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High-class cookery made easy
by Hart, J., Mrs. · Page 33 of 46 · 16,073 words
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with a few leaves of mint. ASPARAGUS WITH WHITE SAUCE. Tie into a bundle the asparagus, after washing the stalks clean. Keep all the heads the one way, put the asparagus on to cook in boiling water, and salt; boil for twenty minutes. Dish them on square pieces of buttered toast; pour a white sauce over. VEGETABLE MARROW. Cut the vegetable marrow into eight pieces, boil in some white stock until tender. Make a little sauce with a pat of butter, a little juice of lemon, and a grating of nutmeg. Pour over the vegetable marrow, and serve. TO BOIL POTATOES. Great care should be taken in boiling potatoes. This is a vegetable that is often neglected. When the potatoes boil, see that they do not boil too fast. A handful of salt should be put into the water. Try with a fork to see if ready. They must not boil too soft. Drain and shake over the fire, and place a napkin over them and steam. Boil a small bit of mint with them, when new. CAKES, AND ICINGS FOR CAKES. POUND CAKES. Take one pound of butter, one pound of sugar, eight eggs, a few drops of lemon. Place the butter in a basin, and warm it in cold weather before the fire. Then beat with the hand. Have the eight eggs broken in a basin, and drop one at a time till the eight are added. Have a tin hoop lined with buttered paper; add one pound of sifted flour. Currants or raisins or lemon-peel can be added. Bake for one hour and a-quarter, in not too hot an oven. CREAM CAKE. Take three ounces of butter, three ounces of sugar, one egg, three glasses of milk, and a tea-spoonful of cinnamon; rub the butter and sugar to a cream, then add the egg and milk. Put two tea-spoonfuls of baking-powder with half-a-pound of flour, and knead it to a stiff dough. If this quantity of flour seems too soft, take a little more, as there is great difference in the strength of flour, and some flour
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