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A Handbook of Fish Cookery: How to buy, dress, cook, and eat fish
by Yates, Lucy H. (Lucy Helen) · Page 43 of 57 · 19,660 words
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and let it boil well. Remove the lemon rind and shallots, and put in the pieces of turbot to heat through, all skin and bone removed. When quite hot, pour all together on to a hot dish; if liked, a few oysters may be added to the sauce just before turning it out. Some potato croquettes are a nice addition to this dish. =Turbot Salad.=--The remains of cold turbot will make an excellent salad. Free it from all skin and bone, and divide into pieces about an inch square. Sprinkle the pieces with salt and pepper and a little vinegar. Take two large fresh lettuces, let them be quite clean and dry. Make a dressing for the salad of the beaten yolks of two eggs, a teaspoonful of made mustard, salt and pepper, four spoonsful of oil, and one of tarragon vinegar. Arrange the salad in a bowl or dish by making a layer of shred lettuce leaves, then one of fish, and a few spoonsful of the dressing, and continue thus until the material is used up. Garnish the top with sliced beetroot, hard-boiled eggs, &c., and let the salad stand in a cold place for half an hour. Turbot may be cooked _au gratin_ if of a small size, allowing white wine or cider to it. French cooks generally prefer to par-boil it in "court-bouillon," then to take it out and finish cooking it in white sauce. =Whitebait.=--Whitebait are genuine Cockney fish, being found alone in the Thames in perfection. They make their appearance early in the year, but the season _par excellence_ is the month of May. They cannot be had too fresh; if not used instantly they are brought in, they should lie in ice-water until required. It is generally thought that only a "professional" can cook whitebait, but if due care be given there is no reason why they should be beyond the skill of the amateur. The principal thing to observe is the _drying_ of the fish. After well draining them they should be thrown on to a floured cloth--a cloth containing flour an
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