The Suffrage Cook Book Part 8

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The Suffrage Cook Book



The Suffrage Cook Book Part 8


Peel and cut separately all vegetables; fry sliced onions in a teaspoon of lard; add tomatoes, crushing them and stirring until quite soft; add half a teaspoon of salt, then the cuc.u.mber, egg-plant, and green pepper, stirring over a hot fire for ten minutes; place over a slow fire and stew for three hours.

If the vegetables are fresh and tender, nothing else is needed, but if they are somewhat dry, add a cupful of stock.

Cold barbouillade is excellent to spread on bread for sandwiches.

Barbouillade is usually served hot with rice boiled a la Creole.

Boiled Rice

Wash very thoroughly one cupful of rice; boil for twenty minutes in three quarts of boiling water; drain and shake well, pour cold water over the rice to separate the grains, and set in the oven a few minutes to keep hot.

Spinach

Wash thoroughly, then throw into cold water and bring to boiling point; then add 1/4 teaspoon of soda and boil 5 minutes. Turn into colander, let cold water run over it, drain well, squeezing out water with spoon, then chop very fine; add creamed b.u.t.ter, salt and pepper.

Heat again thoroughly, then serve with hard boiled eggs sliced on top.

Spaghetti

1/2 box Spaghetti 1 can tomatoes 1/2 large onion 1 teaspoon salt 1/8 teaspoon pepper 3 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon flour 1 pint water 1 tablespoon b.u.t.ter 1 1/2 lbs. boiling meat Sap Sago or Parmesan cheese.

Boil spaghetti twenty-five minutes in salt water, drain, and run cold water over it to separate.

While the spaghetti is boiling make sauce as follows: put the b.u.t.ter in the skillet and when hot put in the onion and let brown. Then add the tomatoes, meat, water, salt, pepper, sugar and cook thoroughly for one and one-half hours. Then add flour mixed with a little water; thicken to the consistency of cream; strain.

Take baking dish and place a layer of spaghetti, then a layer of sauce, then sprinkle this with the cheese, continue until the pan is filled, allowing cheese to be on the top.

Bake one-half hour in a moderate oven.

Baked Beans

1 quart beans 1 scant teaspoon baking soda 3 tablespoons mola.s.ses 1/4 pound salt pork 1/4 pound bacon 3 tablespoons vinegar 1/2 teaspoon mustard salt and pepper to taste 3 tablespoons catsup

Soak beans over night in luke warm water with soda. In morning pour off water and wash in cold water. Now place salt pork in bottom of bean crock and put layers of beans on top, sprinkle with pepper and salt, when filled nearly to top put on slices of bacon.

Now blend mustard with vinegar, now add mola.s.ses and catsup and pour over the beans and fill up and over the top with luke warm water. Bake in a slow oven for at least six hours, longer if necessary.

Creamed Mushrooms

1 lb. mushrooms flour to thicken 1/4 lb. b.u.t.ter 1/2 pt. sweet cream

To one pound of cleaned and well strained mushrooms, add 1/4 lb. of fresh b.u.t.ter. Allow mushrooms to cook in b.u.t.ter about five minutes.

Sprinkle enough flour to thicken.

When well mixed, pour in gently a little more than 1/2 pint of sweet cream. Allow it to boil, add salt and pepper to taste.

MRS. ENOCH RAUH.

[Ill.u.s.tration]

Macaroni a la Italienne

2 lbs. ground meat 2 onions 1 large tablespoon b.u.t.ter 1 1/2 tablespoons sugar salt and pepper to taste 1 large can tomatoes 2 lbs. macaroni Parmesan cheese 2, 3 or 4 cups water

Put b.u.t.ter in a pan and allow it to melt, add onions and cook until light brown, not dark. Now add meat and cook slowly, now add sugar, and seasoning and tomatoes, and as it cooks down add 1 cup of water. Allow it to cook three hours or longer, adding more water as it needs it. It will turn dark, almost a mahogany, as it nears the finishing point. When almost done put macaroni on in plenty of boiling salt water and cook almost twenty minutes. Do not allow it to cook entirely. When done drain off water. Now take baking dish, and put a layer of macaroni on bottom, now a layer of parmesan cheese, now a layer of the tomato and meat sauce, now a layer of cheese and repeat with macaroni, cheese, sauce, etc., until the top is reached. Put on a generous layer of sauce and cheese and allow it to bake about a half hour in a medium oven, being careful that it is not too hot.

Regarding how much water to add must be determined by cook. Some times it boils more rapidly. The sauce must not be too thin.

To serve with Macaroni Italienne the following is very fine.

Have the butcher cut a 2 pound round steak as thin as possible and prepare the following way:

1 generous cup grated bread crumbs 2 anchovies, cut fine 1/2 tablespoon parsley, cut fine 3 eggs boiled hard 1/2 tablespoon parmesan cheese seasoning to taste

Grate the bread, cut anchovies and parsley fine. Mix all with seasoning and cheese and spread on steak. Now place the eggs which have been boiled hard, peel, and allow to remain whole on top of bread crumbs, etc. Place at equal distance from each other, and roll up and bind with skewers or cord. Put this into the pot with the tomato and meat sauce and allow it to cook until the sauce is done, at which time the meat roll will also be ready to serve. Place the roll on a dish and cut in slices.

This, with a light salad, is sufficient for a dinner.

Rice With Cheese

Cook a cup of rice in rapidly boiling, salted water until almost ready for the table. Drain, mix with a pint of white sauce, pour into a baking dish, cover with slices of cheese, and bake in a moderate oven twenty minutes.

The white sauce may also be flavored with cheese.

Rice With Nuts

Prepare rice as above, and mingle with white sauce; add half a cup of chopped nuts--pecans or hickory nuts preferred; sprinkle a few chopped nuts over surface, and brown in quick oven.

MRS. SAMUEL SEMPLE, President, State Federation of Pennsylvania Women.

Carrot Croquettes

Boil four large carrots until tender; drain and rub through a sieve, add one cupful of thick white sauce, mix well and season to taste. When cold, shape into croquettes, and fry same as other croquettes.

Potato b.a.l.l.s

Two soup plates of grated potatoes which have been boiled in the skins the day before. Add four tablespoons flour or bread crumbs, a little nutmeg and salt, one-half cup of melted b.u.t.ter and the yolks of four eggs and one cupful croutons (fried bread--in b.u.t.ter--cut into small cubes).






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