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Choice Cookery
by Owen, Catherine · Page 53 of 165 · 57,625 words
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hot fat. _Cutlets_ are the same (of course fancy cutlets are meant, not the French chops, so called), only they are shaped to imitate a real cutlet, with a little bone inserted; or, in the case of lobster cutlets, a small claw is used to simulate the chop bone. Many only stick a sprig of parsley where the bone should be, to keep up the fiction. _Kromeskies_ are rolls of the same mixture enveloped in very thin slices (hardly thicker than paper) of fat larding pork; a small toothpick holds the pork in place. The rolls are then egged, crumbed, and fried. _Rissoles_ are the same thing, only rather easier to prepare, being rolled in very thin pastry instead of pork. _Cigarettes_, the newest variation of the favorite entree, and most dainty of them all in appearance, are thin rolls of croquette mixture (or, better still, quenelle meat) not thicker than a small cigar. These are rolled in pastry, thoroughly deadened, pinched very securely, and fried a very pale brown. As the manner of making the mixture is about the same for all kinds of meats, fish, or game, varying only in flavor--a little wine, a little onion, or sweet herbs taking the place of the mushrooms in some cases--I will give exact directions for making sweetbread cutlets; chicken, game, or fish may be substituted for the sweetbreads, naming them accordingly. The ham may always be omitted where the flavor is objected to. For those who like it, it adds very much to sweetbreads, but would be out of place with game, which should depend on its own individual flavor. _Cutlets of Sweetbreads._--Soak a pair of sweetbreads in salt and water for an hour--longer if there is much blood about them; then cook them half an hour in stock. Drain them and let them get cold. Trim off all superfluous fat and gristle; chop them with one ounce of lean boiled ham to each pair of large sweetbreads, and half a can of mushrooms, a small teaspoonful of salt, the sixth of one of pepper. Put an ounce of flour
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