge scallops, to
+which add a few mushrooms.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Broiled Partridges.</h3>
+
+<p>Take off the heads and prepare them as if for the spit. Break down the
+breast bone and split them entirely up the back and lay them flat. Shred
+an eschalot as fine as possible and mix it with breadcrumbs. Dip the
+partridges in clarified butter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> and cover inside and outside with the
+crumbs. Broil them over a clear fire, turning them frequently for a
+quarter of an hour, and serve them up with mushroom sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Chartreuse of Partridges.</h3>
+
+<p>Boil some carrots and turnips separately, and cut them into pieces two
+inches long and three quarters of an inch in diameter. Braise a couple
+of small summer cabbages, drain well, and stir over the fire till quite
+dry; then roll them on a cloth and cut them into pieces about two inches
+long and an inch thick. Roast a brace of partridges, and cut them into
+neat joints. Butter a plain entrée mould, line it at the bottom and the
+sides with buttered paper to form a sort of wall, then fill it up with
+cabbage and the pieces of partridge in alternate layers. Steam the
+chartreuse to make it hot, turn it out of the mould upon an entrée dish,
+and garnish with turnips, carrots, and French beans. Send good brown
+sauce to table with it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridges aux Choux.</h3>
+
+<p>Truss a brace of partridges for boiling, and mince about half a pound of
+fat bacon or pork, and put it into a saucepan on the fire; when it is
+boiling, immerse the birds quickly, and sauté them till nicely coloured.
+Have ready a small savoy, which has been well washed and drained, chop
+it up and place it in the saucepan with the partridges, a bouquet garni,
+two pork sausages, pepper and salt to taste; add about half a pint of
+stock, and let all simmer together for two and a half hours. When<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> ready
+to serve, remove the bouquet garni, and serve the chopped cabbage round
+the birds, and the sausages split and divided into four pieces each.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Cold Glazed Fillets of Partridge.</h3>
+
+<p>Roast a brace of partridges, fillet them, pound the meat from the
+carcases in a mortar with truffles and mushrooms; simmer the bones in
+some vin de Grave, with truffle trimmings, shalots, and a bayleaf, which
+reduce on the fire to about three-quarters the quantity; squeeze through
+a cloth, add two tablespoonfuls of clear stock to it, and stir half of
+it into the pounded meat; mix it thoroughly, and stir it until it boils;
+pass it through a tammy, and leave to get cold. Arrange the fillets,
+with a tomato cut the same shape between each one, in a circle round an
+entrée dish; fill the centre with the purée, cover the whole with the
+remainder of the sauce, and garnish with croûtons of aspic jelly.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridges à la Cussy.</h3>
+
+<p>Remove all the bones from the birds except the thigh bones and legs,
+stuff them with a forcemeat composed of chopped sweetbread, mushrooms,
+truffles, and cockscombs which have been boiled; sew up the birds to
+their original shape, hold them over hot coals till the breasts are
+quite firm, and cover them with buttered paper. Line a stewpan with a
+slice of ham, two or three onions, carrots, a bouquet garni, a little
+scraped bacon, the partridge bones which have been pounded, salt, and
+pepper; moisten with stock. As soon as the vegetables get soft, add the
+partridges, and simmer over a slow fire. When done, dish up the birds,
+pass the sauce<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> through a tammy, skim off the fat, reduce, and add a few
+truffles or slices of mushrooms, and pour over the partridges.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridges with Mushrooms.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a brace of birds, and prepare about half a pound of button
+mushrooms, and place them in a stewpan with an ounce and a half of
+melted butter; add a slight sprinkling of salt and cayenne, and let them
+simmer for about nine minutes, then turn out all into a plate, and when
+quite cold put it into the bodies of the partridges; sew and truss them
+securely and roast them in the usual way, and serve either mushroom
+sauce round them, or they can be served up with their own gravy only,
+and bread sauce handed.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridge Pie.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the breasts and legs off two or three birds, sprinkle them with
+pepper and salt, and cook them in the oven smothered in butter, and
+covered with a buttered paper. Pound the carcases, and make them into
+good gravy, but do not thicken it.</p>
+
+<p>Take the livers of the birds with an equal quantity of calf's liver,
+mince both, and toss them in butter over the fire for a minute or two;
+then pound them in a mortar with an equal quantity of bacon, two shalots
+parboiled, with pepper, salt, powdered spice, and sweet herbs to taste.
+When well pounded, pass it through a sieve; put a layer of forcemeat
+into a pie-dish, arrange the pieces of partridge on it, filling up the
+interstices with the forcemeat; then pour in as much gravy as is
+required, put on the paste cover, and bake for an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> hour. When done, a
+little more boiling hot gravy may be introduced through the hole in the
+centre of the crust. A little melted aspic jelly may be added to the
+gravy.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridge Pudding.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a brace of well-kept partridges, cut them into neat joints and skin
+them; line a quart pudding basin with suet crust, place a thinnish slice
+of rump steak at the bottom of the dish cut into pieces, put in the
+pieces of partridge, season with pepper and salt, and pour in about a
+pint of good dark stock well clarified from fat, then put on the cover
+and boil in the usual way.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridges à la Reine.</h3>
+
+<p>Truss a brace of partridges for boiling, fill them with good game
+forcemeat, with two or three truffles cut up in small pieces, and tie
+thin slices of fat bacon over them. Slice a small carrot into a stewpan
+with an onion, four or five sticks of celery, two or three sprigs of
+parsley, and an ounce of fresh butter. Place the partridges on these,
+breasts uppermost, pour over them half a pint of good stock, cover with
+a round of buttered paper, and simmer as gently as possible till the
+partridges are done enough. Strain the stock, free it carefully from
+grease, thicken it with a little flour and as much browning as is
+necessary; flavour with a little cayenne, half a dozen drops of essence
+of anchovy, and a tablespoonful of sherry. Stir this sauce over a gentle
+fire till it is on the point of boiling, then pour it over the
+partridges already dished up on toast, and serve instantly.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Salmi of Partridge à la Chasseur.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a couple of cold roast partridges&mdash;they should be rather
+under-cooked&mdash;cut into neat joints, removing all skin and sinew, and lay
+the pieces in a stewpan with four tablespoonfuls of salad oil, six
+tablespoonfuls of claret, the strained juice of a lemon, salt, pepper,
+and cayenne to taste.</p>
+
+<p>Simmer gently for a few minutes till the salmi is hot throughout, then
+serve directly. Garnish with fried sippets.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Scalloped Partridges.</h3>
+
+<p>Take the fillets of a brace of partridges, sauté them in butter till
+firm, drain them, and put in some good game stock and two tablespoonfuls
+of Allemagne sauce; when boiling put in the scalloped partridges, with
+two or three peeled mushrooms, a small piece of butter, and the juice of
+half a lemon. Dish up the scallops in a circle, and fill the same in the
+centre.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridges à la Sierra Morena.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a brace of partridges properly trussed; cut into dice one inch
+thick a little less than half a pound of bacon, and put them in the
+stewpan; cut two large onions in quarters, take six whole black peppers,
+a little salt, one bayleaf, half a gill of vinegar, one gill of port
+wine, one gill of water, one tablespoonful of salad oil, and put all
+these ingredients into the stewpan; put on the lid, and cover the
+stewpan with half a sheet of brown kitchen paper; put the stewpan on a
+slow fire to stew for two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> hours; then take out the partridges and dish
+them and put round some of the quarters of onions which have been
+stewed. Pass the gravy through a sieve and send to table.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridge Soufflé.</h3>
+
+<p>Roast a partridge, chop and pound the flesh in a mortar with a few
+spoonfuls of Béchamel sauce and a small piece of butter. Season well;
+mix with this four eggs, and strain the whole through a sieve into a
+basin. Beat the whites of the eggs stiffly, and mix lightly with the
+purée. Put all into the soufflé dish, and let it bake in the oven for
+twenty minutes. Cover the top with a piece of paper to prevent its
+burning.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridge Soufflé.</h3>
+
+<h5>Another way.</h5>
+
+<p>Skin a brace of cold roast partridges, cut off all the meat, and pound
+it in a mortar with the birds' livers; warm up in a saucepan with a
+little reduced stock, and pass through a tammy. Break up the bones and
+put them into a saucepan with a good brown sauce and stock, and reduce
+till nearly a glaze; add the partridge purée and half an ounce of
+butter, two yolks of eggs, and the two whites whipped, which must be
+stirred in gradually; pour into a soufflé dish, and bake as soon as the
+soufflé has risen sufficiently. Serve it <i>at once</i>.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Perdreaux en Surprise.</h3>
+
+<p>Take two roasted partridges, cut out the whole of the breasts in a
+square piece, so as to make a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span> square aperture, clean away all the
+spongy substance from the interior, and make a <i>salpicon</i> to be put
+inside the birds as follows:&mdash;Cut into very small dice the flesh taken
+out of the birds, also some truffles and pepper and salt. Put these into
+a little velouté sauce, and with this stuff the birds. Dip them into
+eggs and breadcrumbs put some bits of butter all over, and fry them of a
+nice colour. Dish up and serve with Espagnole sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Stewed Partridges.</h3>
+
+<p>Lard a brace of partridges, and place them in a stewpan with onions,
+carrots, rashers of bacon, a bouquet garni, and equal quantities of
+stock and light claret, and simmer over a slow fire, skimming
+constantly. When done, dish up the partridges, reduce the sauce, and
+pass through a sieve and pour over the birds.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridge à la Toussenel.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a brace of partridges, stuff them with the livers of the birds
+minced up together with butter and some truffles which have been cooked
+in champagne; wrap each bird up in a figleaf or vineleaf, and over these
+place a sheet of buttered paper. Then put the birds on the spit, and
+roast till about three-fourths cooked; then take off the spit, and under
+the four members of each bird spread a mixture of breadcrumb worked into
+a farce with pepper, butter, parsley, shalot, and grated nutmeg. Replace
+the birds on the spit, and let them finish roasting, basting them
+continually alternately with broth and champagne. These<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> drippings, to
+which the grated peel of one lemon and the juice of a Seville orange are
+added, form the sauce to be served with it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridge Tartlets.</h3>
+
+<h5>Bouchées de Perdreaux.</h5>
+
+<p>Take the breasts of two cooked partridges, about six ounces, and cut
+into very small pieces. Mince two ounces of lean ham, one truffle, and
+six mushrooms; stir this mixture into a gill of white sauce. Butter nine
+small moulds, line them neatly with this mixture, smooth well over with
+a hot wet knife, fill in with minced partridge, coat them neatly over
+the top with the quenelle meat, steam them for twenty minutes; dish on a
+circle of mashed potato, pour good white sauce over and round them, and
+serve French beans or tomatoes in the centre.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridge à la Vénitienne.</h3>
+
+<p>Put a brace of partridges into a stewpan with butter, two glasses of
+Chablis, and two glasses of stock, add a bouquet garni, very little
+garlic, two cloves, salt and pepper; let them simmer gently. Take them
+off when done, pass the gravy through a sieve, add a little butter and
+flour to thicken it, a small piece of glaze, a little cayenne and salt.
+Pour the sauce over the partridges, and cover over all with two
+spoonfuls of grated Parmesan cheese; put a few breadcrumbs and pieces of
+clarified butter on this, and set the whole on a baking sheet in the
+oven. Brown the birds well, and serve with sauce espagnole or sauce
+piquante.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Pintail.</h3>
+
+<p>This bird should be roasted at a clear quick fire, well floured when
+first laid down, turned briskly, and basted with butter <i>constantly</i>. It
+takes about twenty-five minutes to roast, and then it should be laid
+down before the fire for two or three more, when it will yield a very
+rich gravy. Score the breast, and sprinkle a little cayenne on it, and
+send cut lemon up to table to hand with it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Boiled Pheasant.</h3>
+
+<p>Cover with buttered paper and simmer as gently as possible till it is
+done enough. Pour either celery, horseradish, oyster, or soubise sauce
+over it, and serve more in a tureen.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Boudins of Pheasant à la Richelieu.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a cold pheasant and pick the meat from it; remove the skin and
+sinews, and pound the flesh in a mortar to a smooth paste. Mix its
+weight with the same quantity of pounded potatoes or panada and six
+ounces of fresh butter. Mix these thoroughly, pound them together, and
+season highly with salt and cayenne, and a trifle of mace. Bind together
+with the yolks of four eggs, one at a time, two tablespoonfuls of white
+sauce, and last of all two tablespoonfuls of boiled onions chopped
+small. Spread this mixture out on a dish, and make it up into small
+cutlets about three inches long, two inches wide, and a quarter of an
+inch thick. Drop these carefully into very hot water, and poach them
+gently for a few minutes. The water must not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> boil. Take them up, drain,
+and let them get cold; then egg and breadcrumb them, and fry them in hot
+butter a nice pale colour. Make a gravy by peeling and frying four
+onions in butter till lightly browned, dredge an ounce of flour over
+them, and pour upon them half a pint of stock, a glassful of claret, the
+bones of the pheasant, and pepper and salt. Simmer over fire for twenty
+minutes, strain through sieve, and it is ready for use. Serve the
+boudins in a circle with the gravy round.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant à la Bonne Femme.</h3>
+
+<p>Put a well-hung pheasant in a buttered stewpan with three ounces of good
+beef dripping and six ounces of ham cut into dice. Let the pheasant fry
+over fire till it is nicely and lightly browned, then add a
+tablespoonful of chutnee and three large Spanish onions cut in rings;
+cover the saucepan, and let it simmer till all are cooked. Take up the
+bird and put it on a dish, beat the onions over the fire for ten
+minutes, season with pepper and salt, and serve round the pheasant.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant à la Brillat-Savarin.</h3>
+
+<p>Hang a pheasant till tender, pluck, draw, and lard it carefully. Bone
+and draw two woodcocks, keep the trail separate, throw away the
+gizzards, chop up the meat with beef marrow which has been cooked by
+steam, scraped bacon, pepper, salt, mixed herbs and truffles; fill the
+pheasant with this stuffing, which fix in with a piece of bread the
+shape of a cork and tie it round with fine thread. Lay a thick slice of
+bread two inches broader than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> the pheasant in the dripping pan; pound
+the tail of the woodcock in a mortar with truffles, add anchovy, a
+little scraped bacon, and a lump of fresh butter; spread a thick layer
+on the bread, roast the pheasant over it so as to catch all the dripping
+and dish up on it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Crème of Pheasants à la Moderne.</h3>
+
+<p>Take two pheasants, remove the skin from the breast, and cut from each
+the two large fillets and the two under ones; remove every particle of
+the white flesh that did not come away with the fillets, leaving the
+legs and pinions on the carcases.</p>
+
+<p>Spread each fillet on a board and with a knife scrape the flesh from the
+skin of the fillet. When the flesh is removed from the four large
+fillets and from the four smaller ones, and little remnants gathered
+from the carcases, place them in a mortar and pour in a gill of cream
+and pound well for a few minutes, then rub through clean wire sieve,
+place it back in the mortar and keep adding, a gill at a time, more
+cream until one pint of cream is used up; now take two plain cylinder
+moulds, well buttered and ornamented according to fancy with truffles
+(or small dariole moulds may be used), fill carefully and place a piece
+of buttered paper on the top of the mould or moulds, and place them in a
+stewpan with about a pint of boiling water and let them simmer very
+gently for twenty minutes and turn out. Make a sauce to serve with this
+dish of the carcases, &amp;c., mixed with rich Béchamel sauce, and when
+dished there should be a garnish of peas, mushrooms, or shred truffles.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Pheasant Cutlets.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a well-hung young pheasant, cut it when prepared into neat joints.
+Take out the bones carefully and shape the joints into cutlets; flatten
+these with the cutlet-bat, season rather highly and cover them thickly
+with egg and finely-grated breadcrumbs. Put the bones and trimmings into
+a saucepan with a carrot, a turnip, an onion, a handful of parsley, a
+bouquet garni, a bayleaf, pepper, salt, and as much water as will cover
+them. Let them stew slowly till the flavour of the herbs is drawn out,
+then thicken gravy and strain. Fry the cutlets in hot fat till a bright
+brown. Serve on a hot dish in a circle with one of the small bones stuck
+into each cutlet; pour the gravy round.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Galantine of Pheasant à la Mode.</h3>
+
+<p>Bone a pheasant, cut off the legs and press what is left of the leg
+inside, and cut away any sinews. Take three-quarters of a pound of
+sausage meat, a dozen oysters, three or four truffles, a slice of
+tongue, and three rashers of fat bacon. Cut the truffles into <i>small</i>
+dice, also the tongue and bacon. Mix all together with the sausage meat,
+adding a little cayenne pepper, half a teaspoonful of herbs mixed, half
+an ounce of melted gelatine, and two yolks of eggs. Mix well together,
+and spread over the pheasant evenly. Then roll it up lengthways and
+tightly in a cloth and place it in saucepan to boil for an hour, then
+take it out and remove the cloth carefully. To serve this dish, cut it
+up into thin slices and dish them in a circle, letting one piece overlap
+the other uniformly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> all round. Place a little cress salad compressed
+into a ball on the top, and at the base a few croûtons of aspic jelly at
+an equal distance apart, and a little chopped aspic between. Sprinkle a
+little over the salad ball at the top.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Fritôt of Crème of Pheasant.</h3>
+
+<p>Take eight tartlet tins, not too large, butter them, and fill about
+three parts full of crème of pheasant and place them in the oven for a
+few minutes. When quite firm to the touch, remove them from oven, and
+when cold dip each one into a light batter and fry in clean lard of a
+light brown. The batter should be made with half a pound of Vienna
+flour, the half of a yolk of egg, a dessertspoonful of salad oil, and a
+gill of pale ale. Mix all these together lightly till it will mask the
+point of one's finger; if too thick, add a drop or two more ale. Serve
+with brown or mushroom sauce. Send this dish very hot to table.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Partridge à la Crème.</h3>
+
+<p>See Pheasant ditto.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Fritôt of Partridge à la Crème.</h3>
+
+<p>See Pheasant ditto.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant and Macaroni.</h3>
+
+<p>Pull the flesh with two forks from a cold roast pheasant. Put the bones
+and trimmings into a saucepan with enough water to cover them, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> let
+them simmer till it is much reduced. Add two shalots, a little salt and
+pepper, a grate of nutmeg, a gill of mushroom ketchup and the same of
+Marsala. Thicken with flour and butter, and let all simmer gently for
+twenty minutes; strain it, and put it back into the saucepan for it to
+boil up. Just before the pheasant is to be served, put the meat into the
+gravy and let it warm through without boiling. After it is dished, place
+round it some macaroni made as follows:&mdash;Have two pints of boiling
+water, into which plunge four ounces of macaroni, add pepper and salt,
+and simmer gently for twenty minutes. Drain it, and put it into a pint
+of good stock, with a little salt, a teaspoonful of unmixed mustard and
+a dust of cayenne. Let it all boil till the macaroni is tender, then add
+a tablespoonful of Parmesan cheese and an ounce of butter. Toss it over
+fire till all is well mixed, then serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant Pie with Oysters.</h3>
+
+<p>Boil a pheasant till almost done; it will finish cooking in the pie.
+Make as much gravy as the size of the bird will require, add half a cup
+of milk, season and thicken it. Make a good pie-crust, and then put the
+pieces of pheasant in a pie-dish, which must be hot. Scatter some raw
+oysters among the pieces of pheasant, pour over all enough gravy to fill
+the dish to the depth of one inch, and cover it with the crust, which
+must be pressed against the edge so that it will adhere. Let it bake for
+half an hour. After it is cooked, pour in remainder of the gravy in the
+slit in the top of the crust.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Pheasant des Rois.</h3>
+
+<p>Have a pound of the best preserved truffles, such as can be obtained at
+Benoist's, in Wardour Street, stew them in a mixture of a quarter of a
+pound of butter, a large tablespoonful of finest Lucca oil, and half a
+pound of bacon fat scraped into shreds. Thoroughly cook the truffles, so
+that a silver fork can be stuck into them without pushing hard. Stuff a
+pheasant with them and sew it up. Cover the breast with a slice of fat
+bacon, and put two or three slices beneath it. Place round the pheasant
+pieces of veal and ham cut into small cubes the size of dice, add a few
+carrots, an onion or two, salt and pepper. Pour on it a claretglassful
+of Chablis, cover the saucepan, place it on a slow fire and use the
+salamander, then let it stew for an hour. When ready to serve, strain
+the same, removing all grease, and pour over the bird.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant à la Sainte Alliance.</h3>
+
+<h5>An expensive dish.</h5>
+
+<p>Take a well-hung cock pheasant and truss it for roasting. Farce it with
+a stuffing made of two woodcocks' flesh and internals (or snipes')
+finely minced with two ounces of fresh butter, some salt, pepper, and a
+pinch of cayenne, a bouquet garni finely powdered, and as many chopped
+truffles as will be required to fill the pheasant. Truss the bird and
+roast, basting it well with fresh butter. Whilst roasting, lay in the
+pan a round of toast, upon which a little of the stuffing has been
+spread, and serve the bird on it. Bread sauce and brown gravy should be
+handed round with it.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Salmi of Pheasant.</h3>
+
+<p>Half roast a pheasant, and when it is nearly cold cut it into neat
+joints, removing the skin. Put the bones and trimmings into a saucepan
+with an ounce of fresh butter, a bayleaf, and a bouquet garni, and stir
+these over a slow fire till lightly brown, then pour over half a pint of
+Espagnole sauce and a glassful of claret. Let all simmer for a quarter
+of an hour. Strain the gravy, skim it carefully, add a pinch of cayenne
+and the juice of half a lemon, then put it back into the saucepan with
+the pieces of game. Heat these up slowly. When cooked, dish up and pour
+the hot sauce over them and garnish with fried sippets. A little orange
+juice and a lump of sugar is an improvement to the sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant Stewed with Cabbage.</h3>
+
+<p>Truss a pheasant for boiling. Divide a large cabbage into quarters, soak
+them after cutting off the stalks, plunge them into boiling water and
+boil for about ten minutes. Take them out, drain them and press all the
+water from them, then put them into the stewpan. Lay the pheasant well
+in the cabbage, add six ounces of good bacon, half a pound of Bologna
+sausage, three pork sausages, some parsley, a bayleaf, a bouquet garni,
+one carrot, an onion stuck with four cloves, a shalot, and some pepper.
+Pour in as much stock as will cover the whole, and cover the pan closely
+and bring to a boil and let it simmer slowly for an hour. Then take out
+the bird and the meat and keep them warm whilst the cabbage is drained,
+peppered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> and salted, and steamed over fire till dry. Then place it on
+a dish, arrange the pheasant on it and all the other adjuncts round it.
+Serve poivrade sauce in a tureen.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant Stuffed with Oysters.</h3>
+
+<p>Truss a pheasant for roasting and fill it with forcemeat made of two
+dozen oysters pounded in the mortar, with a tablespoonful of brown
+breadcrumbs, half an ounce of fresh butter, a dessertspoonful of lemon
+juice, a boned anchovy, and a little cayenne. Mix these ingredients
+thoroughly and bind them with the yolk of an egg. Cover the bird with
+thin slices of fat bacon tied on securely, and roast before a clear
+fire. When done, dish up with clear gravy, and hand bread sauce in a
+tureen with it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant Stuffed with Tomatoes.</h3>
+
+<p>Truss a pheasant for roasting, and fill it with a forcemeat made of six
+tomatoes pounded in the mortar, with a tablespoonful of breadcrumbs, a
+shalot, a mushroom, half a clove of garlic, a teaspoonful of parsley,
+and half an ounce of butter, pepper and salt to taste. Bind together
+with the yolk of an egg. Cover the bird with slices of bacon and roast
+before a clear fire. Mushroom or tomato sauce may be served in a tureen
+with it. Partridge and grouse are also very delicious stuffed in this
+way.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Pheasant en Surprise.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a pheasant, remove the skin from the breast and take away all the
+meat, removing any gristle there may be, and place it in a mortar. Have
+ready half a pint of good cream, and begin by pouring half the quantity
+over the pheasant and pound together for a few minutes, then rub it
+through a clean wire sieve. When passed, put it back into the mortar,
+add the remainder of the cream gradually into the fowl, stirring it
+round so that they blend together perfectly. Fill a mould with this
+mixture and twist a bit of buttered paper round the top; then fold a
+sheet of paper several times and place it in a stewpan, put about half a
+pint of boiling water into the stewpan, or more according to size of it,
+and let all simmer gently for twenty minutes. Add a little salt and a
+dust of cayenne pepper. Turn this out and mix with it half a pint of
+white aspic jelly. Have ready some very clear aspic jelly, and colour it
+red. Take a pretty shaped jelly mould, pour in a little of the red aspic
+to about rather more than a quarter of the mould. When this is cool, put
+in the pheasant and aspic mixture, and place on ice for four hours; when
+properly frozen, turn out, and garnish the top with a wreath of fresh
+chervil leaves. Serve chopped aspic in little mounds round the base
+alternately with mounds of mayonnaise salad or tomatoes.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant à la Suisse.</h3>
+
+<p>Take the remains of a cold pheasant, cut it into neat joints. Salt and
+pepper these highly, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> strew over it finely chopped onion and
+parsley. Cover them with oil, and squeeze over them the juice of a
+lemon. Turn the pieces every now and then, and let them remain till they
+have imbibed the flavour, then dip the pieces in a batter made of four
+ounces of flour, with as much milk added as will make a thick batter.
+Stir into it half a wineglassful of brandy and an egg, the white and
+yolk beaten to a froth. This batter should rest for an hour in a warm
+place before using. Fry the pieces of chicken in the batter, and send it
+up piled on a dish garnished with fried parsley.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant à la Tregothran.</h3>
+
+<p>Bone a pheasant and stuff it with the meat from four woodcocks or six
+snipe, cut it up, and chop up some truffles and make it into forcemeat.
+Fry the trail of the woodcock or snipe in a little butter, and place on
+little rounds of fried bread and arrange round the dish. Stew the bones
+of the woodcocks or snipe to make the gravy, reduce it, and add a glass
+of Marsala to the broth and serve in a boat.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pheasant à la Victoria.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a quarter of a pound of bacon, cut it up in pieces (frying the
+bacon first), add a small clove of garlic, a small shalot, a bayleaf,
+half a carrot, half a turnip, half a dozen stewing oysters, and salt and
+pepper to taste. Stew over the fire, and when cooked pound it all
+together with a few more oysters and pass through a wire sieve. Stuff a
+pheasant with this, and place it in a stewpan with carrots and turnips;
+let all stew till tender, well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span> basting it with its own stock. Serve
+with rich Espagnole sauce or oyster sauce on a croustade of potato.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pigeons à la Duchesse.</h3>
+
+<p>Split a couple of pigeons in halves, remove the breast bones and beat
+them flat, sauté them with two ounces of butter, pepper and salt. Press
+them flat between two plates with a weight on them, and when the pigeons
+are cold spread the quenelle meat over the cut side of the birds; then
+egg and breadcrumb them and fry in fat. Dish in a circle with brown
+sauce round and a macédoine of vegetables in the centre.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pigeons à la Financière.</h3>
+
+<p>Take four pigeons, truss and braise them in stock, then glaze them, dish
+them up against a block of fried bread. Pour round half a pint of
+Financière sauce, and garnish with small quenelles of forcemeat,
+truffles, mushrooms, and cockscombs in the centre.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pigeons à la Merveilleuse.</h3>
+
+<p>Blanch a brace of pigeons, and beat the backs so as to spread out the
+breasts, boil them in equal quantities of stock and Chablis, season with
+salt and pepper, a sprig of parsley, two shalots, and two cloves; when
+cooked, take them out of the stewpan, and cook some mushrooms, twelve
+shelled crayfish, and a little flour in the sauce of the pigeons, boil
+for half an hour, reduce and thicken the sauce with yolks of egg and
+cream, season with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> finely chopped parsley and pour over the pigeons,
+and serve garnished with the heads of the crayfish.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Ballotines of Pigeon à la Moderne.</h3>
+
+<p>Take four boned pigeons, cut them lengthways in two, and make a farce of
+half a pound of pork sausage meat, half a spoonful of chopped truffles,
+the same of mushrooms, a few pieces of tongue cut into dice shapes, a
+bouquet garni, pepper and salt, and one yolk of an egg, all well mixed
+together. Then divide it into eight equal parts, and fill the halves of
+the pigeons with it; make them into round balls, cutting off the feet.
+Tie each piece of pigeon in a little bit of calico, and braise them till
+nicely tender. Then let them cool, tie them up tightly, and let them get
+quite cold; place one of the feet in each ballotine, and arrange them on
+a sauté-pan. Take off the calico, make them hot and glaze them, and
+serve with mushrooms and peas, and with a rich brown sauce over them.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pigeons en Poqueton.</h3>
+
+<p>Put some pâté de foie gras forcemeat, or any other forcemeat, into a
+small stewpan, and spread it all over at the bottom and sides, rubbing
+the stewpan first with butter. Put in a couple of pigeons trussed for
+roasting, some sweetbreads and tongue cut into neat pieces, and some
+button mushrooms; arrange all these tastily in the pan, place some more
+forcemeat on the top, cover it over with slices of bacon, and bake it in
+a gentle oven. Before closing it, pour some good gravy inside. The
+pigeons should be seasoned with pepper<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> and salt, and just rubbed with
+garlic. When it is cooked, take it from the oven, and turn it carefully
+out into its dish, and pour a very rich sauce over it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pigeon en Ragoût de Crevettes.</h3>
+
+<p>Prepare a couple of pigeons, cut them in half, and put them in a stewpan
+with a glass of Sauterne, half a pint of stock, a sprig of parsley, two
+cloves, pepper, salt, and a shalot; simmer till cooked, strain the
+gravy. Now put an ounce of butter with a dozen button mushrooms and two
+or three dozen skinned prawns into a saucepan with a tablespoonful of
+flour and the gravy the pigeons were stewed in; simmer this for half an
+hour, then thicken it with a gill of cream and two yolks of eggs, add
+some finely chopped parsley and a grate of nutmeg. Dish up the pigeons
+with the mushrooms and prawns in the centre.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Pigeons au Soleil.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a couple of roasted pigeons and put them into a marinade of an
+ounce of butter, four shalots, an onion, and a carrot cut up into dice,
+a little parsley, a bayleaf, a little thyme, and a clove; put them into
+a stewpan and fry till they are of a light brown, then moisten with a
+little vinegar and water. When they have simmered for half an hour in
+the marinade let them cool, drain, and put them into a batter made of
+four spoonfuls of flour, a little salt, a little olive oil, and moisten
+with a sufficient quantity of water and two beaten whites of eggs; then
+fry them a good colour, and serve up with fried parsley in the middle,
+with a poivrade or piquant sauce around.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Pigeons à la Soussell.</h3>
+
+<p>Bone four pigeons, and make a forcemeat of some fillet of veal, some ham
+fat, some grated breadcrumbs, mushrooms, truffles, a shalot, a bouquet
+garni, a little cayenne, pepper and salt, mixed with butter cooked over
+the fire and then pounded in a mortar; put some of this forcemeat into
+the pigeons and stew them gently for half an hour. Take the pigeons out
+and mask them well with more of the forcemeat, brush some beaten egg
+over each, and put them in the fryingpan and fry them in good dripping.
+Take the gravy they were stewed in, skim off all fat, thicken well with
+a liaison of cream and eggs, season with a little pepper and salt, and
+mix all together. Make a mound of spinach purée in the centre of the
+dish, and place the pigeons around, standing up against the purée. Take
+some very small boiled tomatoes, of a good shape, make a wreath round
+the base, place a few button mushrooms on the top of the spinach, and
+pour the sauce all round.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Grey Plovers Cooked in Brandy.</h3>
+
+<p>After trussing the plovers, flatten them and warm them in a stewpan with
+a little melted bacon fat, a bouquet garni, two onions, three mushrooms,
+and two or three truffles (the latter may be left out). As soon as they
+begin to colour, add half a pint of brandy and toss over a quick fire
+till the brandy is in flames; as soon as the flames go out, moisten with
+gravy and simmer over a slow fire. When the birds are done, skim off all
+grease, add the juice of a lemon, and serve hot.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Golden Plover.</h3>
+
+<p>Trim, truss, leaving the inside in, cover with fat bacon, and roast or
+bake for twenty minutes. Put a piece of well-buttered toast one-third of
+an inch thick to catch the trails. Dress grey plovers exactly the same.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Golden Plover aux Champignons.</h3>
+
+<p>Take three golden plover, chop up the trails with parsley, shalots,
+salt, pepper, and scraped bacon, and stuff the plover with it; cover the
+breasts with slices of bacon and roast. When done, serve on stewed
+mushrooms.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Fried Plover with English Truffles.</h3>
+
+<p>Truss three plover for roasting, lay them breast downwards in a stewpan
+with plenty of butter, enough to entirely cover the breasts. Put in nine
+or ten well-washed raw truffles pared very thin and cut into slices
+about the size of a florin. Add a bayleaf, pepper and salt. Stir over a
+brisk fire for ten minutes, then pour in a pint of stock mixed with a
+spoonful of flour and a glass of sherry. Simmer by side of fire for
+twenty minutes, skimming carefully. Dish up the birds, and then boil the
+sauce till it is thick and smooth, add the strained juice of a lemon, a
+lump of sugar, and a few drops of some XL colouring, and pour over the
+birds.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Stuffed Pullet.</h3>
+
+<p>Bone the pullet, stuff with forcemeat made with minced veal, egg, ham,
+onions, foie gras,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span> and mushrooms. First warm the veal, onion, and ham
+in melted butter, then add the mushrooms and foie gras, moisten with
+stock and boil. Stir in two yolks of eggs and a teaspoonful of lemon
+juice before taking off the fire, season with a little salt, pepper, and
+a pinch of nutmeg. After stuffing the fowl with this mixture, sew it up,
+turn the skin of the neck half over the head and cut off part of the
+comb, which will give it the appearance of a turtle's head. Blanch and
+singe four chickens' feet, cut off the claws and stick two where the
+wings ought to be and two in the thighs, so as to look like turtle's
+feet. Stew the pullet with a little ham, onions, and carrots, tossed
+previously in butter, moisten with stock, skim occasionally. When done,
+cut the string where it is sewn, lay it on its back in a dish, garnish
+the breast with sliced truffles cut in fancy shapes, and place a
+crayfish tail to represent the turtle's tail.</p>
+
+<p>Velouté sauce may be handed with this dish, or it may be eaten cold and
+garnished with aspic.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Quails à la Beaconsfield.</h3>
+
+<p>Put, having trussed, six quails in a stewpan wrapped in slices of bacon.
+Moisten with two spoonfuls of stock, a bouquet garni, two bayleaves and
+a clove, pepper and salt to taste. Stew them for twenty minutes over a
+very slow fire. Drain them well, make a purée of peas in which a
+tablespoonful of aspic jelly has been mixed. Mask each quail with the
+purée, dish them in a crown shape with little rolls of bacon in front of
+each, have a few truffles or mushrooms cooked and placed in the centre,
+and pour over the quails a rich brown sauce.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Quails en Caisse.</h3>
+
+<p>Bone six quails and halve them, take the bones and trimmings and stew
+them in some stock with two carrots, one onion, one shalot, a bayleaf, a
+small piece of lean ham, a small piece of parsley, pepper and salt. This
+must be reduced, and then strained. Make a forcemeat of the quails'
+livers, a small piece of calf's liver, and half their quantity of bacon.
+Put these into a sauté-pan with a couple of shalots and an ounce of
+butter, and toss them over the fire for five minutes, then pass this
+mixture through a sieve. Have the paper cases ready oiled, and place at
+the bottom a layer of this farce, having already stuffed the half quails
+with it. The stuffed half quails, rolled, must now be put into the cases
+with a thin slice of very fat bacon over them. They must now be baked in
+the oven for about twelve minutes. Remove the bacon, and pour over the
+gravy, which must be thickened with flour rolled in butter. Strew a
+little very nicely minced parsley over each case.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Compôte of Quails.</h3>
+
+<p>Take six quails, cut the claws off, and truss them with the legs inside.
+Cut eight pieces of bacon rolled up like corks, blanch them to draw out
+any salt, and fry them till they are of a light brown; take them out and
+put in the quails, which must be stewed till they begin to be of a light
+brown, then remove them. Make a thickening with flour and butter, and
+put it into a good gill of veal stock; add a bouquet garni, some small
+onions and mushrooms. Skim the sauce well, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> strain it over the
+quails, then dish the bacon, mushrooms, and small onions, and send up
+hot.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Quails and Green Peas.</h3>
+
+<p>Cook the quails in a stewpan with a slice of veal and a slice of ham,
+carrots, onions, and a bouquet garni; cover with rashers of bacon and
+buttered paper; place hot coals on the lid, and, when done, dish up the
+quails with green peas in the centre which have been cooked in butter.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Boudins of Rabbit à la Reine.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the meat from a young very fine rabbit, which put into some reduced
+Béchamel sauce. When cold, roll it into large boudins the shape of
+sausages, egg and breadcrumb, and fry. Serve under them velouté sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Boiled Rabbit à la Maintenon.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut a young rabbit into neat joints, and put them in a stewpan with
+enough white stock just to cover them; add a bouquet garni, a stick of
+celery, a shalot, an onion, a few peppercorns, a carrot, and six
+mushrooms. Let all simmer slowly for half an hour, or it might be a
+little longer, then take them up and drain them; then cut as many pieces
+of white foolscap paper as there are pieces of rabbit, butter them,
+sprinkle the pieces of rabbit, and lay on each a little piece of fat
+bacon, then roll them in the paper and broil over a fire till the bacon
+has had time to cook. Serve in the papers. Thicken the gravy in the
+usual way, and serve it in a tureen.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Galantine of Rabbit.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a couple of young rabbits, bone, and lay them on a linen cloth; lay
+over them a good meat stuffing seasoned to taste, putting over this
+stuffing, which should be laid on about the thickness of a crown, first
+a layer of ham cut in slices, and then a layer of hard eggs. Cover these
+layers with a little forcemeat, roll up the meat, taking care not to
+displace the layers, and cover it with thin slices of fat bacon,
+wrapping the whole in a cloth; wind some packthread round it and let it
+boil three hours in stock, adding salt and coarse pepper, some roots and
+onions, a large bunch of parsley, shalots, a clove of garlic, cloves,
+thyme, bayleaves, and basil. Allow this to cool, take off the cloth, and
+serve cold.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Gibelotte de Lapin.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut a rabbit into pieces. Sauté it in two ounces of butter, add an
+onion, two shalots, and a pint of poivrade sauce; put it in the oven for
+one hour, being careful not to burn it. Small pieces of cauliflower and
+croûtons of fried bread should garnish this dish.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Fillets of Rabbit with Cucumber Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut two cucumbers into thin slices and soak them in vinegar, with
+pepper, salt, and a bayleaf, for two hours, then half roast the rabbit,
+take the skin off, and fillet it. Make a sauce of white stock, and put
+the pieces of rabbit into it with the cucumber until it is quite done.
+Arrange the pieces of rabbit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> in a circle, put the cucumber in the
+middle, and pour the sauce over the fillets. Fried sippets should
+garnish this dish.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Fricandeau of Rabbit.</h3>
+
+<p>Take the fleshy portion of a good-sized rabbit, lard the flesh and lay
+it in a deep baking dish, cover it with some highly flavoured stock.
+Place a piece of buttered paper over the dish, and bake in a moderate
+oven till it is tender, basting it frequently. Lift the rabbit out and
+keep it hot whilst the gravy is boiling to thicken. Spread a teacupful
+of good tomato sauce on a hot dish, lay the rabbit on it, hold a
+salamander over the larding to crisp it, and pour the gravy over all.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Rabbit Fritters.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the meat from a cold rabbit into small pieces, put them in a
+pie-dish and sprinkle over them parsley, chives, thyme, and a clove of
+garlic, all chopped very fine, salt, pepper, and a bayleaf; pour over
+all a glass of Chablis and the juice of a lemon. Let the pieces of
+rabbit soak in this for two hours, then take them out, dredge them well
+over with flour, and throw them into boiling fat till of a nice golden
+colour. Remove and drain them, pile them high in an entrée dish, and
+pour round the following sauce. Take the liquor the rabbit has been
+soaked in, add half a pint of stock and a little thickening of flour and
+butter, and let it boil well. Then strain through a sieve, put in a
+tablespoonful of piccalilli chopped fine, or some chutnee, give another
+boil, and serve.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Rabbit Klösse.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a cold dressed rabbit, mince all the meat, mix in with it an equal
+quantity of bread soaked in milk squeezed dry. Cut two slices of bacon
+into small squares, and fry slowly. Add the minced meat and stir in two
+eggs, and let it cook a few minutes. Turn it out on a dish to cool, and
+add one more egg. Form it into balls the size of an egg, then drop them
+into boiling water, and boil until set. Lift them out very tenderly,
+pile them up in a pyramid on a dish, and garnish them with fried
+potatoes. Send a sharp sauce to table with them.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Rabbits en Papillote.</h3>
+
+<p>Mince up some parsley, mushrooms, shalot, a clove of garlic, a slice of
+bacon, with salt and pepper to taste. Mix this in a little gravy on the
+fire to form a paste. Cut a rabbit into neat fillets and joints. Cover
+each with the paste, then wrap a thin slice of fat bacon and fix each
+piece neatly in an oiled paper. Cook them slowly in the oven, and serve
+in papers.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Rabbit Pie à la Provençale.</h3>
+
+<p>Take two small rabbits, cut them into joints, and lay them in a saucepan
+with two carrots, two onions, a clove of garlic, a bunch of herbs, and a
+pound of pickled pork (the belly). Boil in a very little water for half
+an hour, take out the rabbits and drain them, also drain the pork and
+place it at the bottom of a well-buttered pie-dish, and then lay the
+pieces of rabbit on it. Pour on a wine-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>glassful of Sauterne or vin de
+Grave, and strew over it some Spanish pimento. Pour in some good batter,
+and bake in a quick oven for half an hour. Reduce the liquor in which it
+was cooked and add the strained juice of a lemon. The sauce should be
+handed with it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Rabbit Pilau.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut up a young rabbit into ten or twelve pieces. Rub each piece into a
+savoury pudding made as follows. Extract the juice of two onions, mix a
+teaspoonful of salt with it, half a teaspoonful of powdered ginger, and
+the juice of a lemon. Boil half a pound of rice in a quart of broth till
+it is half cooked. Have ready four ounces of good dripping, and fry the
+pieces of rabbit in it, with two sliced onions. When they are brown
+remove them. Place the meat into a deep jar. Lay the onions on it and
+cover with the rice, add four cloves, eight peppercorns, some salt, and
+a little lemon peel cut very thinly, and pour half a pint of milk over;
+place some folds of paper over the jar and bake in the oven, adding a
+little broth when the rabbit is half cooked. When done, pile the rice on
+a dish, and lay the pieces of rabbit on the top and serve very quickly.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Rabbit Pudding.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut a rabbit into ten or twelve pieces, put these into a stewpan with a
+little pepper and salt, pour on as much boiling water as will cover
+them, and let them simmer for half an hour. Take them up and put in
+their place the head and liver of rabbit with some bacon rind and simmer
+for an hour, strain and skim it, and let it get cool. Line<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> a pie-dish
+with suet crust, and then put in the pieces of rabbit with four ounces
+of fat bacon cut into narrow strips, pour in a cupful of the cool gravy,
+lay on the cover, and boil in the usual way. N.B.&mdash;The brains may be
+mixed in with the liver.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Rabbit à la Tartare.</h3>
+
+<p>Bone a rabbit, cut it into pieces, and let it marinade for six hours in
+parsley, mushrooms, a clove of garlic, chives, all chopped very fine,
+with pepper, salt, and the best salad oil. Dip each piece of rabbit in
+breadcrumbs and broil, sprinkling the pieces with the marinade. Serve
+Tartare sauce over it or with it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>The Wanderer's Rabbit.</h3>
+
+<h5>No. 1.</h5>
+
+<p>Divide a rabbit into pieces of convenient size, put them into a saucepan
+in which half a dozen slices of bacon are cooking. As soon as the meat
+is beginning to brown, pour a wineglass and a half of brandy into the
+saucepan, and set fire to it. When the fire has burnt out, add a little
+pepper, salt, a bayleaf, and a bit of thyme, and let it simmer by the
+side of the fire till the brandy has nearly dried up, then serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3>The Wanderer's Rabbit.</h3>
+
+<h5>No. 2.</h5>
+
+<p>Divide a couple of rabbits into quarters, adding plenty of pepper and
+salt. Slightly fry them in a saucepan in bacon fat and flour. Add
+sufficient stock and two glasses of Sauterne, and let it stew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> on a
+moderate fire. When done, squeeze an orange over the dish just before
+serving up.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Stewed Roebuck Cutlets.</h3>
+
+<p>Sprinkle the cutlets with salt and pepper, cook them in a saucepan with
+melted butter. When half done, turn them, add a little flour, moisten
+with equal quantities of white wine and stock, season with chopped
+eschalots, parsley, and blanched mushrooms; remove the cutlets when
+done, place them round an entrée dish, reduce the sauce, pass it through
+a tammy, and pour over the cutlets.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Snipe à la Minute.</h3>
+
+<p>Pluck three snipes and truss them for roasting. Put the snipes head
+downwards in a saucepan with two ounces of melted butter, two finely
+chopped shalots, a dessertspoonful of chopped parsley, pepper and salt
+to taste. Shake the saucepan over the fire till the birds are lightly
+browned, pour over them as much good stock and sherry as will just cover
+them. Add the strained juice of half a lemon and a small piece of finely
+grated crust. Simmer till birds are done, dish them, and pour over them
+some good strong beef gravy, and serve quickly.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Snipe Pie.</h3>
+
+<p>Take eight snipe for a moderately sized pie; cut them into neat pieces.
+Make a forcemeat of ham, chicken, tongue, seasoned with a little sweet
+herbs, pepper, salt, cayenne, some breadcrumbs, and mushrooms chopped
+fine. Mix all together with the yolks of a couple of eggs, then place in
+the pie-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>dish a layer of snipe, then forcemeat, then snipe again, and
+then forcemeat, till the dish is full. Pour in some good gravy, and put
+it in the oven to bake. When it is done, raise the paste cover and pour
+in some more gravy. This pie may be eaten hot or cold.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Snipe Pie à la Danoise.</h3>
+
+<p>Parboil the birds in broth and Chablis, seasoned with pepper, salt, a
+grated onion, and a grate of nutmeg. Make a forcemeat of finely scraped
+beef, say one pound, also four ounces of fat pork. Pound and mix well
+together with a little butter and the crumb of a roll soaked in broth,
+season with grated onion, pepper, mushrooms and gherkins chopped fine,
+and add a little broth. Line a dish with this forcemeat, put in the
+snipe, and bake it for an hour to an hour and fifteen minutes. Serve
+with a sauce made of half a pint of good stock, a gill of Chablis, a
+little water, and a piece of butter rolled in flour, and stirred till
+smooth; when it begins to boil slice in pickled gherkins.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Snipe Raised Pie (Hot).</h3>
+
+<p>Cut four snipes in two lengthwise, remove the gizzards, put the trails
+aside, and season the birds with salt and cayenne. Fry the birds in
+butter for ten minutes and then stand them to drain in the cool till
+wanted. Make a forcemeat of four ounces of calf's liver, four ditto fat
+bacon cut small, melt the latter over a quick fire, and then add the
+liver and season the mixture with pepper, salt, and herbs. When these
+are cooked, let them get cold, and then pound them in the mortar with
+the trails of the birds.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> Now pass all through a sieve. Line a buttered
+pie-mould with raised crust paste, and put in a layer of the forcemeat
+at the bottom of the mould, leaving it hollow in the centre. Put half
+the pieces of snipe in a circle upon the forcemeat, and place a little
+ball of forcemeat upon them, put in the rest of the birds and put a
+layer of forcemeat over all. Fill the hollow in the centre with bread
+which has been covered with fat bacon, put the pastry cover on, and
+bake. When done, take off the cover, remove bread and fill its place
+with scallopped truffles. Pour good brown sauce over all, pile truffles
+on the top, and serve. This can also be made in a china raised pie-case.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Snipe Soufflé.</h3>
+
+<p>Roast three or four snipe, remove all the meat from the bones, put it
+into a mortar, and pound it well with two ounces of cooked rice, one
+ounce of butter, a little pepper and salt, and one gill and a half of
+glaze. Pass through hair sieve and add the yolks of four eggs whipped to
+a stiff froth; put it into a mould and bake in a quick oven. Serve with
+a good gravy round, made from the bones and trimmings, the juice of half
+a lemon, and a glass of port wine; thicken with butter and cornflour.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Snipes à la Superlative.</h3>
+
+<p>Make a forcemeat of three ounces of fat bacon, three ounces of fowl's
+liver, and cut both into pieces an inch square. Fry the bacon over a
+sharp fire, move it about constantly, and in three or four minutes add
+the liver. When it is half done, mince it with the bacon, season, and
+add half a clove of garlic and pound all smoothly in a mortar. Pass<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+through wire sieve. When quite cold, roll out half of it with a little
+flour, form it into a thick band, and arrange it in a circle at the
+bottom of a dish. Take four partially roasted snipes, split them open
+down the back, and spread the forcemeat a quarter of an inch thick over
+the inside of each. Place the birds in the middle of the dish, and cover
+them with some of the forcemeat, smooth with a hot knife and put the
+dish into a quick oven, wipe away all fat, pour truffle sauce over the
+snipe, and serve.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Teal Pudding.</h3>
+
+<p>Take three teal, season the birds with salt and cayenne, and divide them
+into neat pieces. Cut up a pound of rump steak into pieces about an inch
+in size, season, and dredge them lightly with flour. Line a
+pudding-basin with good suet paste rolled out to half an inch thickness.
+Place in a layer of steak and a layer of teal, and repeat till the dish
+is full, then fill in with three-quarters of a pint of good gravy, and
+put the cover on in the usual way. Plunge it into boiling water and keep
+it boiling till done. Serve it in the basin it is cooked in, with a
+napkin pinned round it.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Salmi of Teal.</h3>
+
+<p>Put in a stewpan three ounces of butter and one good spoonful of flour,
+let them melt together, stirring till it becomes a nice brown; add by
+degrees a gill of good stock and as much red wine, two whole shalots
+(taken out after), a full bouquet, pepper, and a little salt; put in the
+body and bones of the bird, from which you have previously detached<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span> the
+limbs and meat. Let all boil slowly for half an hour, pass all through
+colander, and put gravy alone back in stewpan on the fire, and just when
+on the point of boiling put in the pieces of teal and take the stewpan
+off the fire; add a little lemon juice, put the lid on, and leave it on
+the hob for half an hour.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Stewed Teal.</h3>
+
+<p>Truss the birds, putting aside the hearts, livers, and gizzards, and
+dredge them with flour, then place them in a saucepan with a piece of
+butter, and let them brown equally, taking care of the gravy which oozes
+from them. Let them get cold, then carve them in such a way that the
+wings and legs can be taken off with a piece of breast adhering to it.
+Break the bodies of the birds into small pieces, and stew them with the
+livers, &amp;c., in as much stock as will cover them, till the gravy becomes
+good and strong, then strain it, season with cayenne, salt, a glassful
+of claret, and a little Seville orange juice. Directly it begins to
+boil, put in the fleshy portion of the birds and let simmer till they
+are thoroughly heated, but do not let the gravy boil. Cut slices of
+bread large enough for a leg and wing to lie upon, fry till lightly
+browned, arrange them neatly, and pour sauce over them. Garnish with
+sliced lemon.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Devilled Turkey Drumsticks.</h3>
+
+<p>Score the drumsticks down parallel with the bone, and insert in the
+slices thus made a mixture made with one ounce of butter, a good
+teaspoonful of French mustard, a little cayenne, and a salt-spoonful of
+black pepper. Mix all this thoroughly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> together and spread the mixture
+into the cuts, then rub the drumsticks with butter, and grill over a
+fierce fire.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Turkey en Daube.</h3>
+
+<p>Put slices of bacon in a braising-pan, lard the breast and thighs of a
+turkey trussed for boiling, and place the turkey on the slices of bacon;
+put into the pan a slice of ham and a calf's foot broken into small
+pieces, with the trimmings of the turkey, two onions stuck with four
+cloves, three carrots, and a bouquet garni. Put slices of bacon over the
+turkey, put some melted butter over, and cover with three rounds of
+buttered paper and let it simmer for five hours; take it from the fire
+and leave it for half an hour, strain the gravy and boil it down. Beat
+an egg into a saucepan, and pour the jellied gravy into this, whip it
+well, then put it on the fire, bring it to the boil, and then draw it to
+the side of the fireplace, cover it with the lid with hot coals on it,
+and let it remain for half an hour; strain again, and with this jelly
+cover the turkey.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Venison Cutlets.</h3>
+
+<p>Trim the cutlets the same as you would mutton cutlets, melt a little
+butter on a plate, dip each cutlet in the butter, and dust them slightly
+with flour, then in beaten egg, and roll them in breadcrumbs. Fry them
+in hot lard for ten minutes, take them out of the lard and lay them on a
+flat dish covered with paper; put them before the fire for a few minutes
+to free them from grease. Dish them up, and pour Financière sauce round
+the cutlets.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Venison Cutlets à l'Américaine.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut the cutlets very small, and arrange them en couronne. Make an
+Espagnole sauce, and flavour it with bayleaves, garlic, half a pound of
+red currant jelly, and a glass of Madeira.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Haricot of Venison.</h3>
+
+<p>Take a neck or shoulder of venison, and cut the meat of the shoulder in
+pieces two inches square and the neck in thick cutlets. Fry these pieces
+with two ounces of butter in a stewpan over a brisk fire until they are
+browned, then pour off all grease, shake in a little flour, and stir
+together, moisten with sufficient stock to cover the meat, season with
+pepper and salt, and stir over fire till it boils. Remove it then to the
+corner of the stove to allow it to throw up its scum, which remove. Wash
+and scrape three carrots, and with a vegetable scoop cut out all the
+pink from the carrots in round balls, and boil them in water for half an
+hour. Cut out some balls of turnip in the same manner, and boil for
+fifteen minutes. Strain the vegetables and add them to the stew, with a
+glass of port wine and two ounces of red currant jelly. When the meat
+and vegetables are thoroughly cooked, and the stew well skimmed, dish it
+up very quickly.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Venison Pasty.</h3>
+
+<p>Stew the venison, remove all the bones, sinew, and skin, cutting off the
+fat and putting it aside. Make the paste in the usual way, and cover the
+edge and sides of a pasty dish: then put in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> pieces of venison,
+packing it closely together, pepper and salt it well. Cover it with the
+paste and then bake it, which will take about four hours. Pour in at the
+top three-quarters of a pint of venison gravy which has been made from
+the bones and trimmings, two shalots, a gill of port wine, and a
+tablespoonful of ketchup.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Venison Puffs.</h3>
+
+<p>Cut some cold venison into very thin shavings, mix a tablespoonful of
+red currant jelly with some rich brown sauce, and put on the venison
+pieces. Have ready some light puff paste, roll it out thin and divide it
+in pieces, put some of the meat in each, and form them into puffs. Brush
+with white of egg, and bake quickly a delicate brown colour.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Salmis of Widgeon.</h3>
+
+<p>Take two widgeon that have been cooked, cut them up into neat pieces,
+break up the bones and put them into brown stock with some minced
+shalots, pepper and salt, and let them simmer very slowly for half an
+hour, then add a glass of port wine, half a teaspoonful of Clarence's
+cayenne sauce, and a squeeze of orange. Let it all boil up for about a
+quarter of an hour, and add an ounce of butter into which a little flour
+has been rubbed; let it thicken, then strain, pour the gravy over the
+cold pieces of bird, and bring slowly to the boil and serve with fried
+sippets. Some button mushrooms added to the gravy are a great
+improvement. Widgeon may be cooked in as many ways as teal, using the
+same recipes, substituting widgeon for teal.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Fillets of Wild Ducks with Olives.</h3>
+
+<p>Roast a couple of wild ducks and cut off the fillets in the usual way,
+score the skin, dish the fillets in a circle and put into the centre
+some stoned olives. Send clear brown gravy in a tureen with them.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Wild Fowl with Bigarade Sauce.</h3>
+
+<p>Roast a couple of wild fowl, cut off flesh from each side of the breast,
+and from sides under the wings. Score the skin, and dish the fillets in
+a circle with a little Bigarade sauce poured over them.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Woodcock à la Chasseur.</h3>
+
+<p>Truss a brace of cocks and put them down before a clear fire for fifteen
+minutes, then take them away and cut them into neat joints. Put the
+inferior pieces with three minced shalots, a bouquet garni, and half a
+head of garlic into a saucepan with a wineglassful of good gravy,
+another of wine, a tablespoonful of mushroom ketchup, and the strained
+juice of half a lemon, and let all simmer for ten minutes. Remove the
+gizzards from the trail, and pound them in a mortar with a piece of
+shalot, a little butter, pepper, and salt, and then rub through a sieve
+and spread them upon small pieces of fried bread cut into the shape of
+hearts. Put the joints of the woodcocks into a separate saucepan, strain
+the gravy on them, and let them heat gently; they must not boil. Place
+them on a dish, put the fried bread with the trail round them, pour the
+gravy over all, and serve hot.></p>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h3>Woodcock à la Lucullus.</h3>
+
+<p>Roast the woodcocks in the usual way, and catch the trail on a toast.
+Whilst the birds are still under-dressed, pour over them a little melted
+butter with which the yolk of an egg and a little cream has been mixed.
+Sprinkle grated breadcrumbs over, brown with a salamander, and serve
+with brown gravy.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Woodcock à la Périgueux.</h3>
+
+<p>Truss a brace of woodcocks, cover them with layers of bacon and put them
+into a stewpan with as much richly flavoured stock as will barely cover
+them, and add a glassful of Madeira. Let them simmer till done enough,
+drain, dish them, and pour over some Périgueux sauce.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Woodcock à la Provençale.</h3>
+
+<p>Fillet a brace of woodcock, soak them in salad oil seasoned with black
+pepper, some cloves, and a pounded head of garlic. Place the bones on a
+stewpan with some salad oil, six shalots, a head of garlic, a bayleaf,
+and a bouquet garni. When brown, add a dessert-spoonful of flour, a
+tumblerful of Chablis, and a pint of stock. Reduce to half the quantity,
+and pass through a tammy. Sauté the fillets in warm oil; when done,
+place them in a circle on an entrée dish with a fried bread sippet
+between each, stir a little lemon juice into the sauce, and pour over
+the fillets.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Woodcock en Surprise.</h3>
+
+<p>Take two livers of fowls and the trails of some cold woodcocks. Chop
+very finely two shalots, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> sprig of parsley, and eight flap mushrooms,
+and fry in butter. When nearly cooked, put in the trail and livers to
+fry with the vegetables. After, pound all together in a mortar, and
+season with salt and pepper. Cut some neat slices of bread about two
+inches square, and fry them a pale colour, then spread on them the liver
+and trail forcemeat. Place them into the oven to colour, then dish them
+up with the woodcocks made into a salmi over them, with a good rich
+brown sauce flavoured with claret round.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Salmi of Woodcocks à la Lucullus.</h3>
+
+<p>Take three woodcocks, which must be roasted very under-done. Take out
+the trail, and add to it either three fowl livers or their equivalent in
+pâté de foie gras. Make a farce with a dozen mushrooms chopped very
+fine, a shalot, a sprig of parsley, both chopped fine. Fry these in a
+little butter, then add the trails and livers or pâté de foie gras to
+fry with them; when done, pound all in a mortar and season with salt,
+pepper, and a dust of cayenne. As three woodcocks will give six fillets,
+cut six bits of bread of the same size and fry them of a nice colour.
+Then spread the farce equally divided over the six croustades, put them
+into the oven, and when of a good colour put them between each of the
+fillets. Make the sauce from the bones and cuttings of the birds, add
+six spoonfuls of Espagnole sauce and a glass of Marsala. The fillets
+should be kept in the hot sauce whilst the croustades are cooking, so as
+to prevent their getting dry, then warm them up without boiling, as
+boiling would spoil the dish.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+</div>
+<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX.</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+Blackbird pie, <a href="#Page_1">1</a><br />
+<br />
+Blanquette of chicken, <a href="#Page_1">1</a><br />
+&mdash; &mdash; &mdash; aux concombres, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Capilotade of fowl, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Chicken, blanquette of, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+&mdash; à la bonne femme, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+&mdash; drumsticks, braised, <a href="#Page_3">3</a><br />
+&mdash; chiringrate, <a href="#Page_3">3</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Continental, <a href="#Page_4">4</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Davenport, <a href="#Page_4">4</a><br />
+&mdash; à l'Italienne, <a href="#Page_4">4</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Matador, <a href="#Page_5">5</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Cardinal, fillets of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a><br />
+&mdash; fried à la Orly, <a href="#Page_5">5</a><br />
+&mdash; &mdash; à la Suisse, <a href="#Page_5">5</a><br />
+&mdash; fricassee, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+&mdash; fritôt aux tomates, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+&mdash; nouilles au Parmesan, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br />
+&mdash; pudding à la Reine, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br />
+&mdash; rice, <a href="#Page_8">8</a><br />
+&mdash; in savoury jelly, <a href="#Page_8">8</a><br />
+&mdash; with spinach, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+&mdash; stewed whole, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Capon fried, <a href="#Page_10">10</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Nanterre, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Côtelettes à l'Ecarlate, <a href="#Page_10">10</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Ducks braised, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+&mdash; à la mode, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Nivernaise, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+&mdash; devilled, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+Ducks à la Provence, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+&mdash; à purée perto, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+&mdash; salmi of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+&mdash; stewed with turnips, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Game and macaroni, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
+&mdash; pie, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
+&mdash; rissoles, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
+&mdash; salad of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a><br />
+<br />
+Goose stuffed with chestnuts, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Royale, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
+<br />
+Grouse in aspic, <a href="#Page_16">16</a><br />
+&mdash; croustades of, au diable, <a href="#Page_17">17</a><br />
+&mdash; à l'Ecossais, <a href="#Page_17">17</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Financière, <a href="#Page_17">17</a><br />
+&mdash; friantine of, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+&mdash; kromesquis, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+&mdash; marinaded, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+&mdash; au naturel, <a href="#Page_19">19</a><br />
+&mdash; pie, <a href="#Page_19">19</a><br />
+&mdash; pressed, <a href="#Page_20">20</a><br />
+&mdash; salad, <a href="#Page_20">20</a><br />
+&mdash; scallops of, à la Financière <a href="#Page_21">21</a><br />
+&mdash; soufflé, <a href="#Page_22">22</a><br />
+&mdash; timbale of, <a href="#Page_22">22</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Hare, to cook, <a href="#Page_22">22</a><br />
+&mdash; cutlets à la chef, <a href="#Page_23">23</a><br />
+&mdash; en daube, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+&mdash; Derrynane fashion, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Matanzas, <a href="#Page_25">25</a><br />
+&mdash; à la mode, <a href="#Page_25">25</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span><br />
+&mdash; jugged, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Landrail, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br />
+<br />
+Larks, croustade of, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Macédoine, <a href="#Page_27">27</a><br />
+&mdash; pie, <a href="#Page_27">27</a><br />
+&mdash; puffs, <a href="#Page_29">29</a><br />
+&mdash; salmi of, cold, <a href="#Page_28">28</a><br />
+<br />
+Leveret à la minute, <a href="#Page_29">29</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Noël, <a href="#Page_29">29</a><br />
+<br />
+Lièvre, filet de, à la Muette, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+&mdash; gâteaux de, <a href="#Page_25">25</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Moorfowl, salmi of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Ortolans in cases, <a href="#Page_30">30</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Périgourdine, <a href="#Page_31">31</a><br />
+&mdash; aux truffes, <a href="#Page_31">31</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Partridges à la Barbarie, <a href="#Page_31">31</a><br />
+&mdash; blancmanger and truffles, <a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Béarnaise, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
+&mdash; blanquette of, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
+&mdash; broiled, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
+&mdash; chartreuse of, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
+&mdash; aux choux, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
+&mdash; cold fillets of, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Cussy, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+&mdash; with mushrooms, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br />
+&mdash; pie, <a href="#Page_38">38</a><br />
+&mdash; pudding, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Reine, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
+&mdash; salmi of, au chasseur, <a href="#Page_38">38</a><br />
+&mdash; scalloped, <a href="#Page_38">38</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Sierra Morena, <a href="#Page_38">38</a><br />
+&mdash; soufflé, <a href="#Page_39">39</a><br />
+&mdash; stewed, <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Toussenel, <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
+&mdash; tartlets, <a href="#Page_41">41</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Vénitienne, <a href="#Page_41">41</a><br />
+<br />
+Pintail, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+<br />
+Pheasant, boiled, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+<br />
+Pheasants, boudins of, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+&mdash; à la bonne femme, <a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Brillat-Savarin, <a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
+&mdash; crème of, à la moderne, <a href="#Page_44">44</a><br />
+&mdash; cutlets, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+&mdash; galantine of, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+&mdash; fritôt, <a href="#Page_46">46</a><br />
+&mdash; and macaroni, <a href="#Page_46">46</a><br />
+&mdash; pie with oysters, <a href="#Page_47">47</a><br />
+&mdash; des Rois, <a href="#Page_48">48</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Sainte-Alliance, <a href="#Page_48">48</a><br />
+&mdash; salmi of, <a href="#Page_49">49</a><br />
+&mdash; stewed with cabbage, <a href="#Page_49">49</a><br />
+&mdash; stuffed with oysters, <a href="#Page_50">50</a><br />
+&mdash; &mdash; &mdash; tomatoes, <a href="#Page_50">50</a><br />
+&mdash; en surprise, <a href="#Page_51">51</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Suisse, <a href="#Page_51">51</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Tregothran, <a href="#Page_52">52</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Victoria, <a href="#Page_52">52</a><br />
+<br />
+Pigeons à la duchesse, <a href="#Page_53">53</a><br />
+&mdash; à la financière, <a href="#Page_53">53</a><br />
+&mdash; à la merveilleuse, <a href="#Page_53">53</a><br />
+&mdash; ballotines of, <a href="#Page_54">54</a><br />
+&mdash; en poqueton, <a href="#Page_54">54</a><br />
+&mdash; en ragoût de crevettes, <a href="#Page_55">55</a><br />
+&mdash; au soleil, <a href="#Page_55">55</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Soussel, <a href="#Page_56">56</a><br />
+<br />
+Plovers in brandy, <a href="#Page_56">56</a><br />
+&mdash; golden, <a href="#Page_57">57</a><br />
+&mdash; &mdash; aux champignons, <a href="#Page_57">57</a><br />
+&mdash; aux truffes, <a href="#Page_57">57</a><br />
+<br />
+Pullet, stuffed, <a href="#Page_57">57</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Quails à la Beaconsfield, <a href="#Page_58">58</a><br />
+&mdash; en caisse, <a href="#Page_59">59</a><br />
+&mdash; compôte of, <a href="#Page_59">59</a><br />
+&mdash; and green peas, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Rabbit, boudins of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Maintenon, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+&mdash; galantine of, <a href="#Page_61">61</a><br />
+&mdash; gibelotte of, <a href="#Page_61">61</a><br />
+&mdash; fillets of, with cucumber, <a href="#Page_61">61</a><br />
+&mdash; fricandeau of, <a href="#Page_62">62</a><br />
+&mdash; fritters, <a href="#Page_62">62</a><br />
+&mdash; klösse, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span><br />
+&mdash; en papillote, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br />
+&mdash; pie à la Provençale, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br />
+&mdash; pilau, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br />
+&mdash; pudding, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Tartare, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Wanderer, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Roebuck cutlets, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Snipe à la minute, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+&mdash; pie, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+&mdash; &mdash; à la Danoise, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+&mdash; hot raised, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+&mdash; soufflé, <a href="#Page_68">68</a><br />
+&mdash; à la superlative, <a href="#Page_68">68</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Teal, devilled, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+&mdash; pudding, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Teal, salmi of, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+&mdash; stewed, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Turkey drumsticks, devilled, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+&mdash; en daube, <a href="#Page_71">71</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Venison cutlets, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a><br />
+&mdash; haricot, <a href="#Page_72">72</a><br />
+&mdash; pastry, <a href="#Page_72">72</a><br />
+&mdash; puffs, <a href="#Page_72">72</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Widgeon, salmi of, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Wild ducks, fillets of, <a href="#Page_74">74</a><br />
+<br />
+Wildfowl à la Bigarade, <a href="#Page_74">74</a><br />
+<br />
+Woodcock au chasseur, <a href="#Page_74">74</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Lucullus, <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+&mdash; à la Périgueux, <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+&mdash; en surprise, <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+&mdash; salmi à la Lucullus, <a href="#Page_76">76</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<h4>PRINTED BY<br />
+SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE<br />
+LONDON<br />
+</h4>
+
+<div><br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<p class="notes">
+Transcriber's Notes:<br />
+Left inconsistent hyphenation in place<br />
+Page 44: Changed trail to tail<br />
+Index: Corrected page number for Pigeons à la financière<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Dressed Game and Poultry à la Mode, by
+Harriet A. de Salis
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Dressed Game and Poultry a la Mode, by
+Harriet A. de Salis
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dressed Game and Poultry a la Mode
+
+Author: Harriet A. de Salis
+
+Release Date: April 14, 2010 [EBook #31982]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY A LA MODE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joseph R. Hauser and The Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+ DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY
+
+
+
+
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+ | WORKS BY MRS. DE SALIS. |
+ | |
+ | |
+ | SAVOURIES A LA MODE. Eighth Edition. Fcp. |
+ | 8vo. 1_s._ |
+ | |
+ | ENTREES A LA MODE. Fourth Edition. Fcp. |
+ | 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | SOUPS AND DRESSED FISH A LA MODE. |
+ | Second Edition. Fcp. 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | SWEETS AND SUPPER DISHES A LA MODE. |
+ | Fcp. 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | OYSTERS A LA MODE; or, the Oyster and over |
+ | One Hundred Ways of Cooking it; to which are added a few |
+ | Recipes for Cooking all kinds of Shelled Fish. Second |
+ | Edition. Fcp. 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | DRESSED VEGETABLES A LA MODE. Fcp. |
+ | 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY A LA MODE. |
+ | Fcp. 8vo. 1_s._ 6_d._ |
+ | |
+ | |
+ | London: LONGMANS, GREEN, & CO |
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY
+
+
+ _A LA MODE_
+
+
+ BY
+
+ MRS DE SALIS
+
+
+
+
+ AUTHORESS OF 'SAVOURIES A LA MODE' 'ENTREES A LA MODE'
+ 'SOUPS AND DRESSED FISH A LA MODE' 'OYSTERS A LA MODE'
+ 'SWEETS A LA MODE' AND 'VEGETABLES A LA MODE'
+
+
+ 'One loves the pheasant wing
+ And one the leg'
+ POPE
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON
+ LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
+ AND NEW YORK: 15 EAST 16^{th} STREET
+ 1888
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
+ LONDON
+
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+At this the sporting season of the year, I venture to offer to the
+public another of my little series in the form of Dressed Game and
+Poultry. No doubt many of the recipes are well known, but it has been my
+aim to collect from _all_ the culinary preserves such recipes that from
+personal experience I know to be good. All the known and unknown tomes
+on the gourmet's art have been consulted, and I have to thank the
+authors for this assistance to my work, as well as those _cordons bleus_
+from whom I have practically learnt some few of them.
+
+I shall be very pleased to correspond with any of my readers who may
+wish to discourse on matters relative to the dinner table and its
+adjuncts, floral decorations among the number.
+
+ H. A. DE SALIS.
+
+HAMPTON LEA, SUTTON,
+SURREY, 1888.
+
+
+
+
+DRESSED GAME AND POULTRY
+
+A LA MODE.
+
+
+Blackbird Pie.
+
+Stuff the birds with the crumb of a French roll soaked in a little milk,
+which put in a stewpan with 1-1/2 ounces of butter, a chopped shalot,
+some parsley, pepper, salt, a grate of nutmeg, and the yolks of two
+small eggs. Stir over the fire till it becomes a thick paste, and fill
+the insides of the birds with it. Line the bottom of the pie-dish with
+fried collops of rump steak, and place the birds on them neatly. Add
+four hard-boiled yolks of eggs, and pour gravy all over, cover with puff
+paste, and bake for one hour and a quarter.
+
+
+Blanquette of Chicken.
+
+Cut the meat from a cold boiled fowl, in small pieces. Stew down the
+bones in one pint of water, a bouquet garni, add a little salt and white
+pepper to taste. Then strain the stock, add to it three or four peeled
+mushrooms finely minced, and let them cook in this sauce; when done put
+in the pieces of fowl to warm through, thicken with the yolks of two
+eggs. Add lemon juice and serve hot.
+
+
+Blanquette of Chicken aux Concombres.
+
+Boil a chicken and cut it into neat joints. Cut a cucumber in pieces and
+fry in butter, put them in a little stock, which reduce; have reduced
+half a pint of veloute sauce with a few trimmings of cucumber in it.
+Pour this through a tammy over the fowls, set it on the fire, and as
+soon as it bubbles add a liaison of three yolks of eggs, work in a
+little butter and lemon juice, drain the pieces of cucumber in a cloth,
+throw them in, and serve them in an open vol au vent, garnished with
+flowers of puff paste.
+
+
+Capilotade of Fowl or Turkey.
+
+Take the remains of a cold fowl or turkey, and cut it into neat joints.
+Chop up three or four mushrooms, some parsley, a shalot, and a piece of
+butter the size of a walnut, and let all fry together for a short time;
+then moisten with a little good-flavoured stock, and thicken with flour.
+Add salt to taste, let the sauce boil well, put in the pieces of bird
+for a few minutes; take them out, arrange them on a dish, pour the sauce
+over, and serve.
+
+
+Chicken a la Bonne Femme.
+
+Cut up a chicken into joints, warm up three onions and three turnips in
+butter; when brown add the pieces of fowl. Season with salt and pepper,
+saute over the fire for ten minutes. Then stir in two tablespoonfuls of
+flour, and five minutes after add a tumblerful of stock, a wineglass of
+white wine, a bouquet of mixed herbs, and half a pound of peeled
+tomatoes, with all the pips carefully removed. Cook over a slow fire for
+twenty-five minutes, add about half a pound of mushrooms peeled and cut
+up to the size of a shilling, leave it on the fire for ten minutes; take
+out the bouquet of herbs, season with an ounce of finely-chopped
+parsley, dish up the pieces of chicken in a pyramid, and pour the sauce
+and vegetables over.
+
+
+Braised Drumsticks of Chicken.
+
+Braise the drumsticks, and arrange them uprightly in tent fashion, and
+all around and between the drumsticks should be finely chopped salad.
+Alternate slices of tongue and ham should be placed at the edge of the
+salad, and the border of the dish ornamented with thin rounds of
+beetroot.
+
+
+Chickens Chiringrate.
+
+Cut off the feet of a chicken, break the breastbone flat, but be careful
+not to break the skin. Flour it and fry it in butter, drain all the fat
+out of the pan, but leave the chicken in. Make a farce from half a pound
+of fillet of beef, half a pound of veal, ten ounces of cooked ham, a
+shalot, a bouquet garni, and a piece of carrot, pepper, and salt; cook
+in stock, and then pass it through a sieve, and lay this farce over the
+chicken. After stewing the chicken for a quarter of an hour, make a rich
+gravy from the stock, and add a few mushrooms and two spoonfuls of port
+wine; boil all up well, and pour over and around the chicken.
+
+
+Chicken a la Continental.
+
+Beat up two eggs with butter, pepper, salt, and lemon-juice; then cut up
+the fowls, dip them in the egg paste, and roll them in crumbs and fried
+parsley. Fry in clarified dripping, and pour over the dish any white or
+green vegetable ragout, made hot; grate Parmesan over all.
+
+
+Chicken a la Davenport.
+
+Stuff a fowl with a forcemeat made of the hearts and livers, an anchovy,
+the yolk of a hard-boiled egg, one onion, a little spice, and a little
+shred veal-kidney fat. Sew up the neck and vent, brown the fowl in the
+oven, then stew it in stock till tender. Serve with white mushroom
+sauce.
+
+
+Chicken a l'Italienne.
+
+Pass a knife under the skin of the back, and cut out the backbone
+without injuring the skin or breaking off the rump, draw out the
+breastbone and break the merrythought; flatten the fowl and put two
+skewers through it. Put it into a marinade of oil, sliced onion,
+eschalot, parsley, thyme, and a bay leaf, spice, pepper, and salt, in
+which let them soak a few hours. Broil them before the fire; when done,
+dish the fowls, garnish them with hot pickle, serve them with a brown
+Italian sauce over, with a few onions in it.
+
+
+Chicken a la Matador.
+
+Cut a chicken into fillets and neat joints. Mince finely a Spanish onion
+and stew it with two ounces of butter, a few drops of lemon, pepper, and
+salt; when it has been stewed for half an hour, pass it through a tammy,
+and mix in with it a good tablespoonful of aspic jelly. Mask the chicken
+with this, and warm up the chicken in the bain-marie.
+
+
+Fillets of Chicken a la Cardinal.
+
+Cook some fillets of chicken in butter, and when done place them in a
+circle round an entree dish, with a mushroom between each fillet. Fill
+the centre with Allemagne sauce, to which has been added some lobster
+and crayfish butter to make it red. Garnish with crayfish tails if
+handy.
+
+
+Fried Chicken a la Orly.
+
+Cut up a chicken into joints. Season with salt, pepper, parsley, a
+bayleaf, and lemon juice, sprinkle with flour and fry in butter; dip
+some sliced onions into flour and fry. When done, dish up the chicken in
+a pyramid, garnish with the fried onions and cover with tomato sauce.
+
+
+Fried Chicken a la Suisse.
+
+Roast a chicken and cut it into fillets and neat joints. Sprinkle some
+finely minced herbs, mignonette pepper, and salt over them. Let them
+remain for an hour, then dip them in frying batter and fry. Serve with
+fried parsley and tomato puree.
+
+
+Fricassee of Chicken.
+
+American Recipe.
+
+Clean, wash, and cut up the fowls. Lay them in salt and water for half
+an hour. Put them in a saucepan with enough cold water to cover them and
+half a pound of salt pork cut into thin strips. Cover closely and let
+them heat very slowly. Then stew for over an hour, if the fowls _are
+tender_; if not they may take from three to four hours. They must be
+cooked _very slowly_. When tender, add a chopped onion, a shalot,
+parsley, and pepper. Cover closely again, and when it has heated to
+boiling, stir in a teacupful of milk, to which have been added two
+beaten eggs and two tablespoonfuls of flour. Boil up and add an ounce of
+butter. Arrange the chickens neatly in an entree dish, pour the gravy
+over and serve.
+
+
+Fritot of Chicken aux Tomates.
+
+Take the remains of a boiled fowl and cut into pieces the size of a
+small cutlet. Shake a little flour over them and put them aside. Prepare
+a batter made of half a pound of Vienna flour, the yolk of one egg, half
+a gill of salad oil, and a gill of light coloured ale. Mix all these
+together lightly till it will mask the tip of your finger, add half a
+pint of puree of tomato, and mix well together. Dip the chicken cutlets
+into this batter, masking them well, and then put them in good lard and
+fry, and place them on a wire sieve as they are cooked, keeping them
+near the fire to keep them hot and crisp. Dish piled in a pyramid with
+tomatoes whole and tomato sauce round.
+
+
+Chicken Nouilles au Parmesan.
+
+Take a large fowl, and when trussed put a lump of butter inside it, and
+cover the breast with fat bacon. Put it into a stewpan with an onion, a
+carrot, a piece of celery; cover with water and boil slowly for fifty
+minutes. Garnish the dish on which it is served with a pint of Nouilles
+boiled in a stewpan of boiling water for twenty minutes, drained, and
+then put into another saucepan with two ounces of butter. Sprinkle in
+two ounces of Parmesan cheese and warm up for five minutes, then garnish
+the fowl with them, and pour over it a pint of rich Bechamel sauce, in
+which two ounces of Parmesan cheese has been mixed. The Nouilles are
+made by mixing half a pound of butter with three eggs till it becomes a
+thick smooth paste, roll it out very thin, cut it into strips an inch
+wide, and place four or five of these on the top of each other, shred
+them in thin slices like Julienne vegetables, and drain them.
+
+
+Chicken Pudding a la Reine.
+
+Take the meat from a cold fowl and pound it in a mortar, after removing
+the skin and sinews. Boil in light stock a couple of good tablespoonfuls
+of rice. When it is done and has soaked up the rice, add the pounded
+chicken to it, with a gill of cream, pepper, and salt. If not moist
+enough, add a little more cream. Butter a plain mould, fill it with the
+rice and chicken, tie a pudding cloth closely over, and put the mould
+into a stewpan of hot water to boil for an hour. The water should only
+reach about three-quarters up the mould. When done, turn it out and
+serve a good white mushroom sauce round it.
+
+
+Chicken and Rice.
+
+Pollo con Arroz (Spanish Recipe).
+
+Cut a fowl into joints, wipe quite dry, and trim neatly. Put a wineglass
+of the best olive oil in a stewpan, let it get hot. Put in the chicken,
+stir and turn the joints and sprinkle with salt. When the chicken is a
+golden brown add some chopped onions, one or two red chillies, and fry
+all together. Meanwhile have ready four tomatoes cut in quarters, and
+two teacupfuls of rice well washed. Mix these with the chicken and pour
+in a very small quantity of broth and stew till the rice is cooked and
+the broth dried up. Sprinkle a little chopped parsley and serve in a
+deep dish without a cover, as the steam must not be kept in.
+
+
+Chicken in Savoury Jelly.
+
+Take a large chicken and roast it. Boil a calf's foot to a strong jelly,
+take out the foot and skim off the fat; beat up the whites of two eggs
+and mix them with a quarter of a pint of white wine vinegar, the juice
+of one lemon, a little salt, a tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar, and a
+claret-glassful of sherry. Put these to the jelly, and when it has
+boiled five or six minutes strain it through a jelly bag till clear.
+Then put a little into an oblong baking tin (big enough for a
+half-quartern loaf), and when it is nearly set put in the chicken with
+its breast downwards; the chicken having been masked all over with white
+sauce, in which aspic has been well mixed, and ornamented with a device
+of truffles cut in stars and kite shapes. When the chicken is in, fill
+up the mould gradually with the remainder of the jelly. Let it stand for
+some hours, or place it on ice before turning it out.
+
+
+Chicken with Spinach.
+
+Poach nicely in the gravy five or six eggs. Dress them on flattened
+balls of spinach round the dish and serve the fowl in the centre,
+rubbing down the liver to thicken the gravy and liquor in which the fowl
+has been stewed, which pour over it for sauce, skimming it well.
+Mushrooms, oysters, and forcemeat balls should be put into the sauce.
+
+
+Chicken Stewed Whole.
+
+Fill the inside of a chicken with large oysters and mushrooms and fasten
+a tape round to keep them in. Put it in a tin pan with a cover, and put
+this into a large boiling pot with boiling water, which must not quite
+reach up to the top of the pan the chicken is in. Keep it boiling till
+the chicken is done, which would be in about an hour's time after it
+begins to simmer. Remove the scum occasionally, and replenish with water
+as it boils away; take all the gravy from it and put it into a small
+saucepan, keeping the chicken warm. Thicken the gravy with butter,
+flour, and add two tablespoonfuls of chopped oysters, the yolks of two
+eggs boiled hard and minced fine, some seasoning, and a gill of cream.
+Boil five minutes and dish the fowls.
+
+
+Cotelettes a l'Ecarlate.
+
+Make a stiff forcemeat from the breast of a fowl or pheasant, or the two
+breasts of partridge or grouse. Cut some slices of tongue into cutlet
+shapes. Take some more tongue, pound and pass it through a sieve and mix
+it with the forcemeat. Season with a little cayenne and mushroom
+flavour. Butter and fill up some cutlet moulds with the forcemeat, and
+steam them in the oven. Then turn out the cutlets and place them on a
+baking sheet. Glaze them and replace them in the oven for a few seconds.
+Dish up alternately a cutlet of tongue with a cutlet of forcemeat; sauce
+the whole with chaud-froid sauce, and garnish with chopped aspic and
+very small red tomatoes.
+
+
+Forced Capon.
+
+Cut the skin of a capon down the breast, carefully slip the knife down
+so as to take out all the meat, and mix it with a pound of beef suet cut
+small. Beat this together in a marble mortar, and take a pint of large
+oysters cut small, two anchovies, a shalot, a bouquet garni, a little
+mignonette pepper, and the yolks of four eggs. Mix all these well
+together, and lay it on the bones; then draw the skin over it, and sew
+up. Put the capon into a cloth, and boil it an hour and a quarter. Stew
+a dozen oysters in good gravy thickened with a piece of butter rolled in
+flour; take the capon out of the cloth, lay it in its dish, and pour the
+sauce over it.
+
+
+Capon a la Nanterre.
+
+Make a stuffing with the liver of the capon, a dozen roasted chestnuts,
+a piece of butter, parsley, green onions, very little garlic, two yolks
+of eggs, salt and pepper. Stuff the capon, and then roast it, covering
+it with buttered paper. When it is cooked, brush it over with the yolk
+of an egg diluted in a little lukewarm batter; sprinkle breadcrumbs over
+all, and let it brown, and serve with a sharp sauce.
+
+
+Braised Ducks a la St. Michel.
+
+Rub some flour and oil over a couple of ducks, and brown them in the
+oven for a short time. Mix together a cup of Chablis wine and a cup of
+broth, season with pepper and salt; braise the ducks till they are
+tender. Chop some mushrooms, chives, and parsley; mix these in the broth
+in which the ducks were braised. Put the ducks to keep warm before the
+fire whilst the sauce 'reduces.' Dredge in a very little flour, and send
+up the ducks with the sauce round them.
+
+
+Duck a la Mode.
+
+Divide two ducks into quarters, and put them in a stewpan, and sprinkle
+over them flour, pepper, and salt. Put into the stewpan several pieces
+of butter, and fry the ducks till a nice brown colour. Remove the frying
+fat, and pour in half a pint of gravy and half a pint of port wine,
+sprinkle in more flour, add a bouquet garni, three minced shalots, an
+anchovy, and a dust of cayenne. Let them stew for twenty minutes, then
+place them on a dish, remove the herbs, clear off the fat, and serve
+with the sauce over them.
+
+
+Braised Duck a la Nivernaise.
+
+Line a braisingpan with slices of bacon, add the duck, cover it with
+bacon, and season with a bouquet of parsley, carrots, thyme, and bay
+leaves; moisten with stock and the same quantity of claret; fix the lid
+very tightly on the pan, and simmer over a slow fire, with hot coals on
+the lid of the stewpan. Cut up some turnips into balls, cook them in
+butter till brown, drain and simmer in brown thickening, moistened with
+a little stock. When the duck is cooked, dish up, and garnish with the
+turnips.
+
+
+Devilled Duck or Teal.
+
+Indian Recipe.
+
+Take a pound of onions, a piece of green ginger, and six chillies.
+Reduce them to a pulp, then add two teaspoonfuls of mustard, pepper,
+salt, cayenne, and chutney, two tablespoonfuls of ketchup, and half a
+bottle of claret. Cut up the duck or teal, and put it into the sauce,
+and let it simmer for a long time--the duck having been previously
+roasted.
+
+
+Duck a la Provence.
+
+Rub the duck over with lemon-juice, fry it in butter for a few minutes;
+sprinkle it with flour; then add sufficient stock to cover it, one
+tablespoonful of ketchup, one carrot; cut up two onions, two cloves, a
+bouquet garni, pepper, and salt. Let this stew for an hour; then take
+out the duck, strain the gravy, and remove all fat, and add plenty of
+mushrooms. Put in some stoned and scalded olives, which boil up for ten
+minutes and dish up with the duck. The olives should have been soaked
+three hours previously.
+
+
+Duck.
+
+Canard a Puree Perto.
+
+Take a pint of freshly shelled peas, boil them in a little thin stock,
+and rub them through a sieve; stew a duck in stock with a little salt, a
+dozen peppercorns, half a clove of garlic, six small onions, a bayleaf,
+and bouquet garni. When done, pass the same through a sieve, and add to
+it the puree of peas; reduce the whole to the consistency of thick
+cream. Serve the duck with the puree over it.
+
+
+Salmi of Duck.
+
+Take the giblets of a duck and the flesh off the carcase, and the bones,
+and stew them in equal quantities of claret and stock, salt, pepper, and
+three shalots. Reduce and simmer till it is thick, then pass through a
+sieve, and take it off the fire before it boils. Cut up the duck into
+neat pieces and lay it in the stewpan with the gravy. Squeeze juice of
+strained orange over it, and serve en pyramide.
+
+
+Stewed Duck and Turnips.
+
+Brown the duck in a stewpan with some butter, peel and cut some young
+turnips into equal sizes, and brown in the same butter; stir in a little
+powdered sugar, reduce some stock to a thin brown sauce, season with
+salt, pepper, a bouquet of parsley, chives, half a head of garlic, and a
+bayleaf. Stew the duck in this sauce, and when half cooked add the
+turnips, turn the duck from time to time, being careful not to break the
+turnips, cook slowly, and skim off all grease and serve.
+
+
+Roast Goose Stuffed with Chestnuts.
+
+Prepare a goose and stuff it with a mixture of minced bacon, the liver,
+salt, pepper, grated nutmeg, and chestnuts, which have been previously
+cooked and peeled. Baste the goose well whilst roasting. When cooked,
+serve with its own gravy, and sprinkle with salt, pepper, and the juice
+of a lemon.
+
+
+Goose a la Royale.
+
+Having boned the goose, stuff it with the following forcemeat:--Twelve
+sage leaves, two onions, and two apples, all shred very fine. Mix with
+four ounces grated bread, four ounces of beef suet, two glasses of port
+wine, a grate of nutmeg, pepper, and salt to taste, the grated peel of a
+lemon, and the beaten yolks of four eggs; sew up the goose and fry in
+butter till a light brown, and put it into two quarts of good stock and
+let it stew for two hours, and till the liquor is nearly consumed; then
+take up the goose, strain the liquor and take off the fat, add a
+spoonful of lemon pickle, the same of browning and port wine, a
+teaspoonful of essence of anchovy, a little cayenne and salt, boil it up
+and pour over the goose.
+
+
+Game and Macaroni.
+
+Put some ounces of macaroni into boiling stock, then add any game cut
+into small joints three parts cooked. Add some lean raw ham, chopped
+mushrooms, pepper, and salt.
+
+
+Game Pie.
+
+Take ten ounces of veal and the same of veal fat, and chop it very fine,
+season with pepper, salt, and cayenne. Arrange this as a lining round a
+china raised pie mould. Fill in with fillets of grouse, pheasant,
+partridge, and hare, strips of tongue, ham, hard-boiled yolks of eggs,
+button mushrooms, pistachio nuts, truffles, and pate de foie gras; cover
+in with more of the mince, then put a paste on the top for cooking it
+in. Bake from two and a half to three hours. Remove the paste and fill
+the mould up with clarified meat jelly, partly cold; let this set.
+Ornament the top with chopped aspic and alternate slices of lemon and
+cucumber round. Croutons of red and yellow aspic should be arranged at
+the base of the mould.
+
+
+Game Rissoles au Poulet a la Careme.
+
+Roll out very thin three-quarters of a pound of Brioche paste. Place
+upon it, two inches from the edge, minced fowl or game, prepared as for
+croquets, and rolled up between two teaspoons in balls the size of a
+nutmeg. Place these an inch from each other; egg the paste all round and
+fold the edge of it over the balls of mince. Press it firmly down, and
+with a paste stamp two inches wide cut the rissoles, keeping the mince
+balls exactly in the centre of each. Lay them on a hot tin that the
+paste may rise and fry them in lard not too hot, turning them with a
+skewer. They will become quite round. When of a good golden colour drain
+them and serve directly, and dish up in a pyramid.
+
+
+Salad of Game a la Francatelli.
+
+Boil eight eggs hard; shell them, and cut a thin slice off the bottom of
+each, cut each into four lengthwise. Make a very thin flat border of
+butter about one inch from the edge of the dish the salad is to be
+served on, fix the pieces of egg upright close to each other, the yolk
+outside, or alternately the white and yolk, lay in the centre a layer of
+fresh salad, and, having cut a freshly roasted young grouse into eight
+or ten pieces, prepare a sauce as follows: Put a spoonful of eschalots
+finely chopped in a basin, one ditto of castor sugar, the yolk of one
+egg, a teaspoonful of chopped parsley, tarragon, and chervil, and a
+little salt. Mix in by degrees four spoonfuls of oil and two of white
+vinegar. When well mixed put it on ice, and when ready to serve up whip
+a gill of cream, which lightly mix with it. Then lay the inferior parts
+of the grouse on the salad, sauce over so as to cover each piece, then
+lay over the salad and the remainder of the grouse, sauce over, and
+serve. The eggs can be ornamented with a little dot of radish or
+beetroot on the point. Anchovy and gherkin, cut into small diamonds, may
+be placed between.
+
+
+Grouse in Aspic.
+
+Roast a brace of grouse, and skin them, and mask them with brown sauce
+in which aspic has been mixed. Cut some pistachio kernels into pretty
+shapes and ornament the birds. Take a large square tin mould (a baking
+tin will do), pour in a layer of pale aspic, and when it is all but cold
+place the grouse on it breast downward, one turned one way and one the
+other, then gradually fill it up with the aspic, and put on ice. Turn
+out and decorate the base with chopped aspic, truffles, parsley, and
+tomatoes.
+
+
+Croustades of Grouse a la Diable.
+
+Cut some fillets of grouse into cutlet shapes, also some slices of fried
+bread; sprinkle the latter with grated Parmesan cheese. Put the fillets
+of grouse on the cheesed bread. Mask them with a puree of tomatoes and a
+tiny dust of cayenne, then add a little more grated Parmesan, a little
+parsley, some breadcrumbs, and little pieces of butter. Salamander over
+and serve hot.
+
+
+Grouse a l'Ecossaise.
+
+Take a brace of grouse; put three ounces of good dripping or butter
+inside each, but not in the crop. Put them down to roast, and baste till
+cooked. Have a slice of toast in the pan under them just before they are
+cooked. Parboil the liver, pound with butter, salt, and cayenne, and
+spread it on the toast.
+
+
+Grouse a la Financiere.
+
+Take a brace of grouse; boil the livers for a few minutes, and pound
+them in a mortar with three ounces of butter, a little salt, pepper, a
+grate of nutmeg, one tablespoonful of breadcrumbs, and three or four
+mushrooms. Stuff the grouse with this, truss and roast them, and baste
+plentifully. Take some sauce espagnole, add a few mushrooms and a dust
+of cayenne. Let all boil up together and serve with the grouse.
+
+
+Friantine of Grouse.
+
+Cut with two cutters, one larger than the other, twelve thin flat pieces
+of pastry, put on the centre of the largest a tablespoonful of quenelle
+meat and spread it out; in the centre of this put a tablespoonful of the
+breast of a grouse, cut up with two ounces of lean ham. Mix well and put
+it into a stewpan with three-quarters of a pint of white cream sauce.
+Warm up and let it get cold. Cover this with the smaller sized pieces of
+pastry, having wetted the inside of each with yolk of egg to make them
+adhere to the lowest pastry, press down tightly with the smallest
+cutters, and cut the bottom pastry to the size of the smaller cutter.
+Egg and breadcrumb. Arrange them in a frying basket and fry in boiling
+lard a nice brown. Serve garnished with fried parsley.
+
+
+Grouse Kromesquis.
+
+Take the remains of cold grouse and mince it very fine. Mix with it a
+couple of tablespoonfuls of grated ham or tongue. Divide into small
+sausage shapes, dip each in batter, fry a pale golden colour and serve
+very hot, garnished with crisped parsley.
+
+
+Grouse Marinaded.
+
+German Recipe.
+
+Hang the birds as long as possible, then pluck and draw them and wipe
+their insides with a soft cloth. Mince an onion; take about a dozen
+peppercorns, twenty juniper berries, three bayleaves, and put these into
+a gill of vinegar. Let the grouse soak in this for three days, turning
+them two or three times daily, and pouring the marinade over them. Stuff
+the birds with turkey forcemeat and lard the breasts. Place them in
+front of a clear fire, baste constantly, and serve with slices of lemon
+round the dish.
+
+
+Grouse au Naturel.
+
+Grouse should be wiped inside, but never washed. Have a brisk fire, and
+when the bird is trussed, place it before a brisk fire, and before it is
+taken down the breast should be basted with a little butter, and frothed
+and browned before it is sent up. A good sized grouse requires nearly
+three-quarters of an hour to cook it. Serve fried breadcrumbs and bread
+sauce with grouse.
+
+
+Grouse Pie.
+
+Take two or three grouse, cut off the wings and legs, and tuck the
+drumsticks in through a slit in the thigh; singe the birds; split them
+in halves; season them with pepper and salt. Place some pieces of very
+tender beefsteak at the bottom of a pie dish, add chopped mushrooms,
+parsley, shalot, and two teaspoonfuls of chutnee sauce, and sprinkle
+over the steak. Place the halves of the grouse neatly on the top; add a
+little more seasoning; moisten with sufficient gravy made from the
+necks, legs, and wings. Cover with puff paste, and bake for about an
+hour and a half.
+
+
+Pressed Grouse.
+
+Boil a brace of grouse till very tender; season, and then take away all
+the meat and pull it out very fine, removing all skin. Add to the liquor
+in which they were boiled a tablespoonful of gelatine for each three
+pounds of grouse, and keep stirring it in the boiling liquor till it is
+quite dissolved; place the grouse in a deep tin basin, and pour the
+liquor over it whilst hot; stir it well, so that the meat may become
+thoroughly saturated with the liquor, then turn a plate over it, put on
+a heavy weight, let it get cold, and turn out. It may be made ornamental
+by boiling eggs hard, halving them, and putting the flat side on the
+basin or mould in which the grouse has to be pressed.
+
+
+Grouse Salad.
+
+Cut up a brace of cold grouse, and let them marinade in two
+tablespoonfuls of salad oil and the juice of a lemon, with a little salt
+and pepper, and let them remain in this for three hours. Pound the yolk
+of a hard-boiled egg very smooth, and mix it well with the yolk of a raw
+egg, a teaspoonful of salt, a little pepper, a dust of cayenne, and half
+a teaspoonful of finely-chopped onion, pouring in gradually drop by drop
+some fine salad oil; stir constantly, and, as it thickens, add a little
+tarragon vinegar, then add more oil and vinegar till there is enough
+sauce. Put some shred lettuce on a dish, place some marinaded grouse on
+it, pour the dressing over, and garnish with fillets of anchovies,
+slices of hard-boiled eggs, and sprigs of chervil. Chop up some savoury
+jelly, and place round it like a wreath.
+
+
+Scallops of Grouse a la Financiere.
+
+Take a brace of grouse, remove the skin, take off all the flesh, and
+scrape the flesh into very fine shreds. Chop up all the bones and necks,
+and put them into a saucepan with an onion, five sprigs of thyme, three
+of parsley, and a small carrot; cover with water, and let it boil slowly
+for three hours, skimming when it boils. Make a mixture of about half a
+pint of stock and two ounces of butter, and let boil. When the stock
+boils take 3-1/4 ounces of fine Vienna flour, and stir it well over the
+fire for about three minutes; then add the yolks of three eggs, stirring
+over the fire again. Take it then from the saucepan, and place it on a
+plate to get cool; then pound the shredded grouse till quite fine, using
+a gill of cream; now pass it through a fine sieve. Take a plain round
+mould, holding a pint and a half, butter it, and ornament with truffles
+cut in devices. Cut up three or four mushrooms, and mix in with the
+grouse panada, and fill the mould. Place buttered paper over it, and let
+it steam for half an hour; then turn out and let it get cold, and when
+cold cut it into a number of scallops of the same size. Egg and
+breadcrumb them, dip them in clarified butter, and fry a pale gold
+colour, and serve on a border of mashed potatoes. Make a sauce as
+follows:--Boil one glass of Marsala in half a pint of brown sauce for
+five minutes; place in the centre of them some mushrooms, truffles, and
+cockscombs, and pour sauce over these, but do not put the sauce over the
+scallops.
+
+
+Grouse Souffle.
+
+Take the breasts of two grouse already cooked, pound them in a mortar
+with two ounces of fresh butter and a very small piece of onion. Pass
+them through a sieve, add four eggs, beat the whites to a stiff froth,
+season with a little salt and dust of cayenne. Place it in a souffle
+dish, and bake it in a quick oven.
+
+
+Timbale of Grouse a la Vitellius.
+
+Simmer a slice of tongue in a stewpan till nearly cooked. Cut it up into
+fine dice, and put it back into the saucepan with four truffles, four
+tomatoes, and an ounce of butter; add a little cornflour to thicken it.
+Moisten with half a pint of stock and a gill of claret. Reduce this,
+skim off all the fat; then add some finely-minced grouse, a sprig of
+parsley, and six anchovies which have been soaked in milk. Warm these
+over a slow fire, but do not let them boil; when done, pour into a fancy
+mould lined with light puff paste. Bake, turn out, and serve very hot,
+garnished with crisped parsley.
+
+
+To Cook Hare.
+
+The great object in cooking a hare is to keep it as moist as possible,
+and therefore the hare must not be put too close to the fire in the
+first stage of roasting. Prepare a stuffing of quarter of a pound of
+beef suet, chopped finely, two ounces of uncooked ham, a teaspoonful of
+chopped parsley, and two teaspoonfuls of dried mixed savoury herbs; add
+to this a quarter of the rind of a lemon, chopped very fine, a dust of
+cayenne pepper, salt, five ounces of breadcrumbs, and two whole eggs.
+Pound this in the mortar. The liver may be minced and pounded in with
+these ingredients if fresh. Place the stuffing in the hare, and place at
+a distance from the fire; have plenty of dripping melted in the dripping
+pan, and basting should go on and be continued from the very first. Then
+as the hare is getting on, baste with good milk, and then baste well
+with butter; put the hare near the fire so as to froth the butter, and
+at the same time dredge the hare with some flour, so as to get a good
+brown colour, and serve good rich gravy _round_ it with half a glass of
+port wine in a tureen, and currant jelly should be handed with it.
+
+
+Hare Cutlets a la Chef.
+
+Take a freshly-killed hare, save the blood, paunch and skin it. Roast
+it, then cut off the fillets and cut them aslant and flatten them. Put
+the bones of the hare into a saucepan with two onions sliced, one
+good-sized carrot, a tiny piece of garlic, two cloves, and a bouquet
+garni, and one bayleaf. Moisten with a glass of white wine, and let all
+this steep and stew for an hour; then pass through a sieve, add a
+quarter of a boiled Spanish onion, and thicken with the blood of the
+hare. Make some hare stuffing, and moisten with some of the sauce, and
+make it into cutlets. To form cutlets similar to the fillet cutlets,
+place them in a frying-pan, and let them poach in water. Place the hare
+fillets and the stuffing cutlets in the pan and fry to a good colour in
+clarified butter. Put a small piece of the small bones of the hare in
+every cutlet and dish them in a crown. Fill the centre with a mixture of
+small onions, mushrooms, and small pieces of bacon, cut into dice which
+have been stewed in some of the sauce. Hand red currant jelly with this
+dish.
+
+
+Hare en Daube.
+
+French Recipe.
+
+The hare must not be too high; cut it into pieces as for jugged hare.
+Rub into a stewpan a bit of bacon cut into squares; put the hare into
+it, together with thyme, bayleaf, spices, salt, pepper, and as much
+garlic as will go on the point of a knife. Add a little bacon rind
+blanched and cut into the shape of lozenges. When the whole has a
+uniform colour, moisten with a good glass of white wine, put on a close
+lid, and stew for four hours upon hot cinders. When ready to be served,
+pour away the lard, the spice, and the fat, and add a little essence of
+ham, and send to table hot.
+
+
+Hare Derrynane Fashion.
+
+Take three or four eggs, a pint of new milk, a couple of handfuls of
+flour, three yolks. Make them into a batter, and when the hare is
+roasting baste it well, repeating the operation till the batter thickens
+and forms a coating all over the hare. This should be allowed to brown
+but not to burn.
+
+
+Filet de Lievre a la Muette.
+
+Cut a hare into fillets and stew them with a mince of chickens' livers,
+truffles, shalots in a rich brown gravy with a tumblerful of champagne
+in it.
+
+
+Gateaux de Lievre.
+
+Mince the best parts of a hare with a little mutton suet. Season the
+mince highly with herbs and good stock. Pound it in a mortar with some
+red currant jelly and make up into small cakes with raw eggs. Flour and
+fry them and dish them in a pyramid.
+
+
+Hare a la Matanzas.
+
+Paunch, skin, and clean a hare marinaded in vinegar for a couple of days
+with four onions sliced, three shalots, a couple of sprigs of parsley,
+pepper and salt. After two days take the hare out and drain it. Farce it
+with a stuffing made of the flesh of a chicken, three whole eggs, the
+liver, and a slice of bacon, all finely chopped, mixed and seasoned with
+pepper, salt, and a bouquet garni. Now put the hare in a stewpan with
+slices of bacon all over it, some sliced carrots, two onions stuck with
+cloves, and half a pint of consomme. Put some live coals on the lid of
+the saucepan and let it cook for three hours.
+
+
+Hare a la Mode.
+
+Skin the hare and cut it up in into joints and lard with fine fillets of
+bacon; place in an earthenware pot, with some slices of salt pork,
+chopped bacon, salt, mixed spice, a piece of butter, and half a pint of
+port wine; lay two or three sheets of buttered paper over it; fix on the
+lid tightly and simmer over a slow fire. When nearly done, stir in the
+blood, boil up and serve.
+
+
+Jugged Hare.
+
+Have a wide-mouthed stone jar, and put into it some good brown gravy
+free from fat. Next cut up the hare into neat joints; fry these joints
+in a little butter to brown them a little. Have the jar made hot by
+placing it in the oven, and have a cloth ready to tie over its mouth.
+Put the joints already browned into the jar, and let it stand for
+fifteen minutes on the dresser. After this has stood some time untie the
+jar and add the gravy, with a dust of cinnamon, six cloves, two
+bayleaves, and the juice of half a lemon. The gravy should have onion
+made in it, and should be thickened with a little arrowroot. A
+wineglassful of port should be added, and a good spoonful of red currant
+jelly should be dissolved in it. Next place the jar up to its neck in a
+large saucepan of boiling water, only taking care the jar is well tied
+down. Let it remain in the boiling water from an hour to an hour and a
+half. Stuffing balls, made with the same as the stuffing for roast hare,
+rolled into small balls the size of marbles and thrown into boiling fat,
+should be served with it.
+
+
+To Roast Landrail.
+
+This bird should be trussed like a snipe, and roasted quickly at a brisk
+but not a fierce fire for about fifteen or sixteen minutes. It should be
+dished on fried breadcrumbs, and gravy served in a tureen.
+
+
+Croustade of Larks.
+
+Bone two dozen larks, season, and put into each a piece of pate de foie
+gras (truffled). Roll the larks up into a ball, put them in a pudding
+basin, season them with salt and pepper, and pour three ounces of
+clarified butter over them, and bake in a hot oven for a quarter of an
+hour. Dish them in a fried bread croustade, made by cutting the crust
+from a stale loaf about eight inches long, which must be scooped out in
+the centre and fried in hot lard or butter till it is a good brown.
+Drain it, and then place it in the centre of a dish, sticking it there
+with a little white of egg. Put it into the oven to get hot; then put
+the larks into it, and let it get cold. Garnish with truffles and aspic
+jelly.
+
+
+Larks a la Macedoine.
+
+Take a dozen larks, fill them with forcemeat made of livers, a little
+veal and fat bacon, a dessertspoonful of sweet herbs; pepper and salt to
+taste, and pound all well together in a mortar, and then stuff the birds
+with it. Lay the larks into a deep dish, pour over them a pint of good
+gravy, and bake in a moderate oven for a quarter of an hour. Have a
+pyramid of mashed potatoes ready, and arrange the larks round it, and
+garnish with a macedoine of mixed vegetables.
+
+
+Lark Pie.
+
+Pluck, singe, and flatten the backs of two dozen larks, pound the trail
+and livers in a mortar with scraped bacon and a little thyme, stuff the
+larks with this, and wrap each in a slice of fat bacon. Line a plain
+mould with paste, fill it with the larks, sprinkle them with salt and
+pepper, spread butter all over them, and add two small bayleaves; cover
+with paste, and bake for two hours and a quarter. Can be eaten hot or
+cold. It must be turned out of the mould.
+
+
+Salmi of Larks a la Macedoine, cold.
+
+Take a dozen larks, bone and stuff them with pate de foie gras, and make
+them as nearly as possible of the same size and shape. Make half a pint
+of brown sauce, adding a glass of sherry, a little mushroom ketchup, and
+an ounce of glaze; boil together, and reduce one half, adding a couple
+of spoonfuls of tomato juice; pass through a sieve, and, when nearly
+cold, add a gill of melted aspic. Mask the larks, and place them in a
+saute pan, and cook them; take them out and remove neatly any surplus
+sauce, and dish them in the entree dish in a circle. Take the contents
+of a tin of macedoine of vegetables boiled tender in a quart of water,
+add a dust of salt, a saltspoonful of sugar, and a piece of butter the
+size of a walnut; strain off, and, when cold, toss them in two
+tablespoonfuls of liquid aspic jelly. This macedoine should be piled up
+high and served in the centre. Garnish with chopped aspic round the
+larks, and sippets of aspic beyond this.
+
+
+Lark Puffs.
+
+Make some puff paste, and take half a dozen larks, and brown them in a
+stewpan with a little butter; then take them out and drain them, and put
+into the body of each bird a small lump of fresh butter, a little piece
+of truffle, pepper and salt, and a tablespoonful of thick cream. Truss
+each lark, and wrap it in a slice of fat bacon; cover it with puff
+paste rolled out to the thickness of a quarter of an inch, and shape it
+neatly; put the puffs in a buttered tin, and bake in a brisk oven for
+ten minutes.
+
+
+Leveret a la Minute.
+
+Skin, draw, and cut a leveret into joints; toss in a saucepan with
+butter, salt, pepper, and a bouquet garni. When nearly cooked, add some
+chopped mushrooms, eschalots, parsley, a tablespoonful of flour, a gill
+of stock, and a gill of claret; as soon as it boils, pour into a dish
+and serve.
+
+
+Leveret a la Noel.
+
+Take a leveret, cut off the fillets and toss them in the oven in a
+saute-pan in butter; when cold, slice these fillets in shreds as for
+Julienne vegetables. Shred likewise some truffles, mushrooms, and
+tongue, and bind these together with two tablespoonfuls of good stock,
+in which a glass of port has been put, two cloves, the peel of a Seville
+orange, and a few mushrooms; thicken with butter and flour and tammy.
+Make some game forcemeat with the legs, and with it line some little
+moulds; fill up the empty space with the shredded game and vegetables
+and then cover with a layer of forcemeat. Poach these moulds in a deep
+saute-pan, and when done dish them up round a ragout composed of
+truffles, mushrooms, quenelles, and cockscombs. Sauce the entree with
+gravy made from the bones and thickened. This entree may be served cold,
+when it should be mixed with aspic, and garnished with it also.
+
+
+Salmi of Moor Fowl or Wild Duck.
+
+Carve the birds very neatly, and strip every particle of skin and fat
+from the legs, wings, and breasts, braise the bodies well and put them
+with the skin and other trimmings into a very clean stewpan. Add two or
+three sliced shalots, a bayleaf, a small blade of mace and a few
+peppercorns, then pour in a pint of good veal gravy, and boil briskly
+till reduced nearly half, strain the gravy, pressing the bones well,
+skim off the fat, add a dust of cayenne and squeeze in a few drops of
+lemon; heat the game very gradually in it, but it must not be allowed to
+boil. Place sippets of fried bread round the dish, arrange the birds in
+a pyramid, give the same a boil and pour over. A couple of wineglasses
+of port or claret should be mixed with the gravy.
+
+
+Ortolans in Cases.
+
+Bone as many ortolans as are required, have ready about three rashers of
+bacon chopped fine, which must be put into a saute-pan with two shalots,
+one bayleaf, a bouquet garni, half a teaspoonful of black pepper and
+salt to taste. These must be fried till coloured; then add half a pound
+of calf's liver, cut small, and fried till brown; next place them in a
+mortar and pound them well, add the yolks of three hard boiled eggs and
+some truffle cuttings, pound again, and pass through a sieve; stuff the
+ortolans with this forcemeat, roll them up, and place them in a
+well-oiled paper case, and then bake in a quick oven. Pour over each
+case before serving a gravy made from the bones and trimmings of the
+birds, half a pint of rich gravy and a glass of claret, which should be
+reduced one half: send to table as hot as possible.
+
+
+Ortolans a la Perigourdine.
+
+Cover the ortolans with slices of bacon, and cook them in a bain-marie
+moistened with stock and lemon juice. Take as many truffles as there are
+ortolans, scoop out the centres and boil them in champagne (Saumur will
+do). When done, pour a little puree of game into each truffle, add the
+ortolans, warm for a few seconds in the oven, and serve.
+
+
+Ortolans aux Truffes.
+
+Take as many even large-sized truffles as ortolans; make a large round
+hole in the middle of each truffle, and put in it a little chicken
+forcemeat. Cut off the heads, necks, and feet of the birds, season with
+salt and pepper, and lay each bird on its back in one of the truffles.
+Arrange them in a stewpan, lay thin slices of bacon over them, pour over
+them some good stock, into which a gill of Madeira has been poured, and
+then simmer them very gently for twenty-five minutes. Dish the ortolans
+on toast, and strain the gravy over them.
+
+
+Partridges a la Barbarie.
+
+Truss the birds, and stuff them with chopped truffles and rasped bacon,
+seasoned with salt and pepper and a tiny dust of cayenne. Cut small
+pieces of truffles in the shape of nails; make holes with a penknife in
+the breasts of the birds; widen the holes with a skewer, and fill them
+with the truffles; let this decoration be very regular. Put them into a
+stewpan with slices of bacon round them, and good gravy poured in enough
+to cover the birds. When they have been stewed for twenty minutes glaze
+them; dish them up with a Financiere sauce (see 'Entrees a la Mode').
+
+
+Partridge Blancmanger aux Truffes.
+
+Boil a brace of partridges and let them get cold. Melt about a pint of
+aspic jelly and take a plain round quart mould and pour about a gill of
+aspic jelly into it to mask it by turning the mould round and round in
+the hands till the inside has been entirely covered by the jelly, pour
+away any that does not adhere, and place the mould on ice at once. Cut a
+few large truffles in slices and ornament the bottom of the mould with a
+star, pour on about two tablespoonfuls of a little cold liquid aspic.
+Put into a stewpan a pint of aspic and whisk it till it becomes white as
+cream, then mask the mould with this; pour in enough to half fill it,
+then turn it round and round, covering all the inside of the mould,
+pouring out any superfluity. Skin the partridges and cut off all the
+meat and chop it up: then pound it with a gill of cream in the mortar,
+and then rub through a fine wire sieve. Place this in a large stewpan,
+add half a pint of cream, and mix it with the partridge meat. Collect
+the aspic jelly, melt it, and whip it up and add it to the partridge;
+then fill the mould with this and pour in a little liquid aspic; place
+on ice. To serve this, dip it into warm water the same as a mould of
+jelly, turn it out, and garnish with aspic croutons alternately with
+very small tomatoes; around the top arrange a wreath of chervil.
+
+
+Partridges a la Bearnaise.
+
+Wipe the inside of the partridges with a damp cloth. Cut off the heads,
+and truss the legs like boiled fowls. Put them into a stewpan with two
+tablespoonfuls of oil and a piece of garlic the size of a pea, and shake
+them over a clear fire till slightly browned all over. Then pour over
+them two tablespoonfuls of strong stock, one glassful of sherry, and two
+tablespoonfuls of preserved tomatoes, with a little salt and plenty of
+pepper. Simmer all gently together until the partridges are done enough,
+and serve very hot. The sauce should be highly seasoned.
+
+
+Blanquette of Partridge aux Champignons.
+
+Raise the flesh of a cold partridge, take off the skin; cut the flesh
+into scallops; put some veloute sauce in a stewpan with half a basket of
+mushrooms skinned and sliced. Reduce the sauce till very thick, adding
+enough cream to make it white. Throw it over the partridge scallops, to
+which add a few mushrooms.
+
+
+Broiled Partridges.
+
+Take off the heads and prepare them as if for the spit. Break down the
+breast bone and split them entirely up the back and lay them flat. Shred
+an eschalot as fine as possible and mix it with breadcrumbs. Dip the
+partridges in clarified butter and cover inside and outside with the
+crumbs. Broil them over a clear fire, turning them frequently for a
+quarter of an hour, and serve them up with mushroom sauce.
+
+
+Chartreuse of Partridges.
+
+Boil some carrots and turnips separately, and cut them into pieces two
+inches long and three quarters of an inch in diameter. Braise a couple
+of small summer cabbages, drain well, and stir over the fire till quite
+dry; then roll them on a cloth and cut them into pieces about two inches
+long and an inch thick. Roast a brace of partridges, and cut them into
+neat joints. Butter a plain entree mould, line it at the bottom and the
+sides with buttered paper to form a sort of wall, then fill it up with
+cabbage and the pieces of partridge in alternate layers. Steam the
+chartreuse to make it hot, turn it out of the mould upon an entree dish,
+and garnish with turnips, carrots, and French beans. Send good brown
+sauce to table with it.
+
+
+Partridges aux Choux.
+
+Truss a brace of partridges for boiling, and mince about half a pound of
+fat bacon or pork, and put it into a saucepan on the fire; when it is
+boiling, immerse the birds quickly, and saute them till nicely coloured.
+Have ready a small savoy, which has been well washed and drained, chop
+it up and place it in the saucepan with the partridges, a bouquet garni,
+two pork sausages, pepper and salt to taste; add about half a pint of
+stock, and let all simmer together for two and a half hours. When ready
+to serve, remove the bouquet garni, and serve the chopped cabbage round
+the birds, and the sausages split and divided into four pieces each.
+
+
+Cold Glazed Fillets of Partridge.
+
+Roast a brace of partridges, fillet them, pound the meat from the
+carcases in a mortar with truffles and mushrooms; simmer the bones in
+some vin de Grave, with truffle trimmings, shalots, and a bayleaf, which
+reduce on the fire to about three-quarters the quantity; squeeze through
+a cloth, add two tablespoonfuls of clear stock to it, and stir half of
+it into the pounded meat; mix it thoroughly, and stir it until it boils;
+pass it through a tammy, and leave to get cold. Arrange the fillets,
+with a tomato cut the same shape between each one, in a circle round an
+entree dish; fill the centre with the puree, cover the whole with the
+remainder of the sauce, and garnish with croutons of aspic jelly.
+
+
+Partridges a la Cussy.
+
+Remove all the bones from the birds except the thigh bones and legs,
+stuff them with a forcemeat composed of chopped sweetbread, mushrooms,
+truffles, and cockscombs which have been boiled; sew up the birds to
+their original shape, hold them over hot coals till the breasts are
+quite firm, and cover them with buttered paper. Line a stewpan with a
+slice of ham, two or three onions, carrots, a bouquet garni, a little
+scraped bacon, the partridge bones which have been pounded, salt, and
+pepper; moisten with stock. As soon as the vegetables get soft, add the
+partridges, and simmer over a slow fire. When done, dish up the birds,
+pass the sauce through a tammy, skim off the fat, reduce, and add a few
+truffles or slices of mushrooms, and pour over the partridges.
+
+
+Partridges with Mushrooms.
+
+Take a brace of birds, and prepare about half a pound of button
+mushrooms, and place them in a stewpan with an ounce and a half of
+melted butter; add a slight sprinkling of salt and cayenne, and let them
+simmer for about nine minutes, then turn out all into a plate, and when
+quite cold put it into the bodies of the partridges; sew and truss them
+securely and roast them in the usual way, and serve either mushroom
+sauce round them, or they can be served up with their own gravy only,
+and bread sauce handed.
+
+
+Partridge Pie.
+
+Cut the breasts and legs off two or three birds, sprinkle them with
+pepper and salt, and cook them in the oven smothered in butter, and
+covered with a buttered paper. Pound the carcases, and make them into
+good gravy, but do not thicken it.
+
+Take the livers of the birds with an equal quantity of calf's liver,
+mince both, and toss them in butter over the fire for a minute or two;
+then pound them in a mortar with an equal quantity of bacon, two shalots
+parboiled, with pepper, salt, powdered spice, and sweet herbs to taste.
+When well pounded, pass it through a sieve; put a layer of forcemeat
+into a pie-dish, arrange the pieces of partridge on it, filling up the
+interstices with the forcemeat; then pour in as much gravy as is
+required, put on the paste cover, and bake for an hour. When done, a
+little more boiling hot gravy may be introduced through the hole in the
+centre of the crust. A little melted aspic jelly may be added to the
+gravy.
+
+
+Partridge Pudding.
+
+Take a brace of well-kept partridges, cut them into neat joints and skin
+them; line a quart pudding basin with suet crust, place a thinnish slice
+of rump steak at the bottom of the dish cut into pieces, put in the
+pieces of partridge, season with pepper and salt, and pour in about a
+pint of good dark stock well clarified from fat, then put on the cover
+and boil in the usual way.
+
+
+Partridges a la Reine.
+
+Truss a brace of partridges for boiling, fill them with good game
+forcemeat, with two or three truffles cut up in small pieces, and tie
+thin slices of fat bacon over them. Slice a small carrot into a stewpan
+with an onion, four or five sticks of celery, two or three sprigs of
+parsley, and an ounce of fresh butter. Place the partridges on these,
+breasts uppermost, pour over them half a pint of good stock, cover with
+a round of buttered paper, and simmer as gently as possible till the
+partridges are done enough. Strain the stock, free it carefully from
+grease, thicken it with a little flour and as much browning as is
+necessary; flavour with a little cayenne, half a dozen drops of essence
+of anchovy, and a tablespoonful of sherry. Stir this sauce over a gentle
+fire till it is on the point of boiling, then pour it over the
+partridges already dished up on toast, and serve instantly.
+
+
+Salmi of Partridge a la Chasseur.
+
+Take a couple of cold roast partridges--they should be rather
+under-cooked--cut into neat joints, removing all skin and sinew, and lay
+the pieces in a stewpan with four tablespoonfuls of salad oil, six
+tablespoonfuls of claret, the strained juice of a lemon, salt, pepper,
+and cayenne to taste.
+
+Simmer gently for a few minutes till the salmi is hot throughout, then
+serve directly. Garnish with fried sippets.
+
+
+Scalloped Partridges.
+
+Take the fillets of a brace of partridges, saute them in butter till
+firm, drain them, and put in some good game stock and two tablespoonfuls
+of Allemagne sauce; when boiling put in the scalloped partridges, with
+two or three peeled mushrooms, a small piece of butter, and the juice of
+half a lemon. Dish up the scallops in a circle, and fill the same in the
+centre.
+
+
+Partridges a la Sierra Morena.
+
+Take a brace of partridges properly trussed; cut into dice one inch
+thick a little less than half a pound of bacon, and put them in the
+stewpan; cut two large onions in quarters, take six whole black peppers,
+a little salt, one bayleaf, half a gill of vinegar, one gill of port
+wine, one gill of water, one tablespoonful of salad oil, and put all
+these ingredients into the stewpan; put on the lid, and cover the
+stewpan with half a sheet of brown kitchen paper; put the stewpan on a
+slow fire to stew for two hours; then take out the partridges and dish
+them and put round some of the quarters of onions which have been
+stewed. Pass the gravy through a sieve and send to table.
+
+
+Partridge Souffle.
+
+Roast a partridge, chop and pound the flesh in a mortar with a few
+spoonfuls of Bechamel sauce and a small piece of butter. Season well;
+mix with this four eggs, and strain the whole through a sieve into a
+basin. Beat the whites of the eggs stiffly, and mix lightly with the
+puree. Put all into the souffle dish, and let it bake in the oven for
+twenty minutes. Cover the top with a piece of paper to prevent its
+burning.
+
+
+Partridge Souffle.
+
+Another way.
+
+Skin a brace of cold roast partridges, cut off all the meat, and pound
+it in a mortar with the birds' livers; warm up in a saucepan with a
+little reduced stock, and pass through a tammy. Break up the bones and
+put them into a saucepan with a good brown sauce and stock, and reduce
+till nearly a glaze; add the partridge puree and half an ounce of
+butter, two yolks of eggs, and the two whites whipped, which must be
+stirred in gradually; pour into a souffle dish, and bake as soon as the
+souffle has risen sufficiently. Serve it _at once_.
+
+
+Perdreaux en Surprise.
+
+Take two roasted partridges, cut out the whole of the breasts in a
+square piece, so as to make a square aperture, clean away all the
+spongy substance from the interior, and make a _salpicon_ to be put
+inside the birds as follows:--Cut into very small dice the flesh taken
+out of the birds, also some truffles and pepper and salt. Put these into
+a little veloute sauce, and with this stuff the birds. Dip them into
+eggs and breadcrumbs put some bits of butter all over, and fry them of a
+nice colour. Dish up and serve with Espagnole sauce.
+
+
+Stewed Partridges.
+
+Lard a brace of partridges, and place them in a stewpan with onions,
+carrots, rashers of bacon, a bouquet garni, and equal quantities of
+stock and light claret, and simmer over a slow fire, skimming
+constantly. When done, dish up the partridges, reduce the sauce, and
+pass through a sieve and pour over the birds.
+
+
+Partridge a la Toussenel.
+
+Take a brace of partridges, stuff them with the livers of the birds
+minced up together with butter and some truffles which have been cooked
+in champagne; wrap each bird up in a figleaf or vineleaf, and over these
+place a sheet of buttered paper. Then put the birds on the spit, and
+roast till about three-fourths cooked; then take off the spit, and under
+the four members of each bird spread a mixture of breadcrumb worked into
+a farce with pepper, butter, parsley, shalot, and grated nutmeg. Replace
+the birds on the spit, and let them finish roasting, basting them
+continually alternately with broth and champagne. These drippings, to
+which the grated peel of one lemon and the juice of a Seville orange are
+added, form the sauce to be served with it.
+
+
+Partridge Tartlets.
+
+Bouchees de Perdreaux.
+
+Take the breasts of two cooked partridges, about six ounces, and cut
+into very small pieces. Mince two ounces of lean ham, one truffle, and
+six mushrooms; stir this mixture into a gill of white sauce. Butter nine
+small moulds, line them neatly with this mixture, smooth well over with
+a hot wet knife, fill in with minced partridge, coat them neatly over
+the top with the quenelle meat, steam them for twenty minutes; dish on a
+circle of mashed potato, pour good white sauce over and round them, and
+serve French beans or tomatoes in the centre.
+
+
+Partridge a la Venitienne.
+
+Put a brace of partridges into a stewpan with butter, two glasses of
+Chablis, and two glasses of stock, add a bouquet garni, very little
+garlic, two cloves, salt and pepper; let them simmer gently. Take them
+off when done, pass the gravy through a sieve, add a little butter and
+flour to thicken it, a small piece of glaze, a little cayenne and salt.
+Pour the sauce over the partridges, and cover over all with two
+spoonfuls of grated Parmesan cheese; put a few breadcrumbs and pieces of
+clarified butter on this, and set the whole on a baking sheet in the
+oven. Brown the birds well, and serve with sauce espagnole or sauce
+piquante.
+
+
+Pintail.
+
+This bird should be roasted at a clear quick fire, well floured when
+first laid down, turned briskly, and basted with butter _constantly_. It
+takes about twenty-five minutes to roast, and then it should be laid
+down before the fire for two or three more, when it will yield a very
+rich gravy. Score the breast, and sprinkle a little cayenne on it, and
+send cut lemon up to table to hand with it.
+
+
+Boiled Pheasant.
+
+Cover with buttered paper and simmer as gently as possible till it is
+done enough. Pour either celery, horseradish, oyster, or soubise sauce
+over it, and serve more in a tureen.
+
+
+Boudins of Pheasant a la Richelieu.
+
+Take a cold pheasant and pick the meat from it; remove the skin and
+sinews, and pound the flesh in a mortar to a smooth paste. Mix its
+weight with the same quantity of pounded potatoes or panada and six
+ounces of fresh butter. Mix these thoroughly, pound them together, and
+season highly with salt and cayenne, and a trifle of mace. Bind together
+with the yolks of four eggs, one at a time, two tablespoonfuls of white
+sauce, and last of all two tablespoonfuls of boiled onions chopped
+small. Spread this mixture out on a dish, and make it up into small
+cutlets about three inches long, two inches wide, and a quarter of an
+inch thick. Drop these carefully into very hot water, and poach them
+gently for a few minutes. The water must not boil. Take them up, drain,
+and let them get cold; then egg and breadcrumb them, and fry them in hot
+butter a nice pale colour. Make a gravy by peeling and frying four
+onions in butter till lightly browned, dredge an ounce of flour over
+them, and pour upon them half a pint of stock, a glassful of claret, the
+bones of the pheasant, and pepper and salt. Simmer over fire for twenty
+minutes, strain through sieve, and it is ready for use. Serve the
+boudins in a circle with the gravy round.
+
+
+Pheasant a la Bonne Femme.
+
+Put a well-hung pheasant in a buttered stewpan with three ounces of good
+beef dripping and six ounces of ham cut into dice. Let the pheasant fry
+over fire till it is nicely and lightly browned, then add a
+tablespoonful of chutnee and three large Spanish onions cut in rings;
+cover the saucepan, and let it simmer till all are cooked. Take up the
+bird and put it on a dish, beat the onions over the fire for ten
+minutes, season with pepper and salt, and serve round the pheasant.
+
+
+Pheasant a la Brillat-Savarin.
+
+Hang a pheasant till tender, pluck, draw, and lard it carefully. Bone
+and draw two woodcocks, keep the trail separate, throw away the
+gizzards, chop up the meat with beef marrow which has been cooked by
+steam, scraped bacon, pepper, salt, mixed herbs and truffles; fill the
+pheasant with this stuffing, which fix in with a piece of bread the
+shape of a cork and tie it round with fine thread. Lay a thick slice of
+bread two inches broader than the pheasant in the dripping pan; pound
+the tail of the woodcock in a mortar with truffles, add anchovy, a
+little scraped bacon, and a lump of fresh butter; spread a thick layer
+on the bread, roast the pheasant over it so as to catch all the dripping
+and dish up on it.
+
+
+Creme of Pheasants a la Moderne.
+
+Take two pheasants, remove the skin from the breast, and cut from each
+the two large fillets and the two under ones; remove every particle of
+the white flesh that did not come away with the fillets, leaving the
+legs and pinions on the carcases.
+
+Spread each fillet on a board and with a knife scrape the flesh from the
+skin of the fillet. When the flesh is removed from the four large
+fillets and from the four smaller ones, and little remnants gathered
+from the carcases, place them in a mortar and pour in a gill of cream
+and pound well for a few minutes, then rub through clean wire sieve,
+place it back in the mortar and keep adding, a gill at a time, more
+cream until one pint of cream is used up; now take two plain cylinder
+moulds, well buttered and ornamented according to fancy with truffles
+(or small dariole moulds may be used), fill carefully and place a piece
+of buttered paper on the top of the mould or moulds, and place them in a
+stewpan with about a pint of boiling water and let them simmer very
+gently for twenty minutes and turn out. Make a sauce to serve with this
+dish of the carcases, &c., mixed with rich Bechamel sauce, and when
+dished there should be a garnish of peas, mushrooms, or shred truffles.
+
+
+Pheasant Cutlets.
+
+Take a well-hung young pheasant, cut it when prepared into neat joints.
+Take out the bones carefully and shape the joints into cutlets; flatten
+these with the cutlet-bat, season rather highly and cover them thickly
+with egg and finely-grated breadcrumbs. Put the bones and trimmings into
+a saucepan with a carrot, a turnip, an onion, a handful of parsley, a
+bouquet garni, a bayleaf, pepper, salt, and as much water as will cover
+them. Let them stew slowly till the flavour of the herbs is drawn out,
+then thicken gravy and strain. Fry the cutlets in hot fat till a bright
+brown. Serve on a hot dish in a circle with one of the small bones stuck
+into each cutlet; pour the gravy round.
+
+
+Galantine of Pheasant a la Mode.
+
+Bone a pheasant, cut off the legs and press what is left of the leg
+inside, and cut away any sinews. Take three-quarters of a pound of
+sausage meat, a dozen oysters, three or four truffles, a slice of
+tongue, and three rashers of fat bacon. Cut the truffles into _small_
+dice, also the tongue and bacon. Mix all together with the sausage meat,
+adding a little cayenne pepper, half a teaspoonful of herbs mixed, half
+an ounce of melted gelatine, and two yolks of eggs. Mix well together,
+and spread over the pheasant evenly. Then roll it up lengthways and
+tightly in a cloth and place it in saucepan to boil for an hour, then
+take it out and remove the cloth carefully. To serve this dish, cut it
+up into thin slices and dish them in a circle, letting one piece overlap
+the other uniformly all round. Place a little cress salad compressed
+into a ball on the top, and at the base a few croutons of aspic jelly at
+an equal distance apart, and a little chopped aspic between. Sprinkle a
+little over the salad ball at the top.
+
+
+Fritot of Creme of Pheasant.
+
+Take eight tartlet tins, not too large, butter them, and fill about
+three parts full of creme of pheasant and place them in the oven for a
+few minutes. When quite firm to the touch, remove them from oven, and
+when cold dip each one into a light batter and fry in clean lard of a
+light brown. The batter should be made with half a pound of Vienna
+flour, the half of a yolk of egg, a dessertspoonful of salad oil, and a
+gill of pale ale. Mix all these together lightly till it will mask the
+point of one's finger; if too thick, add a drop or two more ale. Serve
+with brown or mushroom sauce. Send this dish very hot to table.
+
+
+Partridge a la Creme.
+
+See Pheasant ditto.
+
+
+Fritot of Partridge a la Creme.
+
+See Pheasant ditto.
+
+
+Pheasant and Macaroni.
+
+Pull the flesh with two forks from a cold roast pheasant. Put the bones
+and trimmings into a saucepan with enough water to cover them, and let
+them simmer till it is much reduced. Add two shalots, a little salt and
+pepper, a grate of nutmeg, a gill of mushroom ketchup and the same of
+Marsala. Thicken with flour and butter, and let all simmer gently for
+twenty minutes; strain it, and put it back into the saucepan for it to
+boil up. Just before the pheasant is to be served, put the meat into the
+gravy and let it warm through without boiling. After it is dished, place
+round it some macaroni made as follows:--Have two pints of boiling
+water, into which plunge four ounces of macaroni, add pepper and salt,
+and simmer gently for twenty minutes. Drain it, and put it into a pint
+of good stock, with a little salt, a teaspoonful of unmixed mustard and
+a dust of cayenne. Let it all boil till the macaroni is tender, then add
+a tablespoonful of Parmesan cheese and an ounce of butter. Toss it over
+fire till all is well mixed, then serve.
+
+
+Pheasant Pie with Oysters.
+
+Boil a pheasant till almost done; it will finish cooking in the pie.
+Make as much gravy as the size of the bird will require, add half a cup
+of milk, season and thicken it. Make a good pie-crust, and then put the
+pieces of pheasant in a pie-dish, which must be hot. Scatter some raw
+oysters among the pieces of pheasant, pour over all enough gravy to fill
+the dish to the depth of one inch, and cover it with the crust, which
+must be pressed against the edge so that it will adhere. Let it bake for
+half an hour. After it is cooked, pour in remainder of the gravy in the
+slit in the top of the crust.
+
+
+Pheasant des Rois.
+
+Have a pound of the best preserved truffles, such as can be obtained at
+Benoist's, in Wardour Street, stew them in a mixture of a quarter of a
+pound of butter, a large tablespoonful of finest Lucca oil, and half a
+pound of bacon fat scraped into shreds. Thoroughly cook the truffles, so
+that a silver fork can be stuck into them without pushing hard. Stuff a
+pheasant with them and sew it up. Cover the breast with a slice of fat
+bacon, and put two or three slices beneath it. Place round the pheasant
+pieces of veal and ham cut into small cubes the size of dice, add a few
+carrots, an onion or two, salt and pepper. Pour on it a claretglassful
+of Chablis, cover the saucepan, place it on a slow fire and use the
+salamander, then let it stew for an hour. When ready to serve, strain
+the same, removing all grease, and pour over the bird.
+
+
+Pheasant a la Sainte Alliance.
+
+An expensive dish.
+
+Take a well-hung cock pheasant and truss it for roasting. Farce it with
+a stuffing made of two woodcocks' flesh and internals (or snipes')
+finely minced with two ounces of fresh butter, some salt, pepper, and a
+pinch of cayenne, a bouquet garni finely powdered, and as many chopped
+truffles as will be required to fill the pheasant. Truss the bird and
+roast, basting it well with fresh butter. Whilst roasting, lay in the
+pan a round of toast, upon which a little of the stuffing has been
+spread, and serve the bird on it. Bread sauce and brown gravy should be
+handed round with it.
+
+
+Salmi of Pheasant.
+
+Half roast a pheasant, and when it is nearly cold cut it into neat
+joints, removing the skin. Put the bones and trimmings into a saucepan
+with an ounce of fresh butter, a bayleaf, and a bouquet garni, and stir
+these over a slow fire till lightly brown, then pour over half a pint of
+Espagnole sauce and a glassful of claret. Let all simmer for a quarter
+of an hour. Strain the gravy, skim it carefully, add a pinch of cayenne
+and the juice of half a lemon, then put it back into the saucepan with
+the pieces of game. Heat these up slowly. When cooked, dish up and pour
+the hot sauce over them and garnish with fried sippets. A little orange
+juice and a lump of sugar is an improvement to the sauce.
+
+
+Pheasant Stewed with Cabbage.
+
+Truss a pheasant for boiling. Divide a large cabbage into quarters, soak
+them after cutting off the stalks, plunge them into boiling water and
+boil for about ten minutes. Take them out, drain them and press all the
+water from them, then put them into the stewpan. Lay the pheasant well
+in the cabbage, add six ounces of good bacon, half a pound of Bologna
+sausage, three pork sausages, some parsley, a bayleaf, a bouquet garni,
+one carrot, an onion stuck with four cloves, a shalot, and some pepper.
+Pour in as much stock as will cover the whole, and cover the pan closely
+and bring to a boil and let it simmer slowly for an hour. Then take out
+the bird and the meat and keep them warm whilst the cabbage is drained,
+peppered, and salted, and steamed over fire till dry. Then place it on
+a dish, arrange the pheasant on it and all the other adjuncts round it.
+Serve poivrade sauce in a tureen.
+
+
+Pheasant Stuffed with Oysters.
+
+Truss a pheasant for roasting and fill it with forcemeat made of two
+dozen oysters pounded in the mortar, with a tablespoonful of brown
+breadcrumbs, half an ounce of fresh butter, a dessertspoonful of lemon
+juice, a boned anchovy, and a little cayenne. Mix these ingredients
+thoroughly and bind them with the yolk of an egg. Cover the bird with
+thin slices of fat bacon tied on securely, and roast before a clear
+fire. When done, dish up with clear gravy, and hand bread sauce in a
+tureen with it.
+
+
+Pheasant Stuffed with Tomatoes.
+
+Truss a pheasant for roasting, and fill it with a forcemeat made of six
+tomatoes pounded in the mortar, with a tablespoonful of breadcrumbs, a
+shalot, a mushroom, half a clove of garlic, a teaspoonful of parsley,
+and half an ounce of butter, pepper and salt to taste. Bind together
+with the yolk of an egg. Cover the bird with slices of bacon and roast
+before a clear fire. Mushroom or tomato sauce may be served in a tureen
+with it. Partridge and grouse are also very delicious stuffed in this
+way.
+
+
+Pheasant en Surprise.
+
+Take a pheasant, remove the skin from the breast and take away all the
+meat, removing any gristle there may be, and place it in a mortar. Have
+ready half a pint of good cream, and begin by pouring half the quantity
+over the pheasant and pound together for a few minutes, then rub it
+through a clean wire sieve. When passed, put it back into the mortar,
+add the remainder of the cream gradually into the fowl, stirring it
+round so that they blend together perfectly. Fill a mould with this
+mixture and twist a bit of buttered paper round the top; then fold a
+sheet of paper several times and place it in a stewpan, put about half a
+pint of boiling water into the stewpan, or more according to size of it,
+and let all simmer gently for twenty minutes. Add a little salt and a
+dust of cayenne pepper. Turn this out and mix with it half a pint of
+white aspic jelly. Have ready some very clear aspic jelly, and colour it
+red. Take a pretty shaped jelly mould, pour in a little of the red aspic
+to about rather more than a quarter of the mould. When this is cool, put
+in the pheasant and aspic mixture, and place on ice for four hours; when
+properly frozen, turn out, and garnish the top with a wreath of fresh
+chervil leaves. Serve chopped aspic in little mounds round the base
+alternately with mounds of mayonnaise salad or tomatoes.
+
+
+Pheasant a la Suisse.
+
+Take the remains of a cold pheasant, cut it into neat joints. Salt and
+pepper these highly, and strew over it finely chopped onion and
+parsley. Cover them with oil, and squeeze over them the juice of a
+lemon. Turn the pieces every now and then, and let them remain till they
+have imbibed the flavour, then dip the pieces in a batter made of four
+ounces of flour, with as much milk added as will make a thick batter.
+Stir into it half a wineglassful of brandy and an egg, the white and
+yolk beaten to a froth. This batter should rest for an hour in a warm
+place before using. Fry the pieces of chicken in the batter, and send it
+up piled on a dish garnished with fried parsley.
+
+
+Pheasant a la Tregothran.
+
+Bone a pheasant and stuff it with the meat from four woodcocks or six
+snipe, cut it up, and chop up some truffles and make it into forcemeat.
+Fry the trail of the woodcock or snipe in a little butter, and place on
+little rounds of fried bread and arrange round the dish. Stew the bones
+of the woodcocks or snipe to make the gravy, reduce it, and add a glass
+of Marsala to the broth and serve in a boat.
+
+
+Pheasant a la Victoria.
+
+Take a quarter of a pound of bacon, cut it up in pieces (frying the
+bacon first), add a small clove of garlic, a small shalot, a bayleaf,
+half a carrot, half a turnip, half a dozen stewing oysters, and salt and
+pepper to taste. Stew over the fire, and when cooked pound it all
+together with a few more oysters and pass through a wire sieve. Stuff a
+pheasant with this, and place it in a stewpan with carrots and turnips;
+let all stew till tender, well basting it with its own stock. Serve
+with rich Espagnole sauce or oyster sauce on a croustade of potato.
+
+
+Pigeons a la Duchesse.
+
+Split a couple of pigeons in halves, remove the breast bones and beat
+them flat, saute them with two ounces of butter, pepper and salt. Press
+them flat between two plates with a weight on them, and when the pigeons
+are cold spread the quenelle meat over the cut side of the birds; then
+egg and breadcrumb them and fry in fat. Dish in a circle with brown
+sauce round and a macedoine of vegetables in the centre.
+
+
+Pigeons a la Financiere.
+
+Take four pigeons, truss and braise them in stock, then glaze them, dish
+them up against a block of fried bread. Pour round half a pint of
+Financiere sauce, and garnish with small quenelles of forcemeat,
+truffles, mushrooms, and cockscombs in the centre.
+
+
+Pigeons a la Merveilleuse.
+
+Blanch a brace of pigeons, and beat the backs so as to spread out the
+breasts, boil them in equal quantities of stock and Chablis, season with
+salt and pepper, a sprig of parsley, two shalots, and two cloves; when
+cooked, take them out of the stewpan, and cook some mushrooms, twelve
+shelled crayfish, and a little flour in the sauce of the pigeons, boil
+for half an hour, reduce and thicken the sauce with yolks of egg and
+cream, season with finely chopped parsley and pour over the pigeons,
+and serve garnished with the heads of the crayfish.
+
+
+Ballotines of Pigeon a la Moderne.
+
+Take four boned pigeons, cut them lengthways in two, and make a farce of
+half a pound of pork sausage meat, half a spoonful of chopped truffles,
+the same of mushrooms, a few pieces of tongue cut into dice shapes, a
+bouquet garni, pepper and salt, and one yolk of an egg, all well mixed
+together. Then divide it into eight equal parts, and fill the halves of
+the pigeons with it; make them into round balls, cutting off the feet.
+Tie each piece of pigeon in a little bit of calico, and braise them till
+nicely tender. Then let them cool, tie them up tightly, and let them get
+quite cold; place one of the feet in each ballotine, and arrange them on
+a saute-pan. Take off the calico, make them hot and glaze them, and
+serve with mushrooms and peas, and with a rich brown sauce over them.
+
+
+Pigeons en Poqueton.
+
+Put some pate de foie gras forcemeat, or any other forcemeat, into a
+small stewpan, and spread it all over at the bottom and sides, rubbing
+the stewpan first with butter. Put in a couple of pigeons trussed for
+roasting, some sweetbreads and tongue cut into neat pieces, and some
+button mushrooms; arrange all these tastily in the pan, place some more
+forcemeat on the top, cover it over with slices of bacon, and bake it in
+a gentle oven. Before closing it, pour some good gravy inside. The
+pigeons should be seasoned with pepper and salt, and just rubbed with
+garlic. When it is cooked, take it from the oven, and turn it carefully
+out into its dish, and pour a very rich sauce over it.
+
+
+Pigeon en Ragout de Crevettes.
+
+Prepare a couple of pigeons, cut them in half, and put them in a stewpan
+with a glass of Sauterne, half a pint of stock, a sprig of parsley, two
+cloves, pepper, salt, and a shalot; simmer till cooked, strain the
+gravy. Now put an ounce of butter with a dozen button mushrooms and two
+or three dozen skinned prawns into a saucepan with a tablespoonful of
+flour and the gravy the pigeons were stewed in; simmer this for half an
+hour, then thicken it with a gill of cream and two yolks of eggs, add
+some finely chopped parsley and a grate of nutmeg. Dish up the pigeons
+with the mushrooms and prawns in the centre.
+
+
+Pigeons au Soleil.
+
+Take a couple of roasted pigeons and put them into a marinade of an
+ounce of butter, four shalots, an onion, and a carrot cut up into dice,
+a little parsley, a bayleaf, a little thyme, and a clove; put them into
+a stewpan and fry till they are of a light brown, then moisten with a
+little vinegar and water. When they have simmered for half an hour in
+the marinade let them cool, drain, and put them into a batter made of
+four spoonfuls of flour, a little salt, a little olive oil, and moisten
+with a sufficient quantity of water and two beaten whites of eggs; then
+fry them a good colour, and serve up with fried parsley in the middle,
+with a poivrade or piquant sauce around.
+
+
+Pigeons a la Soussell.
+
+Bone four pigeons, and make a forcemeat of some fillet of veal, some ham
+fat, some grated breadcrumbs, mushrooms, truffles, a shalot, a bouquet
+garni, a little cayenne, pepper and salt, mixed with butter cooked over
+the fire and then pounded in a mortar; put some of this forcemeat into
+the pigeons and stew them gently for half an hour. Take the pigeons out
+and mask them well with more of the forcemeat, brush some beaten egg
+over each, and put them in the fryingpan and fry them in good dripping.
+Take the gravy they were stewed in, skim off all fat, thicken well with
+a liaison of cream and eggs, season with a little pepper and salt, and
+mix all together. Make a mound of spinach puree in the centre of the
+dish, and place the pigeons around, standing up against the puree. Take
+some very small boiled tomatoes, of a good shape, make a wreath round
+the base, place a few button mushrooms on the top of the spinach, and
+pour the sauce all round.
+
+
+Grey Plovers Cooked in Brandy.
+
+After trussing the plovers, flatten them and warm them in a stewpan with
+a little melted bacon fat, a bouquet garni, two onions, three mushrooms,
+and two or three truffles (the latter may be left out). As soon as they
+begin to colour, add half a pint of brandy and toss over a quick fire
+till the brandy is in flames; as soon as the flames go out, moisten with
+gravy and simmer over a slow fire. When the birds are done, skim off all
+grease, add the juice of a lemon, and serve hot.
+
+
+Golden Plover.
+
+Trim, truss, leaving the inside in, cover with fat bacon, and roast or
+bake for twenty minutes. Put a piece of well-buttered toast one-third of
+an inch thick to catch the trails. Dress grey plovers exactly the same.
+
+
+Golden Plover aux Champignons.
+
+Take three golden plover, chop up the trails with parsley, shalots,
+salt, pepper, and scraped bacon, and stuff the plover with it; cover the
+breasts with slices of bacon and roast. When done, serve on stewed
+mushrooms.
+
+
+Fried Plover with English Truffles.
+
+Truss three plover for roasting, lay them breast downwards in a stewpan
+with plenty of butter, enough to entirely cover the breasts. Put in nine
+or ten well-washed raw truffles pared very thin and cut into slices
+about the size of a florin. Add a bayleaf, pepper and salt. Stir over a
+brisk fire for ten minutes, then pour in a pint of stock mixed with a
+spoonful of flour and a glass of sherry. Simmer by side of fire for
+twenty minutes, skimming carefully. Dish up the birds, and then boil the
+sauce till it is thick and smooth, add the strained juice of a lemon, a
+lump of sugar, and a few drops of some XL colouring, and pour over the
+birds.
+
+
+Stuffed Pullet.
+
+Bone the pullet, stuff with forcemeat made with minced veal, egg, ham,
+onions, foie gras, and mushrooms. First warm the veal, onion, and ham
+in melted butter, then add the mushrooms and foie gras, moisten with
+stock and boil. Stir in two yolks of eggs and a teaspoonful of lemon
+juice before taking off the fire, season with a little salt, pepper, and
+a pinch of nutmeg. After stuffing the fowl with this mixture, sew it up,
+turn the skin of the neck half over the head and cut off part of the
+comb, which will give it the appearance of a turtle's head. Blanch and
+singe four chickens' feet, cut off the claws and stick two where the
+wings ought to be and two in the thighs, so as to look like turtle's
+feet. Stew the pullet with a little ham, onions, and carrots, tossed
+previously in butter, moisten with stock, skim occasionally. When done,
+cut the string where it is sewn, lay it on its back in a dish, garnish
+the breast with sliced truffles cut in fancy shapes, and place a
+crayfish tail to represent the turtle's tail.
+
+Veloute sauce may be handed with this dish, or it may be eaten cold and
+garnished with aspic.
+
+
+Quails a la Beaconsfield.
+
+Put, having trussed, six quails in a stewpan wrapped in slices of bacon.
+Moisten with two spoonfuls of stock, a bouquet garni, two bayleaves and
+a clove, pepper and salt to taste. Stew them for twenty minutes over a
+very slow fire. Drain them well, make a puree of peas in which a
+tablespoonful of aspic jelly has been mixed. Mask each quail with the
+puree, dish them in a crown shape with little rolls of bacon in front of
+each, have a few truffles or mushrooms cooked and placed in the centre,
+and pour over the quails a rich brown sauce.
+
+
+Quails en Caisse.
+
+Bone six quails and halve them, take the bones and trimmings and stew
+them in some stock with two carrots, one onion, one shalot, a bayleaf, a
+small piece of lean ham, a small piece of parsley, pepper and salt. This
+must be reduced, and then strained. Make a forcemeat of the quails'
+livers, a small piece of calf's liver, and half their quantity of bacon.
+Put these into a saute-pan with a couple of shalots and an ounce of
+butter, and toss them over the fire for five minutes, then pass this
+mixture through a sieve. Have the paper cases ready oiled, and place at
+the bottom a layer of this farce, having already stuffed the half quails
+with it. The stuffed half quails, rolled, must now be put into the cases
+with a thin slice of very fat bacon over them. They must now be baked in
+the oven for about twelve minutes. Remove the bacon, and pour over the
+gravy, which must be thickened with flour rolled in butter. Strew a
+little very nicely minced parsley over each case.
+
+
+Compote of Quails.
+
+Take six quails, cut the claws off, and truss them with the legs inside.
+Cut eight pieces of bacon rolled up like corks, blanch them to draw out
+any salt, and fry them till they are of a light brown; take them out and
+put in the quails, which must be stewed till they begin to be of a light
+brown, then remove them. Make a thickening with flour and butter, and
+put it into a good gill of veal stock; add a bouquet garni, some small
+onions and mushrooms. Skim the sauce well, and strain it over the
+quails, then dish the bacon, mushrooms, and small onions, and send up
+hot.
+
+
+Quails and Green Peas.
+
+Cook the quails in a stewpan with a slice of veal and a slice of ham,
+carrots, onions, and a bouquet garni; cover with rashers of bacon and
+buttered paper; place hot coals on the lid, and, when done, dish up the
+quails with green peas in the centre which have been cooked in butter.
+
+
+Boudins of Rabbit a la Reine.
+
+Cut the meat from a young very fine rabbit, which put into some reduced
+Bechamel sauce. When cold, roll it into large boudins the shape of
+sausages, egg and breadcrumb, and fry. Serve under them veloute sauce.
+
+
+Boiled Rabbit a la Maintenon.
+
+Cut a young rabbit into neat joints, and put them in a stewpan with
+enough white stock just to cover them; add a bouquet garni, a stick of
+celery, a shalot, an onion, a few peppercorns, a carrot, and six
+mushrooms. Let all simmer slowly for half an hour, or it might be a
+little longer, then take them up and drain them; then cut as many pieces
+of white foolscap paper as there are pieces of rabbit, butter them,
+sprinkle the pieces of rabbit, and lay on each a little piece of fat
+bacon, then roll them in the paper and broil over a fire till the bacon
+has had time to cook. Serve in the papers. Thicken the gravy in the
+usual way, and serve it in a tureen.
+
+
+Galantine of Rabbit.
+
+Take a couple of young rabbits, bone, and lay them on a linen cloth; lay
+over them a good meat stuffing seasoned to taste, putting over this
+stuffing, which should be laid on about the thickness of a crown, first
+a layer of ham cut in slices, and then a layer of hard eggs. Cover these
+layers with a little forcemeat, roll up the meat, taking care not to
+displace the layers, and cover it with thin slices of fat bacon,
+wrapping the whole in a cloth; wind some packthread round it and let it
+boil three hours in stock, adding salt and coarse pepper, some roots and
+onions, a large bunch of parsley, shalots, a clove of garlic, cloves,
+thyme, bayleaves, and basil. Allow this to cool, take off the cloth, and
+serve cold.
+
+
+Gibelotte de Lapin.
+
+Cut a rabbit into pieces. Saute it in two ounces of butter, add an
+onion, two shalots, and a pint of poivrade sauce; put it in the oven for
+one hour, being careful not to burn it. Small pieces of cauliflower and
+croutons of fried bread should garnish this dish.
+
+
+Fillets of Rabbit with Cucumber Sauce.
+
+Cut two cucumbers into thin slices and soak them in vinegar, with
+pepper, salt, and a bayleaf, for two hours, then half roast the rabbit,
+take the skin off, and fillet it. Make a sauce of white stock, and put
+the pieces of rabbit into it with the cucumber until it is quite done.
+Arrange the pieces of rabbit in a circle, put the cucumber in the
+middle, and pour the sauce over the fillets. Fried sippets should
+garnish this dish.
+
+
+Fricandeau of Rabbit.
+
+Take the fleshy portion of a good-sized rabbit, lard the flesh and lay
+it in a deep baking dish, cover it with some highly flavoured stock.
+Place a piece of buttered paper over the dish, and bake in a moderate
+oven till it is tender, basting it frequently. Lift the rabbit out and
+keep it hot whilst the gravy is boiling to thicken. Spread a teacupful
+of good tomato sauce on a hot dish, lay the rabbit on it, hold a
+salamander over the larding to crisp it, and pour the gravy over all.
+
+
+Rabbit Fritters.
+
+Cut the meat from a cold rabbit into small pieces, put them in a
+pie-dish and sprinkle over them parsley, chives, thyme, and a clove of
+garlic, all chopped very fine, salt, pepper, and a bayleaf; pour over
+all a glass of Chablis and the juice of a lemon. Let the pieces of
+rabbit soak in this for two hours, then take them out, dredge them well
+over with flour, and throw them into boiling fat till of a nice golden
+colour. Remove and drain them, pile them high in an entree dish, and
+pour round the following sauce. Take the liquor the rabbit has been
+soaked in, add half a pint of stock and a little thickening of flour and
+butter, and let it boil well. Then strain through a sieve, put in a
+tablespoonful of piccalilli chopped fine, or some chutnee, give another
+boil, and serve.
+
+
+Rabbit Kloesse.
+
+Take a cold dressed rabbit, mince all the meat, mix in with it an equal
+quantity of bread soaked in milk squeezed dry. Cut two slices of bacon
+into small squares, and fry slowly. Add the minced meat and stir in two
+eggs, and let it cook a few minutes. Turn it out on a dish to cool, and
+add one more egg. Form it into balls the size of an egg, then drop them
+into boiling water, and boil until set. Lift them out very tenderly,
+pile them up in a pyramid on a dish, and garnish them with fried
+potatoes. Send a sharp sauce to table with them.
+
+
+Rabbits en Papillote.
+
+Mince up some parsley, mushrooms, shalot, a clove of garlic, a slice of
+bacon, with salt and pepper to taste. Mix this in a little gravy on the
+fire to form a paste. Cut a rabbit into neat fillets and joints. Cover
+each with the paste, then wrap a thin slice of fat bacon and fix each
+piece neatly in an oiled paper. Cook them slowly in the oven, and serve
+in papers.
+
+
+Rabbit Pie a la Provencale.
+
+Take two small rabbits, cut them into joints, and lay them in a saucepan
+with two carrots, two onions, a clove of garlic, a bunch of herbs, and a
+pound of pickled pork (the belly). Boil in a very little water for half
+an hour, take out the rabbits and drain them, also drain the pork and
+place it at the bottom of a well-buttered pie-dish, and then lay the
+pieces of rabbit on it. Pour on a wine-glassful of Sauterne or vin de
+Grave, and strew over it some Spanish pimento. Pour in some good batter,
+and bake in a quick oven for half an hour. Reduce the liquor in which it
+was cooked and add the strained juice of a lemon. The sauce should be
+handed with it.
+
+
+Rabbit Pilau.
+
+Cut up a young rabbit into ten or twelve pieces. Rub each piece into a
+savoury pudding made as follows. Extract the juice of two onions, mix a
+teaspoonful of salt with it, half a teaspoonful of powdered ginger, and
+the juice of a lemon. Boil half a pound of rice in a quart of broth till
+it is half cooked. Have ready four ounces of good dripping, and fry the
+pieces of rabbit in it, with two sliced onions. When they are brown
+remove them. Place the meat into a deep jar. Lay the onions on it and
+cover with the rice, add four cloves, eight peppercorns, some salt, and
+a little lemon peel cut very thinly, and pour half a pint of milk over;
+place some folds of paper over the jar and bake in the oven, adding a
+little broth when the rabbit is half cooked. When done, pile the rice on
+a dish, and lay the pieces of rabbit on the top and serve very quickly.
+
+
+Rabbit Pudding.
+
+Cut a rabbit into ten or twelve pieces, put these into a stewpan with a
+little pepper and salt, pour on as much boiling water as will cover
+them, and let them simmer for half an hour. Take them up and put in
+their place the head and liver of rabbit with some bacon rind and simmer
+for an hour, strain and skim it, and let it get cool. Line a pie-dish
+with suet crust, and then put in the pieces of rabbit with four ounces
+of fat bacon cut into narrow strips, pour in a cupful of the cool gravy,
+lay on the cover, and boil in the usual way. N.B.--The brains may be
+mixed in with the liver.
+
+
+Rabbit a la Tartare.
+
+Bone a rabbit, cut it into pieces, and let it marinade for six hours in
+parsley, mushrooms, a clove of garlic, chives, all chopped very fine,
+with pepper, salt, and the best salad oil. Dip each piece of rabbit in
+breadcrumbs and broil, sprinkling the pieces with the marinade. Serve
+Tartare sauce over it or with it.
+
+
+The Wanderer's Rabbit.
+
+No. 1.
+
+Divide a rabbit into pieces of convenient size, put them into a saucepan
+in which half a dozen slices of bacon are cooking. As soon as the meat
+is beginning to brown, pour a wineglass and a half of brandy into the
+saucepan, and set fire to it. When the fire has burnt out, add a little
+pepper, salt, a bayleaf, and a bit of thyme, and let it simmer by the
+side of the fire till the brandy has nearly dried up, then serve.
+
+
+The Wanderer's Rabbit.
+
+No. 2.
+
+Divide a couple of rabbits into quarters, adding plenty of pepper and
+salt. Slightly fry them in a saucepan in bacon fat and flour. Add
+sufficient stock and two glasses of Sauterne, and let it stew on a
+moderate fire. When done, squeeze an orange over the dish just before
+serving up.
+
+
+Stewed Roebuck Cutlets.
+
+Sprinkle the cutlets with salt and pepper, cook them in a saucepan with
+melted butter. When half done, turn them, add a little flour, moisten
+with equal quantities of white wine and stock, season with chopped
+eschalots, parsley, and blanched mushrooms; remove the cutlets when
+done, place them round an entree dish, reduce the sauce, pass it through
+a tammy, and pour over the cutlets.
+
+
+Snipe a la Minute.
+
+Pluck three snipes and truss them for roasting. Put the snipes head
+downwards in a saucepan with two ounces of melted butter, two finely
+chopped shalots, a dessertspoonful of chopped parsley, pepper and salt
+to taste. Shake the saucepan over the fire till the birds are lightly
+browned, pour over them as much good stock and sherry as will just cover
+them. Add the strained juice of half a lemon and a small piece of finely
+grated crust. Simmer till birds are done, dish them, and pour over them
+some good strong beef gravy, and serve quickly.
+
+
+Snipe Pie.
+
+Take eight snipe for a moderately sized pie; cut them into neat pieces.
+Make a forcemeat of ham, chicken, tongue, seasoned with a little sweet
+herbs, pepper, salt, cayenne, some breadcrumbs, and mushrooms chopped
+fine. Mix all together with the yolks of a couple of eggs, then place in
+the pie-dish a layer of snipe, then forcemeat, then snipe again, and
+then forcemeat, till the dish is full. Pour in some good gravy, and put
+it in the oven to bake. When it is done, raise the paste cover and pour
+in some more gravy. This pie may be eaten hot or cold.
+
+
+Snipe Pie a la Danoise.
+
+Parboil the birds in broth and Chablis, seasoned with pepper, salt, a
+grated onion, and a grate of nutmeg. Make a forcemeat of finely scraped
+beef, say one pound, also four ounces of fat pork. Pound and mix well
+together with a little butter and the crumb of a roll soaked in broth,
+season with grated onion, pepper, mushrooms and gherkins chopped fine,
+and add a little broth. Line a dish with this forcemeat, put in the
+snipe, and bake it for an hour to an hour and fifteen minutes. Serve
+with a sauce made of half a pint of good stock, a gill of Chablis, a
+little water, and a piece of butter rolled in flour, and stirred till
+smooth; when it begins to boil slice in pickled gherkins.
+
+
+Snipe Raised Pie (Hot).
+
+Cut four snipes in two lengthwise, remove the gizzards, put the trails
+aside, and season the birds with salt and cayenne. Fry the birds in
+butter for ten minutes and then stand them to drain in the cool till
+wanted. Make a forcemeat of four ounces of calf's liver, four ditto fat
+bacon cut small, melt the latter over a quick fire, and then add the
+liver and season the mixture with pepper, salt, and herbs. When these
+are cooked, let them get cold, and then pound them in the mortar with
+the trails of the birds. Now pass all through a sieve. Line a buttered
+pie-mould with raised crust paste, and put in a layer of the forcemeat
+at the bottom of the mould, leaving it hollow in the centre. Put half
+the pieces of snipe in a circle upon the forcemeat, and place a little
+ball of forcemeat upon them, put in the rest of the birds and put a
+layer of forcemeat over all. Fill the hollow in the centre with bread
+which has been covered with fat bacon, put the pastry cover on, and
+bake. When done, take off the cover, remove bread and fill its place
+with scallopped truffles. Pour good brown sauce over all, pile truffles
+on the top, and serve. This can also be made in a china raised pie-case.
+
+
+Snipe Souffle.
+
+Roast three or four snipe, remove all the meat from the bones, put it
+into a mortar, and pound it well with two ounces of cooked rice, one
+ounce of butter, a little pepper and salt, and one gill and a half of
+glaze. Pass through hair sieve and add the yolks of four eggs whipped to
+a stiff froth; put it into a mould and bake in a quick oven. Serve with
+a good gravy round, made from the bones and trimmings, the juice of half
+a lemon, and a glass of port wine; thicken with butter and cornflour.
+
+
+Snipes a la Superlative.
+
+Make a forcemeat of three ounces of fat bacon, three ounces of fowl's
+liver, and cut both into pieces an inch square. Fry the bacon over a
+sharp fire, move it about constantly, and in three or four minutes add
+the liver. When it is half done, mince it with the bacon, season, and
+add half a clove of garlic and pound all smoothly in a mortar. Pass
+through wire sieve. When quite cold, roll out half of it with a little
+flour, form it into a thick band, and arrange it in a circle at the
+bottom of a dish. Take four partially roasted snipes, split them open
+down the back, and spread the forcemeat a quarter of an inch thick over
+the inside of each. Place the birds in the middle of the dish, and cover
+them with some of the forcemeat, smooth with a hot knife and put the
+dish into a quick oven, wipe away all fat, pour truffle sauce over the
+snipe, and serve.
+
+
+Teal Pudding.
+
+Take three teal, season the birds with salt and cayenne, and divide them
+into neat pieces. Cut up a pound of rump steak into pieces about an inch
+in size, season, and dredge them lightly with flour. Line a
+pudding-basin with good suet paste rolled out to half an inch thickness.
+Place in a layer of steak and a layer of teal, and repeat till the dish
+is full, then fill in with three-quarters of a pint of good gravy, and
+put the cover on in the usual way. Plunge it into boiling water and keep
+it boiling till done. Serve it in the basin it is cooked in, with a
+napkin pinned round it.
+
+
+Salmi of Teal.
+
+Put in a stewpan three ounces of butter and one good spoonful of flour,
+let them melt together, stirring till it becomes a nice brown; add by
+degrees a gill of good stock and as much red wine, two whole shalots
+(taken out after), a full bouquet, pepper, and a little salt; put in the
+body and bones of the bird, from which you have previously detached the
+limbs and meat. Let all boil slowly for half an hour, pass all through
+colander, and put gravy alone back in stewpan on the fire, and just when
+on the point of boiling put in the pieces of teal and take the stewpan
+off the fire; add a little lemon juice, put the lid on, and leave it on
+the hob for half an hour.
+
+
+Stewed Teal.
+
+Truss the birds, putting aside the hearts, livers, and gizzards, and
+dredge them with flour, then place them in a saucepan with a piece of
+butter, and let them brown equally, taking care of the gravy which oozes
+from them. Let them get cold, then carve them in such a way that the
+wings and legs can be taken off with a piece of breast adhering to it.
+Break the bodies of the birds into small pieces, and stew them with the
+livers, &c., in as much stock as will cover them, till the gravy becomes
+good and strong, then strain it, season with cayenne, salt, a glassful
+of claret, and a little Seville orange juice. Directly it begins to
+boil, put in the fleshy portion of the birds and let simmer till they
+are thoroughly heated, but do not let the gravy boil. Cut slices of
+bread large enough for a leg and wing to lie upon, fry till lightly
+browned, arrange them neatly, and pour sauce over them. Garnish with
+sliced lemon.
+
+
+Devilled Turkey Drumsticks.
+
+Score the drumsticks down parallel with the bone, and insert in the
+slices thus made a mixture made with one ounce of butter, a good
+teaspoonful of French mustard, a little cayenne, and a salt-spoonful of
+black pepper. Mix all this thoroughly together and spread the mixture
+into the cuts, then rub the drumsticks with butter, and grill over a
+fierce fire.
+
+
+Turkey en Daube.
+
+Put slices of bacon in a braising-pan, lard the breast and thighs of a
+turkey trussed for boiling, and place the turkey on the slices of bacon;
+put into the pan a slice of ham and a calf's foot broken into small
+pieces, with the trimmings of the turkey, two onions stuck with four
+cloves, three carrots, and a bouquet garni. Put slices of bacon over the
+turkey, put some melted butter over, and cover with three rounds of
+buttered paper and let it simmer for five hours; take it from the fire
+and leave it for half an hour, strain the gravy and boil it down. Beat
+an egg into a saucepan, and pour the jellied gravy into this, whip it
+well, then put it on the fire, bring it to the boil, and then draw it to
+the side of the fireplace, cover it with the lid with hot coals on it,
+and let it remain for half an hour; strain again, and with this jelly
+cover the turkey.
+
+
+Venison Cutlets.
+
+Trim the cutlets the same as you would mutton cutlets, melt a little
+butter on a plate, dip each cutlet in the butter, and dust them slightly
+with flour, then in beaten egg, and roll them in breadcrumbs. Fry them
+in hot lard for ten minutes, take them out of the lard and lay them on a
+flat dish covered with paper; put them before the fire for a few minutes
+to free them from grease. Dish them up, and pour Financiere sauce round
+the cutlets.
+
+
+Venison Cutlets a l'Americaine.
+
+Cut the cutlets very small, and arrange them en couronne. Make an
+Espagnole sauce, and flavour it with bayleaves, garlic, half a pound of
+red currant jelly, and a glass of Madeira.
+
+
+Haricot of Venison.
+
+Take a neck or shoulder of venison, and cut the meat of the shoulder in
+pieces two inches square and the neck in thick cutlets. Fry these pieces
+with two ounces of butter in a stewpan over a brisk fire until they are
+browned, then pour off all grease, shake in a little flour, and stir
+together, moisten with sufficient stock to cover the meat, season with
+pepper and salt, and stir over fire till it boils. Remove it then to the
+corner of the stove to allow it to throw up its scum, which remove. Wash
+and scrape three carrots, and with a vegetable scoop cut out all the
+pink from the carrots in round balls, and boil them in water for half an
+hour. Cut out some balls of turnip in the same manner, and boil for
+fifteen minutes. Strain the vegetables and add them to the stew, with a
+glass of port wine and two ounces of red currant jelly. When the meat
+and vegetables are thoroughly cooked, and the stew well skimmed, dish it
+up very quickly.
+
+
+Venison Pasty.
+
+Stew the venison, remove all the bones, sinew, and skin, cutting off the
+fat and putting it aside. Make the paste in the usual way, and cover the
+edge and sides of a pasty dish: then put in the pieces of venison,
+packing it closely together, pepper and salt it well. Cover it with the
+paste and then bake it, which will take about four hours. Pour in at the
+top three-quarters of a pint of venison gravy which has been made from
+the bones and trimmings, two shalots, a gill of port wine, and a
+tablespoonful of ketchup.
+
+
+Venison Puffs.
+
+Cut some cold venison into very thin shavings, mix a tablespoonful of
+red currant jelly with some rich brown sauce, and put on the venison
+pieces. Have ready some light puff paste, roll it out thin and divide it
+in pieces, put some of the meat in each, and form them into puffs. Brush
+with white of egg, and bake quickly a delicate brown colour.
+
+
+Salmis of Widgeon.
+
+Take two widgeon that have been cooked, cut them up into neat pieces,
+break up the bones and put them into brown stock with some minced
+shalots, pepper and salt, and let them simmer very slowly for half an
+hour, then add a glass of port wine, half a teaspoonful of Clarence's
+cayenne sauce, and a squeeze of orange. Let it all boil up for about a
+quarter of an hour, and add an ounce of butter into which a little flour
+has been rubbed; let it thicken, then strain, pour the gravy over the
+cold pieces of bird, and bring slowly to the boil and serve with fried
+sippets. Some button mushrooms added to the gravy are a great
+improvement. Widgeon may be cooked in as many ways as teal, using the
+same recipes, substituting widgeon for teal.
+
+
+Fillets of Wild Ducks with Olives.
+
+Roast a couple of wild ducks and cut off the fillets in the usual way,
+score the skin, dish the fillets in a circle and put into the centre
+some stoned olives. Send clear brown gravy in a tureen with them.
+
+
+Wild Fowl with Bigarade Sauce.
+
+Roast a couple of wild fowl, cut off flesh from each side of the breast,
+and from sides under the wings. Score the skin, and dish the fillets in
+a circle with a little Bigarade sauce poured over them.
+
+
+Woodcock a la Chasseur.
+
+Truss a brace of cocks and put them down before a clear fire for fifteen
+minutes, then take them away and cut them into neat joints. Put the
+inferior pieces with three minced shalots, a bouquet garni, and half a
+head of garlic into a saucepan with a wineglassful of good gravy,
+another of wine, a tablespoonful of mushroom ketchup, and the strained
+juice of half a lemon, and let all simmer for ten minutes. Remove the
+gizzards from the trail, and pound them in a mortar with a piece of
+shalot, a little butter, pepper, and salt, and then rub through a sieve
+and spread them upon small pieces of fried bread cut into the shape of
+hearts. Put the joints of the woodcocks into a separate saucepan, strain
+the gravy on them, and let them heat gently; they must not boil. Place
+them on a dish, put the fried bread with the trail round them, pour the
+gravy over all, and serve hot.
+
+
+Woodcock a la Lucullus.
+
+Roast the woodcocks in the usual way, and catch the trail on a toast.
+Whilst the birds are still under-dressed, pour over them a little melted
+butter with which the yolk of an egg and a little cream has been mixed.
+Sprinkle grated breadcrumbs over, brown with a salamander, and serve
+with brown gravy.
+
+
+Woodcock a la Perigueux.
+
+Truss a brace of woodcocks, cover them with layers of bacon and put them
+into a stewpan with as much richly flavoured stock as will barely cover
+them, and add a glassful of Madeira. Let them simmer till done enough,
+drain, dish them, and pour over some Perigueux sauce.
+
+
+Woodcock a la Provencale.
+
+Fillet a brace of woodcock, soak them in salad oil seasoned with black
+pepper, some cloves, and a pounded head of garlic. Place the bones on a
+stewpan with some salad oil, six shalots, a head of garlic, a bayleaf,
+and a bouquet garni. When brown, add a dessert-spoonful of flour, a
+tumblerful of Chablis, and a pint of stock. Reduce to half the quantity,
+and pass through a tammy. Saute the fillets in warm oil; when done,
+place them in a circle on an entree dish with a fried bread sippet
+between each, stir a little lemon juice into the sauce, and pour over
+the fillets.
+
+
+Woodcock en Surprise.
+
+Take two livers of fowls and the trails of some cold woodcocks. Chop
+very finely two shalots, a sprig of parsley, and eight flap mushrooms,
+and fry in butter. When nearly cooked, put in the trail and livers to
+fry with the vegetables. After, pound all together in a mortar, and
+season with salt and pepper. Cut some neat slices of bread about two
+inches square, and fry them a pale colour, then spread on them the liver
+and trail forcemeat. Place them into the oven to colour, then dish them
+up with the woodcocks made into a salmi over them, with a good rich
+brown sauce flavoured with claret round.
+
+
+Salmi of Woodcocks a la Lucullus.
+
+Take three woodcocks, which must be roasted very under-done. Take out
+the trail, and add to it either three fowl livers or their equivalent in
+pate de foie gras. Make a farce with a dozen mushrooms chopped very
+fine, a shalot, a sprig of parsley, both chopped fine. Fry these in a
+little butter, then add the trails and livers or pate de foie gras to
+fry with them; when done, pound all in a mortar and season with salt,
+pepper, and a dust of cayenne. As three woodcocks will give six fillets,
+cut six bits of bread of the same size and fry them of a nice colour.
+Then spread the farce equally divided over the six croustades, put them
+into the oven, and when of a good colour put them between each of the
+fillets. Make the sauce from the bones and cuttings of the birds, add
+six spoonfuls of Espagnole sauce and a glass of Marsala. The fillets
+should be kept in the hot sauce whilst the croustades are cooking, so as
+to prevent their getting dry, then warm them up without boiling, as
+boiling would spoil the dish.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+Blackbird pie, 1
+
+Blanquette of chicken, 1
+ -- -- -- aux concombres, 2
+
+
+Capilotade of fowl, 2
+
+Chicken, blanquette of, 1, 2
+ -- a la bonne femme, 2
+ -- drumsticks, braised, 3
+ -- chiringrate, 3
+ -- a la Continental, 4
+ -- a la Davenport, 4
+ -- a l'Italienne, 4
+ -- a la Matador, 5
+ -- a la Cardinal, fillets of, 5
+ -- fried a la Orly, 5
+ -- -- a la Suisse, 5
+ -- fricassee, 6
+ -- fritot aux tomates, 6
+ -- nouilles au Parmesan, 7
+ -- pudding a la Reine, 7
+ -- rice, 8
+ -- in savoury jelly, 8
+ -- with spinach, 9
+ -- stewed whole, 9
+
+Capon fried, 10
+ -- a la Nanterre, 11
+
+Cotelettes a l'Ecarlate, 10
+
+
+Ducks braised, 11
+ -- a la mode, 11
+ -- a la Nivernaise, 12
+ -- devilled, 12
+
+Ducks a la Provence, 12
+ -- a puree perto, 13
+ -- salmi of, 13
+ -- stewed with turnips, 13
+
+
+Game and macaroni, 14
+ -- pie, 15
+ -- rissoles, 15
+ -- salad of, 16
+
+Goose stuffed with chestnuts, 14
+ -- a la Royale, 14
+
+Grouse in aspic, 16
+ -- croustades of, au diable, 17
+ -- a l'Ecossais, 17
+ -- a la Financiere, 17
+ -- friantine of, 18
+ -- kromesquis, 18
+ -- marinaded, 18
+ -- au naturel, 19
+ -- pie, 19
+ -- pressed, 20
+ -- salad, 20
+ -- scallops of, a la Financiere 21
+ -- souffle, 22
+ -- timbale of, 22
+
+
+Hare, to cook, 22
+ -- cutlets a la chef, 23
+ -- en daube, 24
+ -- Derrynane fashion, 24
+ -- a la Matanzas, 25
+ -- a la mode, 25
+ -- jugged, 26
+
+
+Landrail, 26
+
+Larks, croustade of, 26
+ -- a la Macedoine, 27
+ -- pie, 27
+ -- puffs, 29
+ -- salmi of, cold, 28
+
+Leveret a la minute, 29
+ -- a la Noel, 29
+
+Lievre, filet de, a la Muette, 24
+ -- gateaux de, 25
+
+
+Moorfowl, salmi of, 30
+
+
+Ortolans in cases, 30
+ -- a la Perigourdine, 31
+ -- aux truffes, 31
+
+
+Partridges a la Barbarie, 31
+ -- blancmanger and truffles, 32
+ -- a la Bearnaise, 33
+ -- blanquette of, 33
+ -- broiled, 33
+ -- chartreuse of, 34
+ -- aux choux, 34
+ -- cold fillets of, 35
+ -- a la Cussy, 35
+ -- with mushrooms, 36
+ -- pie, 38
+ -- pudding, 37
+ -- a la Reine, 37
+ -- salmi of, au chasseur, 38
+ -- scalloped, 38
+ -- a la Sierra Morena, 38
+ -- souffle, 39
+ -- stewed, 40
+ -- a la Toussenel, 40
+ -- tartlets, 41
+ -- a la Venitienne, 41
+
+Pintail, 42
+
+Pheasant, boiled, 42
+
+Pheasants, boudins of, 42
+ -- a la bonne femme, 43
+ -- a la Brillat-Savarin, 43
+ -- creme of, a la moderne, 44
+ -- cutlets, 45
+ -- galantine of, 45
+ -- fritot, 46
+ -- and macaroni, 46
+ -- pie with oysters, 47
+ -- des Rois, 48
+ -- a la Sainte-Alliance, 48
+ -- salmi of, 49
+ -- stewed with cabbage, 49
+ -- stuffed with oysters, 50
+ -- -- -- tomatoes, 50
+ -- en surprise, 51
+ -- a la Suisse, 51
+ -- a la Tregothran, 52
+ -- a la Victoria, 52
+
+Pigeons a la duchesse, 53
+ -- a la financiere, 53
+ -- a la merveilleuse, 53
+ -- ballotines of, 54
+ -- en poqueton, 54
+ -- en ragout de crevettes, 55
+ -- au soleil, 55
+ -- a la Soussel, 56
+
+Plovers in brandy, 56
+ -- golden, 57
+ -- -- aux champignons, 57
+ -- aux truffes, 57
+
+Pullet, stuffed, 57
+
+
+Quails a la Beaconsfield, 58
+ -- en caisse, 59
+ -- compote of, 59
+ -- and green peas, 60
+
+
+Rabbit, boudins of, 60
+ -- a la Maintenon, 60
+ -- galantine of, 61
+ -- gibelotte of, 61
+ -- fillets of, with cucumber, 61
+ -- fricandeau of, 62
+ -- fritters, 62
+ -- kloesse, 63
+ -- en papillote, 63
+ -- pie a la Provencale, 63
+ -- pilau, 64
+ -- pudding, 64
+ -- a la Tartare, 65
+ -- a la Wanderer, 65
+
+Roebuck cutlets, 66
+
+
+Snipe a la minute, 66
+ -- pie, 66
+ -- -- a la Danoise, 67
+ -- hot raised, 67
+ -- souffle, 68
+ -- a la superlative, 68
+
+
+Teal, devilled, 12
+ -- pudding, 69
+
+Teal, salmi of, 69
+ -- stewed, 70
+
+Turkey drumsticks, devilled, 70
+ -- en daube, 71
+
+
+Venison cutlets, 71, 72
+ -- haricot, 72
+ -- pastry, 72
+ -- puffs, 72
+
+
+Widgeon, salmi of, 73
+
+Wild ducks, fillets of, 74
+
+Wildfowl a la Bigarade, 74
+
+Woodcock au chasseur, 74
+ -- a la Lucullus, 75
+ -- a la Perigueux, 75
+ -- en surprise, 75
+ -- salmi a la Lucullus, 76
+
+
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
+ LONDON
+
+
+
+
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+ | Transcriber's Notes: |
+ | Left inconsistent hyphenation in place |
+ | Page 44: Changed trail to tail |
+ | Index: Corrected page number for Pigeons a la financiere |
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Dressed Game and Poultry a la Mode, by
+Harriet A. de Salis
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #31982 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/31982)