Class TAj /S Book JJjJL Copyright^?.- COPYHIGHT DEPOSIT. © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © exoxoxoxoxo^xoxoxoxoxoxoxox©: SUNSHINE T$i Cook Book i I A Collection of Valuable Recipes and Menus gathered from various sources BY . flRs. Jennie E. Underhill. e# COPYKIGHTED AND PUBLISHED BY MRS. JENNIE E. UNDERHILL, NEW LONDON, CONN. 1910. © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © ® A^ * ft vy : ©CI.A265099 V The receipts in this book Are all tried and true, So with glad sunshine spirit They're passed on to you." CONTENTS. Page Soup, ....... 5 Fish, Oysters and Clams, 13 Meats and Poultry, ..... 22 Fish and Meat Sauce, 35 Left-overs and Luncheon Dishes, 38 Vegetables, ..... 45 Mushrooms, ...... 5« Bread, Biscuit, Muffins, etc., 60 Eggs and Omelets, ..... 7i Cheese, ...... 77 Sandwiches, ...... 82 Salads and Salad Dressings, 86 Pastry, ....... 96 Hot Desserts, ...... 105 Cold Desserts, ..... 113 Loaf and Layer Cakes, .... 122 Cake Filling and Frosting, 137 Small Cakes, Cookies and Doughnuts, 142 Ice Creams, Sherbets and Beverages, 146 Pickles and Preserves, ..... 154 Candy, ........ 163 Household Hints, ...... 168 SOUP. SOUP STOCK. Select a shank of beef and have it sawed in pieces about two inches long. Wash the meat in cold water. Put into a soup-pot allowing one quart of cold water for each pound of meat and one-half teaspoon of salt for each quart of water. Place over a moderate fire till it comes to a boil then skim carefully, after which cover it close and set where it will boil gently for two hours. Then skim again and add a small onion, a few slices of carrot, and a stick or two of celery and boil until the meat on the shank is tender. Strain through a fine sieve and set away until the next day when the soup should be a solid jelly from which all the fat can be removed. For use melt a portion of this jelly, add more salt and pepper and let boil up once and serve in hot tureen. If rice or maccaroni is used have them cooked and add them while hot to the soup. A shank weighing six pounds will serve twelve people. CREAM OF CORN SOUP. One can of corn simmered with a little water for fifteen minutes, then pressed through a coarse sieve. Season with salt, butter and a tiny pinch of cayenne. Add one cup of boiling milk. PUREE OF CORN. Put i can of corn through a vegetable masher, add 3 cups of milk, 2 tablespoons flour wet with a little of the milk, large lump of butter, pepper, salt and a little sugar, cook a few minutes and serve with croutons. CROUTONS. Put a tablespoon of butter into a hot frying-pan, cut some dry bread into small squares, when the butter begins to brown add the bread and frv Hsfhtlv. 6 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Croutons are sometimes bread toasted slowly until quite brown and cut in dice. SPLIT PEA SOUP. One cup dried split peas, l / A pound salt pork, i level table- spoon flour, i tablespoon butter, i tablespoon celery, salt and pepper. Look the peas over, wash them and soak in cold water over night. Drain and put them to boil witn the salt pork and simmer gently six hours, adding the seasoning about an hour before done. If not cooked enough the thick part will settle. Strain the soup and re- turn it to the kettle. Rub the butter and flour together. Stir into the soup and cook a few minutes. Boiling water or hot milk may be used to thin the soup if too thick. GREEN PEA SOUP. i can green peas. i onion, i pt. of stock or water, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 tablespoon flour, 1 cup of cream, 1 cup milk, Salt and pepper. Cover peas with water and boil with an onion until they will mash easily. Mash, add 1 pint of stock or water. Cook together the butter and flour until smooth, but not brown. Add to the peas, then add milk and cream (or 2 cups of milk), season with salt and pepper and boil up once. Strain and serve. CREAM OF CHEESE SOUP. 1 quart of milk, l / 2 teaspoon onion juice, 1 tablespoon chopped *4 cup butter, carrot, yolks of two eggs, 2 level tablespoons flour, Salt and pepper. Yi cup grated cheese, Heat but do not scald the milk ; rub butter, flour, onion and carrot together in a saucepan, add the hot milk grad- ually, stirring constantly. Strain and return to the double soups. 7 boiler and add the cheese and stir till melted, then add the eggs well beaten. Whip with an egg beater till covered with froth and serve at once. CELERY SOUP. i bunch celery, Butter size of walnut, i pt. milk, Salt and pepper. Cut celery (except heart pieces) into small dice, cover with cold water and boil three to four hours. Rub through colander, put back into pan with pint of milk and butter. Salt and pepper to taste. Let it come to a boil. Serve hot. CELERY SOUP. Put a veal bone to boil in i quart of water. After skim- ming it well add : 2 tablespoons rice. I pint celery (cut very I teaspoon celery salt, fine), I onion. Let this boil till reduced to one pint. Take out the meai and pass the soup through a colander, mashing and extract- ing as much of the puree as possible, passing the stock through it two or three times. Boil i quart of milk sepa- rately, rub 2 tablespoons of flour in a half cup of butter, add this to the boiled milk. After cooking it a few minutes add the milk to the celery puree and serve at once, mixing milk and puree well. CREAM OF ONION SOUP. Peel and slice thin one dozen onions and fry a light brown in a little butter. Add 2 cups of milk and I quart of water, i teaspoon sugar and salt and pepper to taste, cook for thirty minutes. Strain and add a cup of cream and two hard boiled eggs chopped fine and serve at once. CREAM OF ASPARAGUS SOUP. i bunch of asparagus, i small onion, i pt. water, 2 tablespons butter, i qt. milk. Pepper and salt. 2 tablespoons flour. 8 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Cook asparagus and onion until asparagus is tender. Remove onion and rub the rest through a strainer. Blend, flour and butter. Add milk gradually. Boil five minutes. Add stock and pulp. Heat and season to taste. RICE AND ONION SOUP. i tablespoon butter or I stick of celery, drippings, i onion (sliced), 3 tablespoons rice, \]/ 2 teaspoons salt, 2 tablespoons parsley, I bay leaf, chopped, 7 cups of boiling water. Fry the onion in the drippings then put all the ingredi- ents into a kettle and boil till rice is tender, add the parsley and serve. CREAM OF SPINACH SOUP. ]/ 2 peck spinach, 3 tablespoons flour, 1 quart stock, 3 tablespoons butter, 2 cups cream or milk, Pepper and salt to taste. Cook spinach one-half hour without water. Chop fine and rub through a sieve. Add stock, thickening, seasoning and simmer five minutes. Add hot cream and serve. CREAM OF LIMA BEAN SOUP. Cook 1 pint of lima beans in salted water till perfectly tender then press through a colander. Add 1 quart of milk, a tablespoon of grated onion and a bay leaf. Pour into a double boiler and stir in 1 tablespoon of butter and two of flour that have been rubbed together. Cook and stir con- stantly till thick and smooth. Put through sieve, season with salt and pepper and serve. BAKED BEAN SOUP. Baked Beans, Tomato, Salt, Pepper. SOUPS. g Put baked beans with twice their amount, of water on to boil and stew until soft. Add half as much tomato. Rub all through a strainer. Put on to boil again and thin with water if necessary. Add salt and pepper to taste. CHICKEN SOUP. To i quart of soup stock add i tablespoon of cornstarch dissolved in milk and cook ten minutes. Then add the yolk of one egg beaten with one-half cup of milk. Strain and add one cup of peas. EGG SOUP. To one quart of beef or chicken broth add one cup of rich milk. Pour it boiling hot on the beaten yolks of four eggs to which you have added a half cup of milk. Reheat and serve at once. MILK SOUP. i quart rich milk, i cup mashed potatoes, yolks of two hard boiled j/2 cup butter, eggs, Pepper and salt. 1 tablespoon flour, Cream egg yolks, butter, and flour together. Beat into the potato and add to the milk that has been brought to the boiling point but not boiled. Strain, season, reheat and serve. POTATO PUREE. 2 lbs. potatoes, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons chopped 2 ozs. butter, onions, 1 qt. boiling milk, 2 tablespoons choped 1 qt. boiling water, celery, y'2 teaspoon pepper. Yz cup sago. Wash, peel and slice potatoes, onions and celery, melt the butter and add it to the vegetables, stirring it for five minutes to keep it from browning or burning. Then add the boiling water. When the vegetables are soft rub them through a sieve, add the milk, and when the soup is boiling IO SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. add the sago, a little at a time, and cook until the sago looks clear. Stir the soup well and add the seasoning last. VEGETABLE SOUP. \y 2 lbs. lean beef, i cup carrot, cut fine, i cup turnip chopped, y 2 cup onion, Ya cup rice, 3 qts, water, 1 pt. tomatoes, Salt and pepper. Put beef (chopped), and vegetables (cut fine), and rice in cold water, bring to a boil and let boil three hours, add salt and pepper. One-half hour before serving add tomatoes. CLAM BOUILLON. 3 quarts clams, 1 quart cold water. Wash clams and put in a saucepan with water and cover tightly so as to keep every bit of steam in. Add salt and pepper to the broth and serve with or without whipped cream in cups. CLAM CHOWDER. 1 qt. long clams, y A lb. fat salt pork, 2 onions, 1 cup milk, salt and pep- 6 milk crackers, per. 6 medium-sized potatoes, Separate and clean clams. Chop the hard part very fine. Fry the pork in an iron kettle in which you make the chow- der, add the onions sliced, and fry until light brown, then add 1 quart hot water and the necks of the clams which have been chopped fine, salt and pepper. Boil slowly l /i hour, then add the rest of the clams and the potatoes cut in dice or thin slices, cook until potato is done Then add milk in which the crackers have been soaking. Boil up once and serve. CREAM OF SALMON SOUP. y 2 can salmon, 2 tablespoons butter. 4 level tablespoons flour, 1 qt. milk SOUPS. 1 1 Drain oil from salmon, remove skin and bones, and rub through sieve. Add hot milk gradually. Season and blend. SHRIMP BISQUE. i cup shrimps, 2 level tablespoons but- 1 cup cold water, ter, 2 cups hot milk, y 2 teaspoon salt, speck 2 tablespoons flour, of pepper. Cut shrimps into bits and add cold water. Heat slowly to boiling and boil ten minutes. Drain, thicken with flour and butter, add milk and seasoning. CLAM BISQUE. 1 quart small long clams, Butter size of an egg, 3 pints milk, 2 tablespoons flour. Separate clams and clean. Chop the necks and cook them one-half hour in one pint of water. Cook soft parts fifteen minutes, warm butter and mix in flour. Heat the milk and add to butter and flour, then add the cooked clams. TOMATO SOUP. 1 qt. tomatoes, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 bay leaf, 1 tablespoon flour. 1 small onion, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon sugar. pepper. 1 pt. watei . Cook tomatoes, onion, and bay leaf till soft enough to rub through a wire sieve. Blend flour and butter, when hot pour tomato gradually into it stirring to keep it from lump- ing. Add sugar, and seasoning and cook for about ten min- utes, adding more water if desired. Reheat, when ready to serve. This soup may be made the day before using. TOMATO SOUP. 1 qt. tomatoes, 6 rolled crackers, 1 pt. water, Butter, pepper, salt, Yi teaspoon soda, i qt. boiling milk. 12 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Cook tomatoes thoroughly. Strain and add the water. Heat again and add the soda. When through foaming, add crackers and seasoning. Pour all into boiling milk. CORN CHOWDER. i can corn, V 4 lb. salt pork, i onion, sliced, I cup cream or milk, I qt. potatoes, sliced, Salt, pepper. Scald the potatoes five minutes in boiling water and drain. Try the fat from pork. Brown onion in fat. Add the fat to i quart boiling water. Cook onion and potatoes in this until tender. Seasor to taste. Add the milk and corn, cook five minutes without boiling. Add 8 crackers broken, and serve. FISH. 13 FISH. HALIBUT BAKED. 1 slice of halibut 1V2 lbs., 1 tablespoon of parsley Y% teaspon pepper, and onion chopped fine. *4 cup melted butter. Sprinkle fish with the above ingredients, roll and put in shallow pan, dredge with milk and flour and bake. Garnish with lemon cut fan shaped and parsley, also with hard boiled eggs. BAKED FISH— COD OR HADDOCK. Cod weighing 4 pounds will make two fillets, have skin and back bone removed. 1 pt. oysters, 1^2 cups cracker crumbs, *4 cup butter (melted), Salt pepper and lemon 1 egg beaten with 1 ta- juice. blespoon of milk, Season fish with salt and pepper and brush with lemon juice. Lay one of seasoned fillets on greased fish sheet. Cover with oysters dipped in buttered cracker crumbs and lay other fillet over this. Brush with the beaten egg and milk. Cover thickly with the buttered crumbs and bake in a moderate oven over three-quarters of an hour or until the fish flakes easily. Serve with tomato or Hollandaise sauce. Creamed macaroni may be used in place of the oysters. HOLLANDAISE SAUCE. Y? cup butter, yolks 2 eggs, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, ^4 teaspoon salt, cay- 1-3 cup boiling water, enne. Divide butter in three parts. Put one piece in double boiler with yolks of eggs and lemon juice. Stir constantly 14 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. until butter is melted then add second piece and as it thickens add the third piece. When thickened add water, cook one minute then add salt and cayenne. HALIBUT FILLETS. Cut in round pieces about biscuit size. Slice rather thin. Brush each piece with lemon juice, salt and pepper. Put layer of seasoned, mashed potatoes between each two pieces. Cover with beaten egg" and crumbs mixed with butter. Put in pan with milk to cover the bottom of pan. Bake till crumbs are brown and fish flakes. Serve with Hollandaise or egg sauce. CREAMED CODFISH. 2 cups milk. i cup salt codfish packed 2 tablespoons butter, solid. 4 level tablespoons flour. Heat the milk in double boiler, keeping out % cup to mix with flour. Make a paste of the flour and milk and add it to the heated milk and cook. Pick up the codfish into small pieces and soak in cold water. Put it over the fire and let it warm slowly but do not let it reach the simmering- point. If the fish is very salt change the water. When the sauce is cooked add it to the codfish and butter. A beaten egg may be added to this if desired, then cook a minute and serve. CODFISH CAKES. i pint codfish, 2 eggs, i quart potatoes (sliced Butter, raw), Boil fish and potatoes together until potatoes are soft. Drain off the water, wash thoroughly and add the butter and eggs. Fry by dropping a tablespoonful into deep hot lard. CODFISH BALLS, i cup raw salt codfish, 2 cups raw potatoes y 2 tablespoon butter, (heaping), Y^ teaspoon pepper, 1 egg (beaten). FISH. 15 Pick the fish into small pieces, if very salt let it soak a few minutes and pour off the water. Put the fish and po- tatoes into a saucepan and cover with boiling- water and cook till potatoes are tender. Drain off all the water and shake the pan over the fire till perfectly dry, if any moisture remains the balls will not keep their shape so well while frying". Mash, add the egg and seasoning, beat well add more salt if necessary and let the mixture cool, then take * tablespoon ful at a time and fry in deep fat. CODFISH PUFF. 1 pound codfish, 2 cups cold mashed po- 1 pint sweet milk, tatoes, a piece of butter, pepper. 2 eggs, Pick the fish in small pieces and put to soak in lukewarm water. Melt the butter and mix with the potato, milk and pepper. Add the fish and bake in a well buttered dish about thirty minutes. FRIED OYSTERS. Select nice, large oysters, drain them, sprinkle with salt and pepper. Roll in cracker crumbs, then in beaten egg then in cracker crumbs again and fry in hot fat. Drain and serve with celery or cabbage salad. BROILED OYSTERS. Select large oysters, drain them, dip them in meketi butter, then in cracker crumbs, and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Lay them on a buttered broiler and broil them a nice brown. Serve on buttered toast. PIGS IN BLANKETS. Drain and carefully dry nice, plump oysters, wrap each one in a thin slice of bacon, fasten it with a wooden tooth- pick and bake in a quick oven. 1 6 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. OYSTER RAMEKINS. I cup diced celery, i pint oysters, 3 tablespoons butter, 3 tablespoons flour, y 2 cup milk, Salt and pepper. Cook celery till tender and drain. Heat oysters to the boiling point and skim them out of the liquor. Blend flour and butter in a saucepan, add one-half cup each of milk, celery, water and oyster liquor. Stir until thick, then add the celery, the oysters cut in pieces and the seasoning. Put the mixture in ramekins, cover with crumbs and brown lightly in the oven. OYSTER ROYALLE. Bring a quart of milk to a boil in chafing dish and add a small stalk of celery, chopped fine, 1 tablespoon of red sweet peppers, and a generous tablespoon butter, creamed in 1 of flour. Season with salt and paprika, and add three dozen oysters, serve as soon as their edges curl. SCALLOPED OYSTERS. Butter a deep baking dish. Put a layer of broken crackers in the bottom. Then a layer of oysters, some small bits of butter, a dash of pepper and salt, and a little of the oyster liquor. Then another layer of crackers, oysters, and seasoning, til you have the required amount. The top layer must be cracker crumbs. Pour in enough milk to come to the top of the crackers, put in the oven and bake till it puffs up in the center. OYSTER COCKTAIL. 1 tablespoon vinegar, 1 tablespoon grated 1 tablespoon Worcester- horseradish, shire, 1 tablespoon tomato 2 tablespoons lemon, ketchup, y 2 teaspoon salt, y 2 teaspoon tobasco. Mix together and pour over small oysters when ready to serve. Serve in small glasses. FISH. 17 CREAMED OYSTERS. 2 tablespoons flour, 1 large tablespoon butter, 1 scant pint milk, iy 2 pints oysters, 1 well beaten egg, Salt and pepper. Melt butter and mix with flour, add milk and oyster juice. When it begins to thicken, add oysters and cook until the edges curl, add egg, and season to taste with salt and pepper. Serve at once on hot toast. BOILED FISH. Take three lbs. of thick part of a cod or haddock. Pin securely in a cloth and place in kettle partly filled with boiling water to which has been added two tablespoons of salt, two of vinegar, a bay leaf and stalk of celery. Boil from twenty to thirty minutes. Remove the cloth and serve with egg sauce. SALMON CUTLETS. One can salmon, picked over and freed from skin and bone and oil, one cup thick white sauce, seasoning, egg and bread crumbs, three sticks macaroni, one tablespoon lemon. Have a thick white sauce made with two tablespoons butter, two tablespoons flour, and one cup milk. Mix the salmon and lemon juice with this. Turn onto plate to cool, divde into twelve portions, shape like cutlets, egg and crumb each one and insert a two-inch stick of macaroni to imitate the bone. Fry in deep fat. Serve with tomato jelly. CREAMED SALMON (BAKED). 1 tablespoon of butter, 1 pint of milk, 2 tablespoons of flour, 1 teaspoon of salt. Make this into cream sauce. Break up one can of salmon fine and free from bone. Stir into sauce, put into a dish, put bread crumbs and bits of butter on top and bake until brown in hot oven. J 8 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. ESCALLOPED SALMON. Flake salmon with a silver fork. Fill a dish with alternate layers of fish, cracker or bread crumbs and white sauce, season with salt and pepper. The top layer must be crumbs and a few bits of butter. Bake a light brown twenty or thirty minutes. ESCALLOPED SALMON. i can salmon (minced), Salt, pepper and bread 2 tablespoons butter, crumbs, i pint of milk. Heat the milk and butter, add salt and pepper. Put a layer of bread crumbs in a baking dish, then a layer of sal- mon, over this pour a little of the milk. Alternate salmon and bread crumbs with crumbs on top and continue to moisten with the milk. Bake one-half hour. BAKED SALMON. i can of salmon. 3 eggs well beaten, 4 tablespoons melted ]/ 2 cup sweet milk, butter, 4 milk crackers, rolled fine, pepper and salt to taste. Beat all together well with a fork, sift another rolled cracker over the top. Bake a few minutes in a quick oven until a light brown. SALMON LOAF. 1 can salmon, 1 cup rolled cracker or y 2 cup melted butter, bread crumbs, 2 eggs, Salt, pepper and little pa- ]/2 cup milk, prika. Mix all together, put in buttered mould and steam three hours. Serve with drawn butter. BAKED BLUE FISH. Dressing for one fish — 3 slices fat salt pork chopped very fine, 1 pint milk with stale bread crumbs soaked in it, 1 egg. FISH. I 9 little salt and pepper. Remove the backbone of fish. Lay flat in the pan, sprinkle over salt and pepper and place in very hot oven for ten minutes. Then pour over it the dressing and bake till done. CREAMED HADDIE. Put a small fish to boil in cold water skin side up and let it boil for twenty minutes. Rub together one tablespoon of butter and one large tablespoon of flour. When hot add two cups of milk or cream, add the fish and let it boil a minute and serve. FINNAN HADDIE. Soak in scalding water a few minutes, wipe dry, then broil over a clear fire. Season with pepper and plenty of butter and pour hot milk over it. BUTTERED LOBSTER. i cup lobster meat, i cup white sauce, salt 2 teaspoons tomato cat- and pepper, sup, y-2. cup buttered bread or cracker crumbs. Cut lobster into dice, add sauce and seasoning, turn into buttered dish, cover with crumbs. Bake in hot oven twenty minutes. FILLET OF SOLE. Dip fillets in beaten egg and flour and fry in hot pork fat till browned on both sides. SCALLOPS A LA TARTAR. Dry scallops and dip in salted egg and cracker crumbs or bread crumbs and fry brown in deep fat using a frying bas- ket. Serve with Tartar sauce. TARTAR SAUCE. yolks of 2 eggs. i teaspoon salt, J /2 cup of oil, i teaspoon onion juice, i tablespoon lemon juice, i tablespoon chopped i or 2 tablespoons vine- capers, gar, i saltspoon pepper, i teaspoon mustard. 20 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Make the sauce as mayonnaise dressing adding capers last. SCALLOPS A LA NEWBURG. i cup thin cream or rich yolks of two eggs, milk, A few drops of tobasco 2 tablespoons butter, sauce, i teaspoon Worcester- 2 tablespoons of port or shire sauce, salt and sherry, pepper, 1 pint of scallops. Make a rich sauce of the butter, flour and cream and add scallops and seasoning. After they are thoroughly heated add the eggs (beaten) and stir until it thickens. Sometimes the scallops will make it toe thin in that case mix a little more flour with cold milk and add another egg. If wine is desired add last. LOBSTER NEWBURG. 1 cup thin cream, 2 cups lobster meat dice. Yolks of two eggs, 10 drops onion juice, 2 tablespoons butter, Salt and paprika, 2 tablespoons sherry or port wine. Melt butter, add salt, paprika and onion juice, then add lobster dice, stir, cooking slowly for three minutes, add cream and beaten yolks of eggs. Stir slowly until thickened then add wine Serve on toast. (W T ine may be omitted.) DEVILED CLAMS. 1 quart round clams 3 onions (chopped fine), (chopped fine), j/ 2 bunch of parsley 3 tablespoons butter, (chopped fine), 2 cups sweet milk, 1 cup clam broth, 3 tablespoons flour, Very little paprika. Fry the onions in the butter until brown, add the parsley and the milk to the onions and let come to a boil. Stir the flour smooth in a little of the clam broth, then add the rest of the broth, clams and paprika, and stir all into the boiling mixture, and let it boil up once, take from the frying pan FISH. 21 and let cool. Then fill into large, round clam shells, cover with cracker crumbs and small bits of butter and bake until brown. Serve hot. CLAM CAKES. i qt. long clams, i cup flour, V2 cup clam broth. Pinch of salt. 1 egg. Separate clams, chop rims and necks or put them through the meat grinder. Beat the egg thoroughly, add clam broth, salt, and about a cup of flour and all of the clams to- gether. Fry in a frying pan in small cakes. CLAM FRITTERS. Drain and chop 1 pint of clams, and season with salt and pepper. Make fritter batter, using a heaping pint of flour, as the liquor in the clams thins the batter. Stir clams into this and drop in boiling fat, fry until brown. Drain and serve. FROGS FRIED. Frogs are best fried. Only the hind legs and quarters are used. Clean them well, season, dip in beaten egg and cracker crumbs and fry the same as oysters. CLAM PIE. 1 pint of clams, t pint of diced raw pota- y 2 pint of cream, toes, Salt and pepper, 2 crackers rolled. Separate clams and chop the necks. Fine a baking dish with pie crust, put in the clams, potatoes, cream, seasoning, and clam liquor. Cover with a top crust and bake. SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. MEATS. TO BROIL OVER COALS. Have the coals glowing hot without flame or smoke Grease a double broiler with beef fat, place the steak in it and hold it near the fire while counting ten slowly. Turn the broiler and hold the other side down for the same length of time. Continue to turn the meat about once in ten seconds until it is well seared. Then hold it further from the fire turning occasionally until the surface is brown. Just be- fore taking it from the fire sprinkle it with salt and pepper, turning each side once more to the heat to cook the season- ing in. When the steak is cooked lift it onto the platter, spread both sides with butter; garnish if you like with watercress and slices of lemon or with parsley and serve. Time for a steak i inch thick 5 to 6 minutes. Time for a steak i l / 2 inches thick 8 to 10 minutes. POT ROAST. Select a piece of rump beef weighing from four to seven pounds. Wash and trim off all bad places. Put a little suet into a kettle and when melted put in the beef and sear on all sides. Then add a cup or two of boiling water two or three cloves and a bay leaf. Cover closely and cook four or five hours adding a little more water when needed. Season with salt and pepper when about half done. Thick- en and strain the gravy and serve with the meat. BRAISED BEEF. Take a piece of beef from the rump or chuck rib. Wipe it carefully with a damp cloth and brown it in beef suet. Lay it in a roaster with salt and pepper and sprinkle over it chopped carrot, onion, celery and parsley. Lay over this MEATS. 23 two or three thin slices of salt pork and three or four cloves. Put on the cover and cook until tender. The juices in the dish will make a nice brown gravy. ROAST BEEF SEASONED. Purchase a good cross rib roast. In the bottom of the roaster sprinkle salt, pepper, sage, two or three bay leaves, mace and a few slices of onion, then put in the roast. Salt and pepper it and pour about ]/ 2 cup of water around the roast, adding more water as it boils away. BEEF POT PIE WITH DUMPLINGS. Cut 2 lbs. of round steak into cubes and add 1 cup of brown sauce. Cover and bake in moderate oven three hours. Drop spoonsful of biscuit dough on the meat. Bake until crust is done and serve with another cup of brown sauce. If you have no brown sauce use hot water Cook 2 cups with the meat and take out 1 cup before putting on crust. Thicken and use for same. BEEF HASH. Chop fine cold steak or roast beef and cook in a little water, add cream or milk, and thicken with flour. Season to taste and pour over thin slices of toast. CREAMFD CORN BEEF. Scald 1 pint of milk with half an onion and a cup of celery cut into bits. Strain out the vegetables and stir into the milk 2 tablespoons each of butter and flour creamed to- gether. Stir until the sauce thickens and cook for 5 minutes. Then add 1 pint cold corned beef cut in small pieces. Turn the mixture into a buttered baking dish, cover with 1 cup of cracker crumbs stirred into Y\ cup melted butter and set in the oven long enough to brown the crumbs. Garnish the center of the dish with a bouquet of celer> leaves. CALF'S HEART EN CASSEROLE. Procure a calf's heart and tongue, mash thoroughly, re- moving any tough fibre from the heart. Take one good 24 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. sized onion, slice and cook a golden brown in one tablespoon of butter, place in bottom of casserole or large beanpot, then put in the heart and tongue, add a tablespoon of poultry dressing, salt, pepper and a bay leaf and one-half cup of well mashed rice. Cover with boiling water and cook slow- ly in oven about three hours or until meat is very tender. A'eal or chicken can be cooked in the same way. HOW TO COOK HAMBURG STEAK. 2 lbs. steak, A little bacon, Onion juice, Salt and pepper. Season the meat with salt, pepper and a few drops of onion juice. Form into a loaf one and one-half to two inches thick, put slices of bacon cut very thin over the top and bake until done in a hot oven. OR Make the meat in balls after putting in the seasoning, fry in bacon fat until cooked through, take up the meat on a hot platter, put a tablespoonful of flour into the fat remaining in the frying pan and when mixed smooth with the fat, add i cup hot water, boil up, salt, and pour over meat balls. BAKED HAMBURG STEAK. i lb. raw beef, I table spoon bread i tablespoon chopped crumbs, parsley, i teaspoon lemon juice, i tablespoon butter, I teaspoon salt, Yolk i egg, 3 dashes black pepper. Mix this together, form in a roll six inches long, put bits of butter on top and put in a long, narrow pan and bake in hot oven thirty minutes. FRIZZLED BEEF. Take % lb of dried beef shaved fine, put in a pan with 2 tablespoons melted butter. Let it cook three or four minutes then add a rounding spoon of flour and a cup of milk or cream. MEATS. 25 CECILS. 2 cups chopped beef, 1 teaspoon salt and pep- 2 table spoons bread per, crumbs, 1 teaspoon onion juice, 1 tablespoon butter, %. nutmeg grated. Yolks 2 eggs, Put all this over fire and stir until very hot, let it cool, then make into balls size of walnuts. Dip in white of egg roll in bread crumbs and fry in hot fat until a nice brown Serve hot with tomato sauce. LARDED LIVER. y 2 of a calf's liver — larded at the market. Sear it all over in a frying pan. Make a gravy by sprinkling some flour into the juice in the pan and brown it. Then put liver into casserole with gravy around it but not over it. Have small pieces of vegetables around it such as carrots, parsnips, potatoes, onions, peas and string beans, as many as you prefer. Steam two or three hours in the oven. DUTCH CASSEROLE. 2 pounds of round steak cut in pieces, 1 can peas, y 2 can tomatoes, y 2 carrot cut in cubes, 4 cloves, 1 onion sliced, 34 CU P bread crumbs, 34 cup pearl tapioca, Salt and pepper. i l / 2 cups cold water, Cook in casserole three or four hours. YORKSHIRE PUDDING— FOR ROAST BEEF. 1 pint of milk, 2 cups flour, 4 eggs, salt. Pour this batter into the meat pan three-quarters of an hour before the meat is done, raising the roast on sticks or a grating. Cut the pudding in squares and lay it around the meat when done. 26 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. BROWN STEW OF VEAL. Two pounds veal, a quarter of a pound of salt pork ; cut the pork in thin slices and fry to^ a crisp brown. Cut the veal in small pieces (as you would for a stew or pot pie), brown in the pork fat. When well browned turn in hot water and let the meat cook slowly until tender. The gravy should be a rich brown color. Serve with dumplings or quick biscuit. The flavor is much improved from simply boiling veal as many do for pot pie. SWEETBREADS. Put into ice water twenty minutes to harden ; parboil until tender; after they are cool, fry them in butter, until nicely browned ; for the gravy, take the water the sweet- bread was boiled in ; add a pint of stewed and strained to- matoes; thicken with cornstarch, blended with butter; sea- son with a pinch of cloves, mace, pepper and salt; strain over the hot sweetbreads, and cook a few minutes. VEAL LOAF. Z l A pounds veal or beef, 3 eggs, 1 tablespoon pepper, 1 tablespoon salt, 1 grated nutmeg, 4 rolled milk crackers, 1 tablespoon cream, butter size of an egg, % pound salt pork chopped. Make in loaf and cook slowly in moderate oven. BEEF LOAF. 2j/ 2 lbs. chopped meat,, % lb- fet pork, 2 eggs, 1 cup milk, 6 milk crackers, Pepper, salt and sage. Soak the crackers in the milk. Bake one and one-half hours. PRESSED VEAL. Boil a shin of veal in four quarts of water until the bones can be taken out and the water is nearly boiled away. Chop the meat fine. Season with pepper, salt and a pinch of mace ; add two cracker^ pounded and sifted, and chopped MEATS. 27 parsley. Moisten with the water that remains in the kettle, and put into a bowl that has been wet with cold water. As you fill the bowl add slices of two or three hard-boiled eggs. Cover the bow! with a plate. Set a weight upon it, an let it stand till next day. VEAL CUTLETS BREADED. Cut the veal steak into four inch squares. Dip each piece into beaten egg then into bread crumbs and fry in hot fat. Serve with tomato sauce. TOMATO SAUCE. Two cups tomatoes, a slice of onion, and four or five cloves, cooked together a few minutes. Blend together 1 ta- blespoon of butter and one of flour. Stir it into the tomato and cook. Season with salt and pepper and rub through a strainer. VEAL CUTLETS. 1 egg, 1 cup cracker crumbs, 2 tablespoons ketchup, Salt, pepper, 1 tablespoon 1 tablespoon butter, flour. iy 2 lbs. veal cutlets, Cut the cutlets into pieces right size for serving, dip into beaten egg and cracker crumbs, and fry until brown. Melt butter in double boiler, stir in flour until smooth, add 1 cup boiling water and the tomato ketchup. Take cutlets from frying pan and salt and pepper them and add them to sauce and let them cook in double boiler from one and one-half to two hours. Serve with the gravy poured around them on platter. LUNCH VEAL. Take a pound of veal steak, remove skin and fat. Cover with a quart of water and let it slowly simmer until the liquid is reduced to one pint. Take out the meat when very tender and cut it into dice. Wet a mould in cold water Place two hard-boiled eggs sliced and a few thin slices of lemon with the veal. Add one-eighth of a box of gelatine, a 28 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. pinch of nutmeg, and plenty of salt and pepper to the broth and strain into the mould and set away to harden. MUTTON STEW. 2 lbs. neck of mutton, 4 onions (small), 6 large potatoes, 3 pts. of water, 2 tablespoons flour. Salt and pepper. Cut off all the fat, and cut the mutton into pieces for serving. Put a little of the fat into the stew pan with the onions, sliced, and stir over a hot fire for 8 or 10 minutes. Then put in the meat, which sprinkle with the flour, salt and pepper. Stir ten minutes and add the water boiling. Boil about 3 hours. LIVER FRIED AS CUTLETS. 1 egg, 1 lb. of calves liver. Powdered crackers, Have the liver cut thin, scald and wipe dry. Beat up the egg, dip the liver in the egg, then in powdered crackers, and fry brown. Serve with tomato sauce. ROAST LAMB. Place a leg of lamb in roaster. Sprinkle with pepper, flour and salt in the order named, and roast until flour is brown; then add water, basting roast often. When done remove the meat, put the pan on the stove. Mix flour with a little water and pour into the juices in the pan stirring constant- ly until it thickens ; if lumpy, strain. LAMB AND MUTTON CHOPS Are broiled like beef steak allowing six to eight minutes according to thickness. Mutton chops may be slightly red in the middle. Lamb chops are usually preferred less red. Tomato sauce or green peas may be served with chops. FRIED PORK CHOPS. Dredge them with flour. Sprinkle; them with pepper and .salt and a little sage if liked and fry till thoroughly cooked. MEATS. 29 If gravy is liked stir a large spoonful of flour into the fat in the frying pan. stir till it is smooth and brown, then add milk or water to make it the consistency of thick cream and sea- son it. HAM WITH CREAM GRAVY. Put a slice of ham into a hot frying pan, brown lightly on both sides, add one cup of cream and a dash of pepper. Let the cream boil for two minutes, and serve in a deep platter poured over the ham. DELICIOUS BOILED HAM. Put the ham to soak over night in cold water. In the morning scrape and wipe off well. Put in ham kettle with sufficient water to cover. When the water begins to boil place where the heat will be sufficient to keep up a gentle boiling. From four to five hours will be sufficient to boil a ham of twelve pounds. Remove the kettle from the stove and allow the ham to remain in kettle two hours, or until cool. On removing draw off the skin. Sprinkle over the entire surface a layer of bread crumbs, three tablespoonfuls of brown sugar, dot attractively with cloves. Put into the oven to brown. SALT PORK WITH GRAVY. Slice the pork and lay in a frying pan with enough cold water to cover and let it come slowly to the boiling point. Pour off all of the water and let it fry slowly till a light brown, turning it often. Take it up and if there is too much grease in the pan for gravy pour out part of it. GRAVY. 5 tablespoons of fat. 3 tablespoons flour, t cup of milk or water, Salt and pepper. Put the flour in the hot pork fat and stir till smooth and light brown color. Remove from the fire; add the milk and stir well. Then return to the fire and stir until it thickens. Season with salt and pepper. Serve in gravy boat. 3° SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. SAUSAGE AND EGGS. Get a pound of link or bag sausage remove the skin and fry out, breaking up into small pieces ; when the sausage is cooked drop in five eggs; stir together, and when the eggs are set remove and serve. This is an excellent breakfast dish and will serve five persons. TO FRY SAUSAGES. Put a little lard into a frying pan Prick the sausages to prevent them from bursting. Lay them in the melted grease and turn them frequently. They ought to be cooked in ten or twelve minutes. Another sure way to pre- vent the cases from bursting is to cover them with cold water and let it come to the boiling point, then turn it off and fry them. BAKED SAUSAGES. Lay the sausages in ? pan and put them in the oven. When the grease is partly fried out pour it off, turning the sausages over so to brown on both sides. This is a very nice way to cook sausages and you avoid all smoke and odor in the kitchen. BREAKFAST BACON. Soak slices of salt pork or bacon in milk for ten minutes, then roll in flour and fry. When done have some raw pota- toes sliced thin and fry in the pork fat. Serve the potatoes on a hot platter with the pork or bacon in a circle around them. PLAIN CHICKEN STEW. Joint a fowl and boil till tender in salted water. Remove the fowl and lay on a platter which has been covered with biscuits broken open. Beat flour and water to a thick cream and pour into the hot broth and cook till as thick as desired ; then pour over the chicken and serve with noodles. MEATS. 31 NOODLES WITH CHICKEN. Beat 2 eggs and one-half teaspoon salt; work in as much flour as the eggs will take up ; knead well and roll as thin as a sheet of paper. Set aside for twenty minutes to dry or longer if necessary, so it will roll without sticking together, but dry enough to break. Cut the sheet in the center, lay one-half over the other, roll like a jelly roll and slice it in finest shavings with a sharp knife, turning the knife so to cut them in short pieces. Take enough broth from the boil- ing chicken to cover the noodles, put in another kettle, bring it to the boil. Stir it while you sift the noodles in and boil ten minutes. CHICKEN BROWNED IN GRAVY. Joint a chicken and boil till tender with salt added to sea- son. Take the chicken from the broth, remove the large bones, roll in flour and brown in hot butter. Make a thin batter of flour and water and pour into the broth and cook till as thick a? cream ; season with salt and pepper. Pour over the chicken and serve hot. CHICKEN IMPERIAL. 2 cups chicken cut in 1 large cup celery, cut in dice, dice, Yolks of 4 eggs, 1 large cup French peas. y 2 pint cream, Salt and pepper. Yz pint milk, Cook the chicken, milk and cream in a double boiler, then add eggs and season well with salt and pepper. Just before serving, add the celery. Serve on toast or crisp crackers. Heat the peas and serve a spoonful on the same plate. CHICKEN EN CASSEROLE. Separate chicken into pieces at joints, wipe each piece with wet cloth .saute in butter in frying pan, first on one side then on the other till delicatelv browned. Then trans- 32 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK fer to the casserole. Add about i pint of hot water. Cover and cook in a moderate heated oven about i y 2 hours. Melt 2 or 3 tablespoons butter in frying pan and in it saute 6 oi 8 peeled mushroom caps, a dozen carrot balls, two dozen potato balls, six peeled onions size of potato balls. As soon as these are browned removed to casserole, add more broth if needed, salt to season, four tablespoons sherfy wine. Cover and return to oven for a half hour or longer, until vegetables are tender. Do not leave casserole uncovered. FRIED CHICKEN. Select a young, tender chicken ; wash thoroughly for no water should touch the meat of a chicken after it is jointed, but wipe with a damp cloth. Roll each piece in flour and fry in a fiyiftg pan with plenty of lard and butter. Put the chicken in, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and cover tightly to keep in the steam till about half done, then uncover and turn each piece so to brown on both sides. Serve with a thickened gravy made from the fat left in the pan. CREAMED CHICKEN. 4 level tablespoons 4 level tablespoons flour. butter, Yi cup cream, 1 cup hot milk, 2. l /i cups diced chicken. y 2 cup chicken stock, Salt, pepper and celery salt. Melt butter, add flour and stir until blended. Add hot milk, cream and stock, season with celery salt, salt and pep- per to taste. Add chicken and cook until heated through. Serve hot on toast or in pastry shells. CHICKEN CANAPE. y 2 lb. chicken (cut in 1 tablespoon of butter, cubes), 1 tablespoon of flour, 1 cup celery cut in dice, Salt, pepper and pinch of 1 egg, celery salt, 1 pint of milk, Saltines. MEATS. 33 In a chafing dish put butter and flour; when melted, add milk. When it thickens to a cream add chicken, salt, pepper and celery salt and I egg, slightly beaten. Add the celery last and pour over broken saltines. JELLIED CHICKEN. 3 cups chicken meat, 2,y 2 cups chicken liquor. y 2 box gelatine, Soften gelatine in y 2 a cup of the chicken liquor, cold, then dissolve it in the remainder of the liquor heated. Mix with chicken and season highly. Put in a mould that has been wet with cold water, and set away in a cold place to harden. CHICKEN CROQUETTES. 1-3 cup flour, i l / 2 cups chopped chicken. 1 cup chicken stock, Salt, pepper and cayenne, 3 tablespoons butter, l / 2 cup chopped almonds. Blend butter and flour ; add chicken stock and the season- ing and cook. Mix the chicken and nuts, moisten with the sauce and cool then. Shape, crumb and fry, serve with horseradish sauce. HORSERADISH SAUCE. y 2 cup heavy cream. 2 tablespoons lemon juice, J 4 cup grated horseradish Salt and cayenne, root, Beat cream till thick and add rest of ingredients. CRUST FOR MEAT OR CHICKEN PIE. 1 egg, 6 tablespoons melted but- 1 scant cup of sweet ter, milk, 3 cups flour, 3 teaspoons baking pow- A little salt. der. Stir all together and pour over meat. 34 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. STUFFING FOR ROAST TURKEY. 4 cups crumbs, Y y 2 teaspoons poultry 4 tablespoons butter, k seasoning. y 2 cup boiling- water, 2 teaspoons salt. Yi cup cold water, Melt butter in boiling- water, add salt and pepper, cold water, crumbs and seasoning-. hour. EMERGENCY CROQUETTES. A mixture of dried beef, veal, sausage and fresh pork, put through the meat chopper and seasoned with salt, pepper, onion and parsley, make delicious croquettes. MEAT SOUFFLE. 1 coffee cup milk, a slice of onion, 1 tablespoon flour, 1 teaspoon butter, 2 eggs, 1 cup of diced meat Several kinds may be mixed together. Put milk and onion in double boiler to cook. Blend the flour and butter and stir into the milk, add the meat and beaten volks of the e^trs and cook a few minutes. Then 4° SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. add the beaten whites, put into a buttered baking- dish and bake about one-half hour. RISSOLES. • Remove fat and chop very fine any kind of cold meat. Season and add half the quantity of bread crumbs. Moisten with gravy or beaten egg. Press into a small cup and turn out on buttered tin. Put small piece of butter on top of each and bake in hot oven about twenty minutes. Serve with brown or tomato sauce. SMOTHERED BEEF. Chop the tough ends of the beefsteak and put in the bak- ing pan with a tablespoon of butter to each pound of meat, add salt and a little onion juice and pepper. Cover with another pan. Put in a quick oven for twenty minutes. SHREDDED WHEAT, OYSTER, MEAT OR VEGE- TABLE PATTIES. Cut oblong cavity in top of biscuit, remove top carefully and all inside shreds, forming a shell. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, put small pieces of butter in bottom, and fill the shell with drained, picked and washed oysters. Season with additional salt and pepper. Replace top of biscuit over oysters, then bits of butter on top. Place in a covered pan and bake in a moderate oven. Pour oyster liquor or cream sauce over it. Shell fish, vegetables, or meats may also be used. SCOTCH WOODCOCK. Boil (very gently) 5 eggs for 1 hour, shell and chop fine. In a saucepan melt 1 heaping tablespoonful butter, add 1 tablespoonful flour. When mixed add slowly 1 cup milk and stir till smooth and thick. Add J /i teaspoon salt, 34 teaspoonful of paprika and the chopped eggs. Simmer five minutes. Spread on slices of hot buttered toast and serve at once. LEFT-OVERS. 4 1 SCALLOPED HAM AND MACARONI. Prepare a white sauce as in the preceding recipe. Cut i pint of cold boiled macaroni in inch lengths and chop finely i cup boiled ham. In a buttered baking dish put alternate layers of macaroni, ham and sauce. Stir i tablespoonful melted butter into i cup fine bread crumbs, spread over the top and brown in a quick oven. DELICIOUS BREAKFAST DISH. Prepared in the following way, Shredded Wheat Biscuit are hard to surpass as a breakfast dish : Crisp carefully in the oven, pour over them just enough boiling milk to thoroughly soften the shreds, lightly cover with Karo Corn Syrup, and serve with good cream. ESCALLOPED BEEF. i cup or more of meat, I cup moist bread, part of an onion or i crumbs, small one, i cup macaroni, About i cup pan gravy or i tablespoon butter, part tomato, Salt and pepper to taste. The remains of roast, steaks or any cold boiled or stewed meat may be used for this. Put it over the fire to cook with some water; simmer gently till tender; make gravy of the water or use cold gravy; improves flavor to add some tomato. Have about half as much sauce as beef and maca- roni. Put in baking dish in alternate layers and season. Pour sauce over all, mix the bread crumbs and butter to- gether over fire till butter is melted and thoroughly mixed; put this over top and bake till crumbs are thoroughly brown and sauce bubbles up around the edges; allow 15 or 20 minutes for this. The crumbs may be omitted and a covering of mashed potatoes put over; then brush with milk or butter and bake until brown. 42 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. MEAT BALLS. Take any bits of cold meat, add one small onion chopped fine. Mix with one egg a few bread crumbs and a spoonful of flour. Season with pepper and salt and moisten with a little water or cold gravy. Make into small balls. Roll in flour and fry brown. MEAT HASH. Cold meat, Cracker crumbs. 1-3 as much mashed pota- Yi small onion (grated), toes, Butter, % as much tomatoes, Pepper and salt to taste Put any kind of cold meat through the meat chopper, add potatoes, tomatoes, onion, butter, pepper and salt to taste. Line a baking pan with cracker crumbs, add the prepared meat, cover with cracker crumbs, place lumps of butter on top and bake fifteen minutes in a hot oven. BEEFSTEAK PIE. 1 lb. round steak, 1 pint milk, 1 cup flour, 1 egg, salt and pepper. •Cut steak into dice. Beat egg very light, add milk to it and half a teaspoon salt. Pour upon the flour gradually, beating very light and smooth. Butter a two-quart dish, and in it put the meat. Season well and pour over it the batter. Bake an hour in a moderate oven. Serve hot. Mutton or lamb can be used instead of beefsteak. CHICKEN A LA CREOLE. Cook 2 tablespoons chopped onions and 4 tablespoons chopped green peppers in 3 tablespoons butter for five minutes. Add 1-3 cup flour, 2 cups chicken stock and I cup tomatoes. When hot add 2 cups cooked chicken chopped. Season with salt and pepper. Serve plain or on toast. LEFT-OVERS. MOCK OYSTERS. 43 Cut veal cutlets into pieces size of an oyster, dip in beaten egg and cracker crumbs and fry in hot fat. BEEF PIE. Cut either roast beef or beef steak into small pieces. Line the sides of a deep dish with biscuit dough rolled thin. Put a layer of the meat in the dish, then a few slices of cold pota- toes, salt and pepper and some bits of butter and a litle cold gravy if you have any. Continue in this way until your dish is nearly full, then cover with the biscuit dough and cut a slit in the top. Bake about a half hour. PRUNE TOAST. Soak Yz lb. of choice prunes over night in water to cover. Cook until very tender, remove the stones, place in a sauce- pan with 1-3 cup sugar, juice of ^2 lemon, and a few spoon- fuls of hot water if needed. Cook until the sugar is melted. Cut thick slices of stale bread in rounds and fry to a golden brown, first on one side, then on the other in 2 tablespoons of hot butter. Turn the prunes upon the bread and top with a spoonful of whipped cream. Serve at once. SAVORY TOAST (FOR LUNCHEON OR SUPPER). Cook 1 teaspoon chopped onion and half a bay leaf in 1 tablespoon of butter, beat 4 eggs slightly and scramble. When set a little, add Y /\ lb. of cheese, diced, and season with salt and a dash of cayenne pepper. Stir until the cheese is melted and serve on toast. MARMALADE TOAST (SUPPER). Beat 1 egg in a shallow dish, add 1 teaspoon of sugar, a pinch of salt and 1 cup of milk. Soak 6 slices of stale bread in the custard, drain them and brown on each side on a well 44 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. buttered griddle. Spread them with orange marmalade and pile them lightly on a dish. Serve immediately. EGG GEMS. Mix equal parts of bread crumbs and chopped meat, a little salt and pepper, and moisten with a little broth; put in buttered gem pans, and put an egg on each, and bake eight minutes with a few cracker crumbs sprinkled on top. VEGETABLES. 45 VEGETABLES. SARATOGA POTATOES. Slice the potatoes very thin, letting them stand in cold water an hour or until ready to fry. Spread the slices on a soft towel and pat dry. Put a handful in a frying basket and fry in very hot fat. When they are a light brown turn them on a piece of paper to drain and dust them with salt and pepper while hot. POTATO CROQUETTES. Take 2 cnps cold mashed potato (or more), 2 eggs, 1 tablespoon butter (melted), Salt and pepper. Beat the whites o f the eggs, then work all together thoroughly. Make it into small rolls, then dip them in the beaten yolks of the eggs, roll them in flour, lay them in a frying basket and fry in hot fat. FRENCH FRIED POTATOES. Pare small uncooked potatoes. Divide them in halves and each half in three or four pieces, lengthwise. Put in frying basket, and cook in boiling fat for ten minutes. Drain on brown paper and dredge with salt. Serve hot with chops or beef steak. SCALLOPPED POTATOES NO. 1. Slice raw T potatoes thin into a well buttered dish. Pour enough rich milk over them to cover them nicely, season with salt and pepper and butter and sprinkle in a very little flour. Bake slowly covering the dish until twenty minutes before serving, let them color a light brown. 46 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. HASHED POTATOES (BAKED). Dice 5 or 6 potatoes. Season with butter, salt and pepper, and moisten with milk. Put into a dish \\ith bits of butter on top and bake a nice brown. SCALLOPED POTATOES NO. 2. Prepare as receipt No. 1 using" alternate layers of raw onions and potatoes. POTATO ROLLS. 3 cups potatoes (mashed), Large piece of butter, 2 eggs, (well beaten), 1 teaspoon baking powder, y 2 cup sweet milk, A little pepper and salt. Beat all well together and bake in hot gem pans. POTATO DUMPLINGS. 2 eggs, 2 large teaspoons baking y 2 cup sweet milk, powder, Pinch of salt. Flour, Potatoes. Mix the dumplings, using flour enough to make a very stiff batter. Peel and cook small potatoes or large ones cut in quarters in enough water to cover them, seasoned with butter, salt and pepper. Ten minutes before they are done drop the dough from the spoon into them. Cover them closely so no steam will escape and boil ten minutes. Serve the gravy with the potatoes and dumplings. The bone or the tough end of a beef steak cooked with the potatoes is an improvement. POTATO CAKES. Form cold mashed potatoes into cakes about one-half inch thick, arrange on buttered baking pan, putting a small piece of butter on top of each. Rake on a grate in hot oven until slightly brown. VEGETABLES. 47 LYONNAISE POTATOES. 2 cups boiled potatoes, i teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon m inced 2 tablespoons chopped onion, parsley, 2 tablespoons butter, Pinch of pepper. Cut potatoes into cubes, season with salt and pepper. Melt butter in a saucepan and brown the onion in it delicate- ly. Add the potatoes, stir with a fork until they have ab- sorbed all the fat. Add parsley and serve hot. CHEESE POTATOES. Boil six or seven good-sized potatoes ; let them cool ; then chip in small pieces. Make a cream sauce of one table- spoonful of melted butter and one of flour ; stir thoroughly until free from lumps; add one cup of cold milk and stir constantly until thick and smooth. Season with salt and pepper. Line the bottom of a baking dish with a layer of potatoes ; pour some of the sauce over, then sprinkle grated cheese over each layer; continue this until the dish is full, having the grated cheese on top and a few pieces of butter. Bake about three-quarters of an hour. POTATO CROWN. 2 cups cold mashed pota- 1 cup milk, toes, 2 eggs (well beaten), 2 tablespoons melted Salt and pepper, butter, Beat all together thoroughly ; butter a baking dish well and sprinkle it with bread crumbs. Put in the mixture and bake in a quick oven until a nice brown. Turn out on a platter and arrange chops against it. STUFFED POTATOES. Select nice smooth potatoes of uniform size. Bake them and when well done cut oft" the tops and carefully scrape out the inside. Mash the potatoes and season with a little 48 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. cream or milk, butter and salt. Beat well and return it to the skins. Set the potatoes upon end in a dish and put them in the oven to heat but do not brown. CREAMED POTATOES. 2 cups cold potatoes, I tablespoon butter, i teaspoon salt, pepper, i cup milk, Heat milk, add the potatoes, cut into cubes, stir while cooking until they have absorbed nearly all the milk, add seasoning, stir thoroughly and serve. FRIED WHOLE POTATOES. Peel, steam or boil white potatoes until nearly done ; take from the lire and drain ; beat one egg and dip the whole po- tatoes into it, then in bread crumbs ; drop into boiling lard and brown, salt the potatoes and serve hot. SCALLOPED SWEET POTATOES. Wash 4 or 5 large, sweet potatoes and put them on to boil. When done, peel and slice lengthwise, put a layer in the bottom of a deep baking dish, cover with bits of butter and sugar, and a few bread crumbs, then add layer after layer of potatoes, butter and sugar until dish is full. Put butter and sugar on top and ?et in the oven until brown. SWEET POTATOES BAKED IN SYRUP. Boil sweet potatoes, when cold cut in thick slices, put into buttered baking dish, pour over a syrup made of x / 2 cup of sugar, 34 CU P water (boiled down a little), baste with syrup while baking. Bake in very hot oven until brown over the top. Put bits of butter on top before baking. TO BOIL SWEET CORN. It should be cooked as soon as possible, as it will soon lose its sweetness. Husk, silk, boil rapidly ten minutes (some say five). To eat score every row with a sharp knife, , VEGETABLES. 49 spread lightly with butter, dust with salt. It may now be eaten by pressing out the center of the grains, leaving the hull on the cob. The hull is the only indigestible part. ESCALLOPED CORN. Take six ears of corn and cut the corn off. Place a layer of corn in the bottom of a baking dish, then a layer of bread crumbs, butter, salt and pepper; add the corn and crumbs., with seasoning, alternately until the dish is full. Pour over enough milk so that it covers the top; bake. CORN FRITTERS NO. i. 3 eggs, i teaspoon sugar, 2 tablespoons flour. Salt and pepper, iy 2 pts. corn (grated), Drop on hot griddle. CORN FRITTERS NO. 2. 3 ears corn scraped, 1 egg, 1 cup cracker crumbs, Salt and pepper. Drop from a spoon into hot fat. CORN FRITTERS NO. 3. One pint of raw, scraped, tender, sweet corn, one egg, half a cup of milk, one teaspoonful of baking powder, a little salt, floui to fry nicely. BAKED CORN. Cut the corn from the cob into a baking dish, add a tea- spoon sugar, a little salt, then add milk to cover the corn. Bake about one-half hour. I think no one will want to eat corn on the cob afttr trying this baked corn. ESCALLOPED TOMATOES. Pare and slice them ; alternate layers with bread crumbs adding pepper, salt, butter and sugar; finish with crumbs, bits of butter and a little sugar on top and bake. 50 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. SCALLOPED TOMATOES. Peel and slice a quart of ripe tomatoes, break in small pieces an equal measure of stale bread, and make a pint of white sauce. Put these ingredients in layers into a baking dish, sprinkle on the tomatoes 2 tablespoons of granulated sugar. Over the top of the dish dust a layer of fine crumbs, season with salt and pepper, dot with bits of butter, and cook in the oven for one-half an hour or until nicely browned. Serve in the dish in which they were baked. BAKED TOMATOES. Scald, peel and cut a slice from the stem end of tomatoes, leaving about two-thirds of each tomato. Place them, cut side down, on slices of buttered bread of fitting size. Arrange on a buttered pan, sprinkle with salt, pepper and a little sugar each tomato ; bake half an hour. TOMATO RICE. One pint of tomatoes, canned or raw, y 2 cup of rice, 1 cup of water, small piece of butter, salt and pepper, red pepper if you prefer; cook one hour. STEWED MACARONI. Cook 1-3 of a pound of macaroni in a pint of clear beef soup. Cook it gently for fifteen minutes, adding a little salt. Take up the macaroni put it on the dish in which it is to be served. Sprinkle it thickly with grated cheese. Pour over it a pint of tomato sauce and serve. MELON CROQUETTES. Cut small canteloupes in eighths lengthwise, remove rind and seeds, sprinkle with salt, roll in crumbs, egg and crumbs. Fry in deep fat and drain on brown paper. Serve in place of a vegetable, 01 as an entree with lemon sauce. VEGETABLES. 5 1 FRIED CAULIFLOWER. Wash and cut the cauliflower into sections, cook in boil- ing salted water until tender, but not broken, drain thoroughly, dip each floweret into beaten egg, then into crumbs and fry in deep fat. Serve with cream sauce. CAULIFLOWER. Trim off the outside leaves, soak the head in cold salted water for an hour with the flower side down, drop in a kettle of boiling salted water, boil rapidly a moment, then let it simmer until done. Serve with a cream sauce. LENTILS. Wash the lentils and c oak them over night, next morning drain off the water and cover them with fresh cold water, bring to the boiling point and then simmer gently for about an hour. CREAMED BRUSSELS SPROUTS AND CELERY. 1 qt. Brussels Sprouts, White sauce No. 2. 1 bunch celery cut in cubes, Boil celery until tender in boiling salted water. Boil Brussels sprouts in boiling salted water (with cover off to prevent odor in cooking) until tender about ten minutes. Make white sauce no. 2 with 2 tablespoons butter, 2 table- spoons flour and 2 cups hot milk, 1 teaspoon salt, dash pep- per. Drain vegetables, mix together lightly with fork and reheat in white sauce or pour white sauce over them. BRUSSELS SPROUTS. Wash the sprouts, cut off the outer leaves, put them into boiling salted water, and when they reach the boiling poirt, push them back where they will simmer for about thirty minutes, or until the sprouts are tender. Drain and cover with cream sauce. 52 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. CREAMED CELERY. 2 cups celery, i tablespoon flour, i tablespoon butter, Salt, pepper, i cup milk, Cut into small pieces the celery. Cook in salted water until tender (about twenty minutes). Heat the milk, cream butter and flour and add to milk. Drain off the water from celery and stir celery into thickened milk. Add salt and pepper to taste. PORK AND BEANS. Pick over carefully a quart of beans and let them soak over night. In the morning- wash and drain in another water and put on to boil in cold water with half teaspoon of soda. Let them come to a boil then drain again. Cover with cold water once more and boil them fifteen minutes, or until the skin of the beans will crack when taken out and blown upon. Drain the beans again, put them into an earth- en beanpot adding i tablespoon of salt and 3 tablespoons of molasses, cover with hot water, place in the center 1 lb. of salt pork, first scalding it with hot water and scoring the rind across the top a quarter of an inch apart to indicate where the slices are to be cut. Place the pot in the oven and bake six hours or longer. Keep the oven a moderate heat, add hot water from the teakettle as needed on account of evaporation, to keep the beans moist. Keep the pot covered so the beans will not burn on top. BEANS WITH BROWN SAUCE. Use cold boiled lima or string beans, and add to them the following sauce : Put into a saucepan 1 tablespoonful each of butter and finely chopped ham, and cook for three minutes. Then add 1 tablespoonful flour, mixing well, and gradually pour in a cupful of good, rich stock or gravy. Stir until smooth, seasoning with salt and pepper, and a few VEGETAGLES. S3 drops of onion juice. Cook five minutes longer and pour over slices of toast. Good supper dish. BAKED BEANS WITH TOMATO. Melt 3 tablespoons butter, add T / 2 onion and ^ green pepper (from which seeds have been removed) finely chopped, and cook three minutes. Add i cup tomato (thick), and 1^2 cups cold baked beans, simmer till heated and well thickened. Serve with brown bread toast. BAKED ONIONS. Peel large onions, boil one hour in plenty of water., slightly salted. Butter a shallow dish, place onions in it, sprinkle with salt and pepper, put a teaspoon of butter in the center of each onion, cover lightly with crumbs, bake slowly one hour. Serve with cream sauce. BUTTERED ONIONS. Boil the onions a few minutes, then pour off the water, and add more boiling water and a little salt, boil until ten- der. Drain and dress with salt, pepper and melted butter. FRIED SPANISH ONIONS. Cut onions in thin slices and lay in milk for a few minutes. Roll in flour and fry in deep fat. RICE CROQUETTES. Boil one cup of rice. When thoroughly cooked add 1 pint of milk and cook until the rice has absorbed the milk; add one-half teaspoon of salt, pepper and juice of one small onion and the yolk of one small egg. When cool, form in balls, dip in the beaten white of egg and bread crumbs and fry in deep, hot fat. Serve with peas. AS RICE IS COOKED IN THE SOUTH. To y 2 pt. of rice add i l /2 qts. of cold water. Use hot water in the lower part of the double boiler, and boil about 54 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. three hours. Proportioned in this way, all the water will be taken up by the rice. RICE CROQUETTES. x /z cup cooked rice, i pt. of milk, 2 eggs, Grated lemon rind, i talbespoon melted but- I teaspoon sugar, ter, A little salt. Fry in deep lard. BOILED RICE. 4 cups boiling water, 2 teaspoons salt, i cup rice, Wash rice thoroughly. Put in boiling salted water, boil ten minutes rapidly. Then put in double boiler and cook until tender drain and dry carefully. Serve hot, or place in wet moulds and serve cold with apple jelly. PARSNIP BALLS. Boil parsnips in salted water until tender, mash, season with salt, pepper and butter, add a little flour and 2 well- beaten eggs. Form into small balls and fry in hot lard. PARSNIPS FRIED IN BUTTER. Scrape the parsnips and boil gently forty-five minutes. When cold, cut in long slices about one-third of an inch thick. Season with salt and pepper, dip in melted butter and in flour. Fry in butter. BOILED PARSNIPS OR CARROTS. Wash and scrape and let stand in cold water till ready to cook. Cook in boiling salted water forty-five minutes, or until soft. Drain off water, serve hot with white sauce, or plain with butter, pepper and salt. FRIED CABBAGE. Cut cabbage fine as for slaw, salt and pepper, stir well and let it stand five minutes. Have an iron kettle smoking VEGETABLES. 55 hot, put into it a tablespoonful of nice fat, then the cabbage, stir until tender. To half a cup of sweet cream, heated, well stirred, and taken from the stove, add three tablespoon fuls of vinegar; pour this over the cabbage and serve im mediately. W hen properly done it is excellent. BAKED CABBAGE. A quarter of a good-sized cabbage ; soak in cold water, with a little salt; drain and boil ten minutes in slightly salted water uncovered ; drain again, and add a sauce made of i cup milk, i tablespoonful of butter and I of flour ; sea- son with salt and pepper; cover with crumbs either bread or cracker ; bake one hour. BAKED BEETS. Beets retain their delicate flavor and sweetness much better baked instead of boiled. Turn them often while baking with a knife as a fork will break the skin. When done remove the skin, slice and serve hot with butter, pepper and salt. STUFFED SQUASH. Cut the top of a large pattypan squash smoothly across and scrape out the inside. Mix this with a cupful of bread crumbs, half an onion, chopped fine, a piece of butter size of walnut, salt, pepper and a haif cup of milk. Fill the squash with the dressing, sprinkle grated bread over the top and bake slowly. BAKED WINTER SQUASH. Cut the squash open. Scrape out the seeds, cut it into rather large pieces without paring. Put it into a dripping pan and bake in a moderate oven till tender. When done peel, mash with butter, pepper and salt. Serve hot. S6 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. TO STEW CUCUMBERS. Peel and cut the cucumbers into eighths lengthwise. Put them into a baking pan, cover with boiling water, add a teaspoonful of salt and stew gently for twenty minutes. Drain and arrange on squares of toasted bread. Put 2 tablespoons of butter and 2 of flour into a saucepan, add a pint of the water in which cucumbers were boiled, and stir constantly until you have a smooth sauce, add 1 teaspoon of salt and 1 tablespoon of lemon juice and a clash of pepper. STUFFED PEPPERS. To stuff peppers cut off stem, remove seeds and let stand in water over night. For the filling take 2 tablespoons melted butter, 1 onion chopped fine, 2 cans Campbell's to- mato soup or 1 pt. tomato puree, 1 teacup of bread crumbs. This is enough for eight peppers. Fry onion in butter, add tomato soup and bread crumbs, and cook till it thickens. Stuff peppers with this mixture and bake for half an hour. SAUCE. — Half pint of cream heated with rounded tea- spoonful flour. Cook in double boiler. Just before send- ing to the table pour over beaten egg. FRIED EGG PLANT. 1 large egg-plant, 2 eggs, 1 pt. crumbs. Salt and pepper. Cut the plant in slices one-third of an inch thick. Pare these and cover with boiling water to which 1 tablespoon of salt for every quart of water has been added. Let stand one hour. Drain and slightly pepper the slices. Dip in the beaten egg and cracker crumbs (or in batter made of egg, flour and milk), and fry in boiling fat for eight or ten minutes. The slices will be soft and moist when done. VEGETABLES. 57 PEAS IN TURNIP CUPS. Steam small, white turnips, hollow out the centers, cut the edges in points, fill with peas that have been heated in a sauce made of 2 tablespoons of butter, 2 tablespoons flour, 1 cup milk, y\ teaspoon salt. Cooked smooth. SPINACH. 1 peck spinach, White sauce, made of 4 2 saltspoons salt, tablespoons butter, 3 4 eggs, boiled 25 minutes. tablespoons flour, 1 cup milk. Cover the spinach with water, and boil, adding salt. Heat halves of shredded wheat biscuit, dipped in milk, and put in a buttered pan in the oven. Serve a spoonful of the spinach on each half biscuit, pour the cream sauce over and u^e eggs cut in quarters to garnish. JELLIED VEGETABLES. Soak 1 large tablespoon of gelatine in *4 cup cold water. Dissolve in 1 cup boiling water ; add J4 cup each of sugar and vinegar, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 1 teaspoon salt, a few whole cloves. AYhen nearly cold strain, then add 1/2. can of small green refugee beans, which have been drained and cut in half, also 2 or 3 pimentos, cut in fancy shapes. Put in mould and set on ice to harden. Garnish with a border of Malaga grapes seeded and cut in halves. 58 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. MUSHROOMS. MUSHROOM STEW. Skin and wash one pound of mushrooms, add I pt. water, salt, pepper, a small piece of butter. Boil slowly 20 minutes. MUSHROOMS ON TOAST. Fry in hot butter until they are nice and tender. Serve on hot buttered toast. CREAMED MUSHROOMS. Simmer your mushrooms in just enough milk to cover them ; season, and thicken a little ; serve on toast. MUSHROOMS WITH CHICKEN AND EGGS. Cut all the meat from a cold roast or boiled chicken into*- small dice ; add four or five mushrooms, cut in rather small pieces ; put them in chafing dish with a pint of rich cream, leaving out a gill of the cre?m to dissolve the flour; add a generous teaspoonful of butter, season with salt and pepper, and let the whole cook about ten minutes. In the mean- time beat up the yolks of two fresh eggs in the gill of cream ; then add a heaping tablespoonful of flour and stir the mix- ture till the flour is dissolved ; then stir briskly through the chicken and let it come to a boil. Last of all, stir in another teaspoonful of butter, lay some slices of toast on a hot platter, pour the chicken over it and serve at once. Dec- orate the dish with sprigs of parsley. TO PICKLE MUSHROOMS. Put tender parts into jars with peppercorns, mustard seed and nasturtium seeds. Pour over cold white wine vinegar ; cork and seal hermetically. MUSHROOMS. 59 MUSHROOMS ON TOAST. Fresh meadow mushrooms are best. Wash carefully, peel (with silver knife), divide into quarters, and throw into cold water to which has been added a little vinegar. For each pint of mushrooms put I tablespoonful of butter in the saucepan; when melted, add the mushrooms, i table- spoonful of water, ^ teaspoonful of salt. Cover and cook slowly ten minutes, or until tender. Divide i pt. of cream in two portions ; add i part to the mushrooms, and mingle the remainder with 2 even tablespoonfuls of flour ; add to the mushrooms and stir carefully, until very hot. Serve on toasted bread or biscuits. 6o SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Bread, Biscuits, Muffins, Etc. DELICIOUS NUT BREAD. 2 cups sweet milk, i teaspoon soda, 2 cups flour, y 2 cup molasses, 2 cups graham flour. y 2 cup sugar. i tablespoon salt, Mix well and add i cup walnut meats cut, not too fine. Let it stand in the pan twenty minutes before baking one hour in a slow oven. WHITE BREAD. i qt. milk, i large spoonful shorten- 2 qts. flour, ing, 2 tablespoons sugar, i tablespoon salt, i yeast cake. Sift flour into a large pail or pan. Mix with it the shortening, sugar, and salt. Scald the milk. When it be- comes lukewarm dissolve yeast in it (y 2 cake is sufficient in summer). Make a hole in the center of the flour and pour milk and yeast into it. Cover tightly, and leave in a warm place over night. In the morning stir all together, adding flour if necessary until the mixture is thick enough to mould. Knead for a few minutes, then put back in pail and let stand until light. This will make two large loaves and pan of rolls, or three loaves. WHITE BREAD OR PARKER HOUSE ROLLS MADE IN ONE-HALF DAY. i pt. milk, i tablespoon butter, 2 tablespoons sugar, I yeast cake. Flour enough to make a stiff batter. BREAD, BISCUITS, MUFFINS, ETC. 6l Scald the milk, add butter and sugar and let it cool. Then add yeast and flour. Knead ten or fifteen minutes. Cover and put in a warm place to rise. When very light roll out one-half inch thick. Cut with biscuit cutter, spread with soft butter, fold over, put on tin and let rise again until very light. Bake in hot oven until a good brown. RAISIN BREAD. Make a sponge at night of I qt. of milk scalded and cooled. To the hot milk add i tablespoon of lard. When cool stir in a beaten egg, % lb. of sugar, i yeast cake and flour enough to make a soft batter. In the morning add l tablespoonul of salt, 2 lbs. seeded raisins and flour enough to make a dough. When raised, mould into five loaves. Sprinkle cinnamon on top. Let it become very light and bake one hour in moderate oven. QUICK YEAST ROLLS. Scald 1 pt. of milk, add to it 2 tablespoons of sugar and ^4 cup butter. When lukewarm crumble into the mixture 1 cake of compressed yeast. Stir until evenly mixed then add 2 well beater eggs and 7 cups of sifted flour. Beat thoroughly, cover and set aside in a warm place to become light. Roll into a sheet and cut into biscuit, spread a piece of butter on one side of the round, fold over like a pocket- book and let stand until light, then bake. Or the rounds may be placed close together in a buttered pan, first dipping the edges in melted butter. The whole work can be done in between three and four hours. The dough is too soft to knead. RUSK NO. 1. 1 egg, hot water, Yz cup sugar, 2 teaspoons baking pow- }i cup milk filled with der, salt. Beat the egg, add sugar and the milk and water. Sift a little flour with two teaspoons of baking powder, add to 62 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. milk and egg, then salt. Add enough more sifted flour to roll lightly on board, cut with biscuit cutter and bake in a hot oven until done (20 to 30 minutes). RUSK NO. 2. i pt. of light sponge, 1 cup sugar, T / 2 cup melted butter, 2 eggs, Flour enough to make like bread dough. When light, form into biscuits and set to rise again. When light the second time, bake, and just before they are done, brush the tops with sugar and milk. WAFFLES. 1 cup sour milk, Butter size of an egg, 1 egg, y 2 teaspoon soda, Flour enough to make smooth batter. Delicious eaten with strawberries and cream or peaches and cream. SHREDDED WHEAT BROWN BREAD. 2 cups shredded wheat ]/ 2 cup sour milk, crumbs, 1 cup corn meal, y 2 teaspoon salt, 1 cup molasses, 1 teaspoon soda, i}i cups sweet milk. Have water boiling before beginning the bread. Mix crumbs, corn meal and salt, add the molasses in which has been mixed y of the teaspoon of soda, then add 1^/4. cups of milk, and last the y 2 cup of sour milk to which has been added the remaining y 2 teaspoon of soda, stirring until it foams. Turn into a buttered brown bread mould, cover tightly, and steam three hours. BAKING POWDER BISCUITS. 1 qt. flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1 tablespoon lard, I teaspoon salt. BREAD, BISCUITS, MUFFINS, ETC. 63 Mix with sweet milk sufficient to roll out on board with- out sticking. Cut with biscuit tin and bake quickly in hot oven. VIENNA ROLLS. 1 tablespoon lard, ing powder, 1 qt. flour (unsifted), Yi teaspoon salt. 2 heaping teaspoons bak- Milk to make stiff dough. Warm the lard and mix with the other ingredients. Knead smoothly. Roll out ]/2 inch thick, cut with round biscuit cutter and fold over, wetting with a little milk to make it stick. SOUR MILK BISCUIT. 1 qt. flour, 1 teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon salt, 4 tablespoons butter. Sour milk. Rub butter into sifted flour, add salt. Make a hole in the center of the flour. Put the soda in a cup and dissolve in warm water, then fill cup with sour milk and stir well. Pour this in the center of the flour and make a soft dough using more milk if needed. Turn out on floured board, roll out and cut with small cutter and bake in quick oven. FRENCH ROLLS. \y 2 lbs. flour, 4 oz. butter, */2 cup sweet milk, y 2 cake of yeast, 1 teaspoon salt, 4 eggs. Beat the eggs very light and add them last. Set to rise md bake same as other rolls. STEAMED BROWN BREAD WITH SQUASH. 3 cups yellow corn meal 1 cup graham flour, Ya cup molasses, 1 cup squash, 3 cups of milk, either sweet or sour, 2 teaspoons soda dissolved in 1 cup hot water. Steam four hours. 64 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. GRAHAM NUT BREAD. i y 2 cups Graham, i]/ 2 cups sour milk, }i cup molasses, i" cup nuts chopped fine, 2 teaspoons soda, A little salt. i }/2 cups Hour, Bake one hour. BROWN BREAD. 2}/2 cups yellow meal, 2 cups sweet milk. 1^2 cups wheat flour, I cup sour milk with i i teaspoon salt, teaspoon soda dissolved 1 cup molasses, in it. Stir all together until smooth, pour into a well greased 5-lb. lard pail, place this in a larger pail half full of boiling water. Cover tightly and cook in a steady oven three hours. BROWN BREAD. 2 cups flour, 3 cups corn meal, 1/4 cups sweet milk, iy 2 cups sour milk, i teaspoon soda (dis- i cup molasses, solved in milk), i teaspoon salt. Steam three hours. SALLY LUNN. i pt. flour, 2 tablespoons m e 1 t e d i cup sugar, butter, i cup milk, 2 teaspoons cream of tar- i teaspoon soda. tar, i egg, Bake in long biscuit tin and cut in squares for table. QUICK WAFFLES (FINE). i qt. sweet milk, y 2 cup melted butter, 6 eggs, yolks and whites 5 cups flour, beaten separately. BREAD, BISCUITS, MUFFINS, ETC. 65 Just before baking" add 4 teaspoons baking powder. Beat well for a few minutes. HUCKLEBERRY GEMS. Butter size of egg, 1 teaspoon cream tartar, y 2 cup sugar, l / 2 teaspoon soda, 1 egg, salt, 2 scant cups flour, 1 cup milk, 1 large cup berries, Bake in gem pans. BROWNIES OR MUFFINS. i pt. bran, 1 cup flour, 2 cups milk, 1 teaspoon soda. 4 teaspoons molasses, Pinch salt. Bake in hot oven twenty minutes. SHREDDED WHEAT BISCUIT WITH STRAWBERRIES. Prepare berries as for ordinary serving. Warm biscuit in oven before using. Cut or crush oblong cavity in top of biscuit to form basket. Fill the cavity with berries and serve with cream or milk. Sweeten to taste. Peaches, blackberries, raspberries, blueberries, pineapple, bananas, and other fruit, fresh or preserved, can be served with Shredded Wheat Biscuit in the same way, CORN CAKE. 1 cup sour milk, 1 cup corn meal, 1 cup flour, J4 cup sugar, \ 1 tablespoon melted butter, ]/ 2 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon of soda dissolved in a little of the milk. CORN BREAD NO. I. 1 cup corn meal, 1 cup flour, 1 cup milk, x egg (unbeaten), 1 tablespoon melted J / 2 cup sugar, butter. 2 teaspoons baking pow- A little salt. der. Bake about one-half hour in thin loaf. 66 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. CORN BREAD NO. 2. \y 2 cups flour, 1 egg, 1^2 cups Indian meal, 3 tablespoons sugar, 1 cup milk, 34 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons baking pow- 1 tablespoon melted der, butter. Mix dry ingredients together, then add milk and egg, and lastly the melted butter. Beat thoroughly. EGG CORN CAKE. yi cup corn meal, % cup flour, l / 2 cup sour milk, l / 2 cup sweet milk, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon sugar, ]/ 2 teaspoon soda, 1 egg, y 2 teaspoon salt. Heat a pan and melt the butter. Beat egg and add all the ingredients except the sweet milk, add melted butter, put batter into pan, and when ready to put in oven, pour the sweet milk over the top. Bake twenty minutes in a very hot oven. JOHNNY CAKE. 1 cup yellow meal, 1 cup sweet milk, 1 cup wheat flour, 1 teaspoon cream tartar. 1 cup sugar, y 2 teaspoon soda. 2 eggs, SQUASH MUFFINS. 1 cup sifted squash, 1-3 cup sugar, 1-3 cup of butter, 1 cup milk, y 2 of a yeast cake, a little salt. Stir as stiff as you can with a spoon. J^et it stand over night, and in the morning stir down and drop in gem pans and bake in a quick oven. SHREDDED WHEAT BISCUIT FOR BREAKFAST. Warm the biscuit in the oven to restore crispness — don't burn, pour hot milk over it, dipping the milk over it until BREAD, BISCUITS, MUFFINS, ETC. 67 the shreds are swollen ; then pour a little cream over the top of the biscuit. Or, serve with cold milk or cream, ac- cording" to. individual taste. OAT MEAL BREAD. 1 cup Quaker Rolled 1-3 cup molasses, Oats, 1 qt. flour, 1 pt. boiling water, Little salt. t/o yeast cake, Pour hot water over the oats and let stand one hour, or until cool. Stir ingredients together and let rise over night. Then add enough flour to roll easily. Bake as wheat bread. GRAHAM GEMS. 2 tablespoons molasses, Salt, y 2 tablespoon butter, 1 teaspoon soda, Beat well then add 1 cup sour milk and iy 2 cups graham flour. . CREAM MUFFINS. 3 eggs, well beaten, y 2 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon butter ^4 pt. milk, (melted), y 2 pt. cream. Beat all together ; then add 1 pint flour sifted and stirred in lightly. Half fill the gem pans and bake in good oven. GRAHAM BREAD NO. 1. 2 cups sour milk, 1 heaping teaspoon soda, y 2 cup sugar, 1 tablespoon melted 4 cups graham flour, butter. Dissolve the soda in the milk. Mix all ingredients quick- ly, pour into bread pan and let it stand for one hour before baking. 68 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. GRAHAM BREAD NO. 2. 2Y2, cups of graham flour, l / 2 cup wheat flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 2-3 cup molasses. 1 teaspoon soda, Wet soft with milk and water. GRAHAM BREAD (WITHOUT YEAST). 2 cups graham flour, l / 2 cup molasses, t cup white flour sifted, 1 pt. sour milk, 1 teaspoon soda, x / 2 teaspoon salt. Mix graham flour, white flour and soda thoroughly. Bake 1 hour in slow oven. GREEN CORN GRIDDLE CAKES. 2 cups green corn, 2 cups milk, 2 eggs, (well beaten). Salt. Enough flour to make a batter. Fry on hot griddle and serve hot. SOUR MILK GRIDDLE CAKES. 1 pt. sour milk, 1 tablespoon melted 1 egg, butter, Flour, V2 teaspoon of salt, ]/ 2 teaspoon soda dissolved in a little warm water. The batter must not be too thick ; bake on hot griddle. GRIDDLE CAKES (VERY GOOD). t cup corn meal, 1 teaspoon salt, 4 cups graham flour, 1 cake compressed yeast. Dissolve yeast in lukewarm water. Mix flour and meal with enough water to make a rather thick batter ; add yeast and salt and let stand to get light. Rake till brown on a hot griddle. BREAD, BISCUITS, MUFFINS, ETC. 69 RAISED BUCKWHEAT CAKES. 1 quart warm water, i cake compressed yeast, 1 teaspoon salt. Buckwheat flour. Dissolve yeast, add it to the water, put in the salt, then stir in enough buckwheat flour to make a good batter. Cover and set in a warm place to rise over night. In the morning add a level teaspoon of soda dissolved in water to remove the sour taste and a tablespoon of molasses to make them brown nicely and more water if batter is not thin enough ; if some of the batter is left over it can be used to start the cakes the next night. APPLE FRITTERS. 1 1-3 cups flour, 1 egg, *4 teaspoon salt, 2-3 cup milk, i l /> teaspoons baking 2 apples cut in small powder, pieces. Sift flour, salt and baking powder together, add milk, then egg and lastly the apple. Drop by spoonfuls in hot fat. Serve with sauce. SAUCE FOR FRITTERS. 3 tablespoons butter, y$ cup sugar, 1 tablespoon cornstarch, \ x / 2 cups boiling water. 2 tablespoons brandy. Cream butter and sugar then add cornstarch. When well creamed add boiling water and let the sauce come to the boiling point then set on the back of the stove and add brandy or other seasoning. BREAD FRITTERS. Drop small pieces of bread dough into hot fat and fry a nice In-own ; dust with powdered sugar and nutmeg or serve with maple syrup. 7© SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. SPANISH TOAST. i cup milk, 2 eggs (beaten), i tablespoon flour, ^ teaspoon salt. Put milk in double boiler, add eggs, salt and flour and cook till smooth. Dip slices of bread in this and fry; sift powdered sugar over them and serve hot. LOTTIE'S SCRAPPLE. Stew 2 lbs. of fresh pork till thoroughly done. Take the meat up and add enough water to the liquor in the kettle to make a quart. Remove all bone from the meat and chop the meat or put it through the meat chopper. Return to the kettle adding more salt if necessary also sage and onion if desired. Add corn meal that has been mixed with a little flour ; sift it in slowly stirring constantly to keep it from lumping. When thick enough so that the spoon will stand let it cook two or three minutes. Turn into a pan and when wanted slice thin and fry in drippings. EGGS AND OMELETS. 7 1 EGGS AND OMELETS. OMELET WITHOUT MILK. Use any number of eggs desired. Beat whites and yolks separately. To the yolks add salt and as many tablespoons full of waer as you have eggs and one more. Pour this mixture into the whites and beat together until well mixed. Put in hot frying pan in which a tablespoonful of butter has been melted. Shake over the fire until set, then place in hot oven for ten minutes. BAKED OMELET. 4 eggs, 1 tablespoon of flour, 1 teacup milk, A little salt. Beat all together except whites of eggs, and put into a double boiler and cook until thick as a custard. Then add the well-beaten whites and beat all thoroughly. Bake in a well-buttered dish until a light brown. SHIRRED EGGS. Set into the oven until quite hot, a common white dish, which is large enough to hold the number of eggs to bt baked. Melt in it a small piece of butter. Break the eggs carefully in a saucer one at a time and slide into the dish, sprinkle salt and pepper over them, and let them cook in a hot oven until white is set. ( Much nicer than fried eggs with ham or bacon). CORN OMELET. Take well-filled ears of corn ; cut the kernels down through the center ; with the back of a knife press out the pulp. To three tablespoonfuls of the pulp add the beaten yolks of three eggs and a little salt; beat the whites to a stiff froth ; mix with the corn and pour into a hot buttered 72 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. pan; cover at once and place where it will cook, but not burn. When set, fold and serve on a hot dish. . SAUCE FOR EGGS. i tablespoon butter, \A cup of veal or chicken Yz cup cream. broth, i tablespoon flour, Blend butter and flour; add cream and broth; cook and stir till smooth ; season with pepper, salt, onion juice and a few drops of lemon. TABASCO EGGS. Butter, Cream, 3 tablespoons milK, Tabasco, Salt and pepper, Eggs. Melt a ^ood-sized piece of butter in the milk, salt and pepper to taste, and just before this boils add cream enough to poach the number of eggs you wish to serve. When this boils, break in each egg, and when they are set, put six or seven drops of tabasco on each egg, then cover the cream over them until they are done. Serve on hot buttered toast. This may be made in a chafing dish. CURRIED EGGS. Boil eggs hard, remove shells carefully and drop the eggs in hot water to keep warm until ready to use. Mold some boiled rice into balls and place in plate warmer, make a sauce from I tablespoon cornstarch, a small Vi teaspoon curry powder, diluted with a little cold water or stock and \ l /i cups of milk, stirred in slowly, cook until smooth, sea- son with pepper and salt and strain it. Wipe the eggs dry, roll them in the sauce and place them in the balls of rice. Pur on enough sauce to moisten rice without dis- coloring ed^es around eggs. EGGS AND OMELETS. 73 EGGS FOR SUPPER. 6 hard boiled eggs, cut in even slices. Place in a baking dish with alternate layers of grated cheese, sprinkle with pepper, a little salt and a dash of nut- meg, cover the top with bread crumbs and butter. Bake for fifteen minutes, brown nicely and serve very hot. CHEESE OMELET. Make the same as plain omelet, and when it begins to thicken, sprinkle in three tablespoons grated cheese. Fold and serve. HAM OMELET. Make the same as plain omelet, and add three tablespoons chopped ham. SPANISH EGGS. Cook 1 cup of rice thirty minutes in 2 qts. boiling water to which has been added t tablespoon salt. Drain through a colander and add i tablespoon of butter. Spread very lightly on a hot platter. On the rice place six dropped eggs and serve. LUNCHEON EGGS. Cut hard boiled eggs lengthwise. Arrange them on a flat dish and pour over them a giblet sauce made from chicken or turkey gravy. HAM AND EGGS. Chop the remains of fried or boiled ham very fine. Beat 4 or 5 eggs, add 1 tablespoon milk to each egg. Melt t tablespoon butter in top of double boiler, add eggs and milk and when it begins to thicken add 3 tablespoons of chopped ham. Cook until thick and creamv. 74 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. PLAIN OMELET. 4 eggs, 2 tablespoons milk, I teaspoon salt, I tablespoon butter. Beat the eggs with an egg beater thoroughly. Add salt and milk. Have frying pan very hot. Put in spoonful oi butter and pour in the beaten egg. Shake vigorously on the hottest part of stove until the egg begins to thicken, then let it stand a few minutes to brown. Run the knife be- tween the sides of the omelet and the pan, fold and turn on a hot dish. Serve immediately. PARSLEY EGGS. Break fresh eggs into boiling water, slightly salted. When set, remove with a skimmer and place on slices or rounds of buttered toast. Over the egg and toast pour the following sauce : To one cup of cream or rich milk add a teaspoonful of chopped parsley, a tablespoon butter and one of flour, mix smoothly together, season with salt and pepper. Boil three minutes and pour over the eggs. EGGS FOR A PICNIC. Boil the eggs hard. Cut lengthwise. Remove the yolk and add finely chopped ham, lamb or chicken, salt, pepper and olive oil. Replace this mixture in the half of the white, and wrap in oiled paper. BAKED OMELET. Beat two eggs lightly and stir in 2 teaspoons of flour. with about j4 teaspoonful of baking powder and % tea- spoonful of salt. Heat a teacupful of milk and in it put a teaspoonful of butter. Pour the milk on the eggs, stir quickly and pour in a hot buttered dish; set in a quick oven and bake fifteen minutes. EGG TOAST. Boil eggs hard. Chop whites, mix minced ham with white sauce spread on rounds of toast. Put one yolk on EGGS AND OMELETS. 75 each slice and mix chopped whites with white sauce and pour over all. PEACH OMELET. Make an omelet as usual and just before foldi.ig it, add I cupful of sliced peaches, sugared lightly. Fold the omelet, slip onto a hot dish, cut four slits on the top, into which slip marshmallows dipped in brandy. Pour a tablespoon of brandy over the top and apply a lighted match. This is to be served at the close of a luncheon or for dessert at an informal dinner. FISH OMELET. Boil a shad roe 20 minutes in salted water, chop it fine and add it to a cupful of any kind of cold fish broken fine. Season with salt and pepper and warm in a cupful of cream sauce. Make plain omelet with six eggs. When ready to fold, spread the prepared fish in it. Roll up, dish, and serve immediately. BIRDS' NESTS. Break the number of eggs desired. Beat the whites till light and pour into a di?h. Make places for the yolks, put them in gently. Bake in a quick oven until the whites are a light brown and the yolks set, beat a little salt with the whites. EGGS POACHED IN MILK WITH GRATED CHEESE. Have a large shallow pan which you can put over a kettle of boiling water. Into the pan put one cup of milk, drop the eggs in and sprinkle over them when nearly done, 1 tea- spoon of grated cheese, salt and pepper. Take up with large spoon and serve on toast. 76 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. SCRAMBLED EGGS. 6 raw eggs Salt and pepper. y 2 cup rich cream, Beat together lightly, and put in a well buttered flat saucepan and shake over the fire till set. Serve very hot. EMERGENCY EGGS. Cut slices of bread about an inch thick, scoop out a hollow in the center of each, grate some cheese, season with salt and paprika, moisten with milk and spread on bread. Then turn an egg into each piece without breaking the yolk, dot with butter and bake until white is set. EGG OMELET. 2 eggs, 8 tablespoons milk, 2 tablespoons flour. Little salt. Stir yolks without beating, with flour and milk. Beat whites of eggs and fold into the yolks. CHEESE. 77 CHEESE. WELSH RAREBIT, NO. i. i tablespoon butter i teaspoon cornstarch, melted, y 2 teaspoon mixed mus- y 2 teaspoon salt, tard, Ya cup thin cream, -)4 cup grated cheese. Scant teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, dash of cayenne pepper. Stir cornstarch into butter, then cook all together. WELSH RAREBIT, NO. 2. 1 tablespoon butter. i teaspoon cornstarch. 34 cup milk, T j lb. cheese. Pinch salt, t teaspoon Heinz mus- t egg, tard. Melt butter in top of double boiler, add corn starch and cook until smooth. Add mustard, then cheese cut rather thin, and milk. Cook until cheese is melted, and then add beaten egg. Serve very hot on slices of toast. VENETIAN RAREBIT. 1 pt. tomato, T.ittle salt, y 2 lb. cheese, Onion juice, 3 eggs, Mustard. 1 butter ball. Can be cooked in chafing dish. Cook tomato until hot, add cheese cut fine. Cook until »t melts. Add the eggs well beaten, the butter, salt, onion juice and mustard. Serve on saltines. 78 SUNSHINE CQOK BOOK. BEAN RAREBIT. 2 tablespoons butter, y 2 cup milk, Salt and pepper, \ cup cheese cut in cubes, i cup beans, Slices of toast. Melt butter, add salt and pepper and cup of cold cooked beans mashed through sieve. M'x thoroughly, add milk gradually. Let cook until blended then add cheese and stir constantly until cheese is melted. Serve on toast with Worcestershire sauce. CHEESE TOAST. Cut stale bread in thin slices or rounds, and fry in boiling lard a delicate brown. Dip in boiling milk and cover thickly with grated cheese. Bake in a hot oven five min- utes and serve hot. ESCALLOPED CHEESE, NO. i. Boil rice and put it in a baking dish with layers of grated cheese. Put a layer of cracker crumbs on the top and bits of butter. Bake fifteen or twenty minutes and serve hot. ESCALLOPED CHEESE, NO. 2. Grated cheese, Slices of stale bread but' 1 egg, tered, milk, Salt and pepper. Butter some slices of stale bread and cut into dice, put a layer into a quart baking dish, spread with a thin layer of grated cheese, salt and pepper. Continue until dish is three-quarters full. Beat egg light and add 1 cup milk. Pour over bread, and if there is not sufficient to cover, add more milk. Bake until brown. CHEESE CROQUETTES. 3 tablespoons butter, i J / 2 cups mild cheese 54 cup flour, grated, 2-3 cup milk, Salt and pepper, yolks of 2 eggs, Few grains of cayenne. CHEESE. 79 Make a thick white sauce, using- butter, flour and milk, add yolks of eggs, without beating and stir untr/ well mixed then add cheese. As soon as grated cheese melts remove from fire and season with salt, pepper and cayenne. Spread in a shallow pan, and cool, turn on a board, cut in small squares or strips, dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs again, fry in deep fat and drain on brown paper. Serve for a cheese course or a luncheon or supper dish. DREAM CAKES. Cut thin slices of stale bread. Spread each slice with club cheese and press together like a sandwich. Fry brown and crisp in hot butter. Serve immediately. BAKED EGGS AND CHEESE. Put 2 or 3 tablespoons of melted butter in a shallow bak- ing dish and cover with a layer of grated cheese ; break in the eggs carefully so as to keep them separate. Season with salt and pepper, ^nd add a little cream or milk to moisten the cheese, then cover with another layer of grated cheese. Put in a moderate oven for ten minutes or till cheese is browned and serve. COTTAGE CHEESE. Put a pan of sour milk on the range where it is not too hot ; let it scald till the whey rises to the top (be careful not to let it boil or the curd will become tough). Place a cheese cloth over a sieve and pour this whey and curd into it and let it drain a few minutes, then gently press it dry with the hands and while it is still warm add a good lump of butter and salt and thoroughly mix. Then add enough sweet cream to make it the consistency of mashed potato and make into little balls. CHEESE BALLS. Whites of 2 e g g s i cup grated cheese, (beaten), *4 CU P grated stale bread. Pinch of cayenne pepper 80 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Mix all together, make in small balls and fry a rich brow it in deep fat. CHEESE STRAWS. i cup grated cheese, A little cayenne pepper, 3 tablespoons m e 1 t e d 2 tablespooons cold water, butter. Cream cheese and butter together, add flour enough to roll. Cut in narrow strips and bake. BAKED MACARONI. Six ozs. macaroni, 1 pt. of milk, 2 tablespoons of butter. 2 tablespoons of flour, 4 ozs. grated or chopped % teaspoon soda, cheese, Break macaroni into short pieces, drop into large kettle of boiling water and boil rapidly for twenty minutes, drain and throw into cold water for a few minutes. Put butter in a saucepan, melt, add the flour and milk and stir constantly until it boils. Take from the fire, add the cheese and stir until it is smooth, then the pinch of soda. Stir the maca- roni into the cheese dressing, put in a baking dish, add a bit of pepper and salt, sprinkle bread crumbs on the top, place here and there a few bits of butter and bake a few minutes in a quick oven. CHEESE FONDU. 1 cup hot milk, 1 cup chopped cheese, 1 egg (well beaten), 2 tablespoons of butter, 1 cup soft bread crumbs, 34 teaspoon salt. 1-8 teaspoon pepper, Put the cheese and butter into the hot milk, add the egg seasoning and crumbs. Spread on crackers or toast and bake till cheese is melted and the top slightly browned, (about fifteen minutes). CHEESE. 3 1 CHEESE FILLING. 2 cheeses (cream ioc), x /i cup chopped English 1 tablespoon melted walnuts, buttter, Small pinch of salt and 34 cup cream, cayenne pepper. Stir the cheese with spoon, adding cream gradually; when soft and creamy add butter, salt and pepper, then stir in the nuts chopped very tine. This hilling is fine for teas or luncheons, spread on wafers or butter thins. CHEESE SOUFFLE. 2 tablespoons butter, 3 eggs, y 2 cup milk, Yz teaspoon prepared l / 2 teaspoon salt, mustard, Y$ cup grated cheese, A little cayenne. 2 tablespoons flour. Make cream sauce of butter, flour and milk. Add cheese stirring until it melts. Add beaten yolks and seasoning. Set away to cool. Fold in whites of eggs and bake in a greased dish about fifteen minutes. Serve at once. BAKED RICE AND CHEESE. 1 cup rice, 2 cups thin white sauce )6. cup cracker crumbs, Cheese, salt and pepper to taste. Cook rice twenty or thirty minutes in 8 cups boiling water. Arrange layers of rice and grated cheese in a bak- ing dish. Moisten with the white sauce. Cover with the buttered crumbs and bake until light brown. For the sauce use 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons flour. 2 cups hot milk, J/2 teaspoon salt. LUNCH PASTRY. Roll out the pieces of puff-paste left from pies and sprinkle with grated cheese. Fold the paste in three folds and roll out again and sprinkle with more cheese, fold and roll as before, cutting in any shape desired. Brush with the yolk of an egg and bake. Serve on a hot napkin. Very nice with a cup of coffee for lunch. 82 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. SANDWICHES. Butter thin slices of bread and sprinkle a thick layer o r grated cheese on them. Press two slices together and toast them in the oven or fry them in deep fat. They are ver^ nice served with cream sauce poured over them. MARBLE SANDWICHES. Cut slices of white and brown bread each one half inch thick, butter and spread with Xeufchatel cheese, chopped stuffed olives may be added it liked. Cut away the crust and arrange in piles of alternate layers of first white then brown bread using about four or five slices. Put a weight on each pile of bread for a few minutes, then slice them down through in slices a half inch thick. TOASTED SANDWICHES. Butter thin slices of bread as if preparing sandwiches, trim off the crust, toast over a clear fire until delicately browned. Serve hot. CHEESE AND CELERY SANDWICHES. Whip a gill of cream and add enough freshly grated cheese to make a stiff paste, spread bread with this and sprinkle with very finely minced white stalks of celery. CRACKER AND ANCHOVY SANDWICHES. Toast split Boston or royal milk crackers, butter while hot and spread with anchovy paste ; put two together. HAM SANDWICHES. Chop or grind the meat, fat and lean together, season with salt, pepper and a little mustard. The yolks of one or two boiled eggs mashed and the whites chopped fine are a nice addition. Put between bread or crackers. SANDWICHES'. 83 CHEESE AND EGG SANDWICHES. One cup grated cheese, yolks of three hard boiled eggs minced fine ; rub to a paste with a little butter, season with salt and pepper and spread between rounds of bread or crackers. These are nice made of Graham bread. QUEEN SANDWICHES. Mince finely 2 parts cooked chicken or game to 1 part cooked tongue and 1 part cooked mushrooms or truffles, add seasoning and a little lemon juice and spread between thin slices of bread. EGG SANDWICHES. Powder and rub fine the hard boiled yolks of 4 eggs, chop the whites as fine as possible, mix all together and rub to a paste, with 2 tablespoonfuls of melted butter, a little salt and a dash of cayenne pepper. Mix and spread. CRANBERRY SANDWICHES. Butter thin slices of white bread and spread with the fol- lowing: Turn a glass of cranberry jelly into a bowl and beat with a silver fork. Add a tablespoon of minced celery, a cup of chopped chicken, add a little orange juice, cover with another slice of bread, cut into triangles, arrange on platter, garnish with bunches of crisp watercress. CHEESE SANDWICHES. These are very fine. Chop half a pound of cheese, add 1 tablespoonful of French mustard, and work this to a smooth paste ; spread on the bread, put the slices together, and cut into diamonds or long narrow strips. SANDWICHES. 1. Take a young nasturtium leaf, sprinkle with salt and set between two circular pieces of bread and butter, its own size. 2. Spread bread and butter with chopped boiled ham, seasoned with horse-radish. 84 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. 3. Brown bread or entire wheat bread, liberally spread with butter and a few leaves of watercress. 4. Spread thin slices of white bread with cream cheese made into a thin paste with mayonnaise dressing. 5. Chop an equal amount of raisins and English walnuts fine, moisten with cream or sherry wine, and spread between slices of graham bread well buttered. 6. Spread one saltine cracker with cream cheese, another with orange marmalade, and press them together to serve with afternoon tea. 7. Rub a cream cheese very soft with chopped watercress and 2 tablespoons of mayonnaise dressing, spread it upon white bread, buttered and cut in rounds. SARDINE SANDWICHES. Cut thin slices of bread. Remove the sardines carefully from the box, split them open and take out the bones, cut oft" the heads and tails. Place halves of the sardines over one-half the slices of bread, squeeze lemon juice over them and press together. Cut in long, narrow pieces. DRIED BEEF SANDWICHES. Dried beef and hard boiled eggs make appetizing sand- wiches using about equal parts. Put through meat chopper one or two small sweet pickles. Moisten with mayon- naise. SANDWICHES A LA MOTOR. Shape very thin slices of sandwich bread with cake cut- ter. Remove portions of upper layer to form wheels. Spread with deviled ham or tongue. CELERY SALAD SANDWICHES. 4 eggs, Yi teaspoon salt, 1 head celery. Dash pepper. 1 cup mayonnaise. SANDWICHES. 85 Boil eggs hard and chop them very tine, take the white portion of celery, chop it fine and mix with the egg, season, add mayonnaise and spread on thin slices of white bread. FILLINGS FOR SANDWICHES. 1 cream cheese, 1 small bottle stuffed olives, A little cream or salad dressing. Chop the olives and mix with the cheese, soften with salad dressing. Chopped raisins with neufchatel cheese. Chopped lamb with mayonnaise. Chopped pimolas with mayonnaise. Chopped nuts with mayonnaise. Chopped nuts with cream cheese. Chopped ham with mayonnaise. Chopped hard boiled eggs with mayonnaise. Chopped hard boiled eggs and English walnuts with dressing. 86 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Salads and Salad Dressings, POTATO SALAD. Cut cold boiled potatoes into dice ; use one-half as much diced celery as potato. A little chopped parsley and a few drops of onion juice. (An easy way to get the onion juice is to rub an onion over a grater a few times then press it tightly to the grater as long as the juice will drip, then grate again). Mix the salad lightly and just before serving marinate with boiled dressing. GERMAN POTATO SALAD. 6 potatoes, i egg, l / 2 cup vinegar, 2 tablespoons of melted A little finely sliced butter, onion, Pepper and salt. Parsley, celery salt, 2 or 3 hard boiled eggs. 1 tablespoon of sugar, Wash and boil medium sized potatoes. When done drain off water and peel. While still hot season with salt, pepper and celery salt mixed with onion. Beat egg stiff, add to it the melted butter, then drop in gradually the vinegar sweetened with the sugar. Pour this dressing over the potatoes while hot, toss lightly, place in salad bowl and garnish with parsley and hard boiled eggs. POTATO SALAD WITH FRENCH DRESSING. 4 cold boiled potatoes, 1 onion chopped very French dressing, parsley, fine, Beet, turnip, carrot, Capers, olives. Cut potatoes into dice, mix carefully with the onions, add the dressing Put away in a cold place for one or two hours. Sprinkle with the chopped parsley. The dish may SALADS AND SALAD DRESSINGS. 87 be garnished with pickled beets, turnips and carrots cut in fancy shapes, capers or olives. FRUIT SALAD. 2 lbs. malaga grapes, y 2 lb. dates, 2 oranges, i grape fruit, 2 apples, 4 bananas, y 2 lb. of figs, y 2 cup chopped nuts. Remove seeds and cut fruit in small pieces. Serve with mayonnaise. SHRIMP SALAD. i can shrimps, i head lettuce, 2 tablespoons capers. Turn shrimps from can. remove the black ligament. Dress with French dressing and set on ice to cool. Crisp the inside leaves of lettuce, arrange in salad bowl, turn the shrimps into the center. Pour mayonnaise over and sprinkle with the capers. CHEERY SALAD. Stone Yi lb of cherries. Place a meat from hazel nut in each cherry. Prepare mayonnaise dressing (using lemon juice instead of vir-egar). Arrange cherries on lettuce leaves and, just before serving, pour over the mayonnaise. MOCK CHICKEN SALAD. 2 cups cold pork or veal, 3 hard boiled eggs, 1 cup diced celery, Mayonnaise. Trim cold boiled or roasted pork free from fat, then chop or cut into dice. To two cups of meat add the eggs chopped fine, and the celery. Toss lightly until mixed. Dress with mayonnaise and garnish with fringed celery. CHICKEN SALAD. Use twice as much diced celery as chicken. Marinate with boiled dressing. Arrange a border of lettuce leaves 88 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. on a salad dish and mound the salad in the center. Put spoonfuls of mayonnaise over it and garnish with olives and pickled beets cut in fancy shapes or with parsley and quartered hard boiled eggs. FISH SALAD. Free salmon or any other boiled or baked fish of skin and bones. Arrange on crisp lettuce leaves. Serve with mayonnaise or cream salad dressing. If desired add l cup cold peas. Garnish with stuffed olives. EGG AND BANANA SALAD. Boil enough eggs to provide two eggs for each person. When hard, cool and take off shell and cut in slices. Com- bine these with sliced banana and put on lettuce with either French or mayonnaise dressing. FRUIT SALAD. Shredded pineapple. Oranges, Bananas, Lettuce. White Grapes, Delicate dressing. Shred the pineapple, slice the bananas, and cut the oranges in small pieces. Cut grapes, take off skin and take out seeds. Place all on lettuce and cover with delicate dressing or mayonnaise. APPLE AND NUT SALAD. Pare, core and slice thin 3 cups of apples ; mix with t cup of chopped nuts; season with sugar and salt to taste: mix with boiled salad dressing. FRUIT SALAD. Slice [ pineapple, peel 4 oranges, dividing them in sec- tions, add 4 sliced bananas and a cup of strawberries, cover SALADS AND SALAD DRESSINGS. 89 with French dressing and serve in a glass bowl lined with crisp lettuce leaves. Serve with macaroons as follows: Press together two very fresh macaroons with a layer of cream cheese between. ROYAL SALAD. Cold cooked potatoes, String beans, beets, Olives and capers, Celery, lettuce, tomatoes, Mayonnaise or French dressing. Take eqnal quantities of the vegetables, pnt them in a salad bowl, add olives and capers. Pour over a mayonnaise or French dressing, and garnish with lettuce. PINEAPPLE SALAD. Cut celery into dice pieces. Cut pineapple into dice pieces. Serve on lettuce leaves with mayonnaise dressing. EGG SALAD. 8 eggs. Lettuce, Mayonnaise or cooked dressing. Cook eggs hard. Cut the whites of the egg into six long petals, arrange them on beds of lettuce to simulate petals of a daisy. Strain yolks and heap in center. EGG SALAD. Cut hard boiled eggs in halves crosswise, remove the yolks and moisten with cooked dressing. Refill the whites. Serve on lettuce leaves with cooked dressing. CABEAGE SALAD. 2 raw eggs (well beaten), 6 teaspoons vinegar, T / 2 teaspoon salt, A small piece of butter. 6 tablespoons cream, Put in a double boiler and cook stirring constantly until quite thick. Chop the cabbage fine and sprinkle with a 90 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. little salt. When the dressing is cold add 2 tablespoons of cream and pour over the cabbage. ORANGE SALAD. 1 head of lettuce, Mayonnaise dressing. 3 oranges, Prepare the lettuce and place in nests in the salad dish. Pare and slice 3 navel oranges very thin, arrange on the let- tuce and put mayonnaise dressing on. Do not prepare this until just before serving. • FRUIT SALAD. One pineapple, 5 oranges and 4 bananas; cut pineapple, oranges and bananas in slices ; put a layer of pineapple (which is cut in small pieces) in the bottom of a dish, then a layer of cocoanut, a little sugar, then the oranges, and co- coanut, and bananas, and cocoanut, and so on until the dish is full. Have the cocoanut on top, sift a little sugar over. Serve with whipped cream. APPLE SALAD. Take large red apples, polish them, dig out inside after cutting off a slice from the top. Then fill with a salad made of celery, chopped nuts, chopped apple, with mayon- naise dressing. After filling the apples put on top a white grape and a candied cherry. Serve on lettuce leaf. CUCUMBER AND CORN SALAD. Equal parts of cold cooked green corn and cucumbers, sliced or cut in small pieces, and served with mayonnaise. DRESSING FOR CABBAGE SALAD. Yolks of 3 eggs beaten, 4 tablespoons sugar, 1 teaspoon mustard, y 2 teaspoon salt, *4 teaspoon pepper, 5 tablespoons vinegar or 1 tablespoon b u t t er lemon juice, melted, SALADS AND SALAD DRESSINGS. 91 Cook in a double boiler till thick and smooth. Serve cold on chopped cabbage. If the dressing is too thick thin with cream. COLD SLAW. 34 head of cabbage i l /2 teaspoon butter, y 2 cup of vinegar, (diluted with water if very strong). % teaspoon pepper, i teaspoon sugar, Yolks of 3 eggs, A salt spoon of salt. l / 2 teaspoon mustard, Put all but the cabbage in a saucepan over the fire and beat them til! they thicken. Then pour over the cabbagt and set away to cool. BEET SALAD. Cook beets till very tender then cut them in thin slices or dice or cut in fancy shapes with a vegetable cutter. Mix diced celery with a little diced cold potato; season and serve all together on lettuce leaves with mayonnaise. GOLF SALAD. Moisten cream cheese with fresh cream until of the rignt consistency to roll into balls, using butter ball spaddles. Roll in chopped nuts and serve on a lettuce leaf with mayon- naise dressing. CHEESE SALAD. Add to any nice cream cheese sufficient rich milk to make it soft enough to form into ba^s. Press halves of English walnuts on the balls and arrange them on lettuce leaves; serve with a mayonnaise dressing. APPLE, BANANA AND ENGLISH WALNUT SALAD. 3 apples, 4 bananas, 1 cup broken nuts, Lettuce. Pare and slice the bananas and apples, and place on the lettuce after washing and drying it. Put a liberal sprink- ling of nut meats, then mayonnaise on top. 92 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. SWEETBREAD SALAD. Equal parts of cooked sweetbreads cut small, with an equal quantity of fine cucumber ; season with boiled cream dressing or mayonnaise dressing; serve on a bed of lettuce leaves and garnish with cold boiled egg or shrimps. APPLE AND GRAPEFRUIT SALAD. Remove the pulp from 2 grapefruit with a spoon, pare and slice an equal amount of apples. Season with French dressing and serve on lettuce leaves. CUCUMBER SALAD. Serve sliced cucumbers on a bed of watercress. Garnish with German salad dressing as follows: Beat y 2 cup oi cream until thick ; add slowly 3 tablespoons vinegar, *4 tea- spoon salt and a little cayenne. DRESSING FOR FRUIT SALAD. 4 tablespoons vinegar, 2 well beaten eggs, 4 tablespoons sugar, 2 tablespoons whipped Butter size of half an cream, egg, t teaspoon salt. 1 teaspoon mustard. Melt butter in the vinegar and let cool. Mix sugar, salt, mustard and egg. Add to the vinegar and butter and cook slowly till it thickens. Just before serving beat in the cream. TOMATO ASPIC SALAD. 1 pt. tomatoes, 1 teaspoon onion juice, 1 salt spoon pepper, */> pt. Mayonnaise dress- *4 box gelatine, ing. Lettuce. Parsley. i teaspoon salt. Strain the tomatoes, add the salt, pepper and onion juice, add the gelatine. Soak for half an hour, then bring it to the boiling point, and pour into small moulds. Put away to SALADS AND SALAD DRESSINGS. 93 harden. When ready to serve, arrange nest of lettuce leaves on salad dish, turn out each mould of jelly in a nest. Pour the mayonnaise dressing around them, sprinkle with chopped parsley. BAKED APPLE SALAD. Peel, core and bake apples as usual. Place one apple on a lettuce leaf and fill the cavity with mayonnaise dressing. Stewed prunes, drained, the stones removed, and served on heart leaves of lettuce with mayonnaise dressing makes a delicious salad. MALAGA SALAD (TO SERVE WITH GAME). Cut Malaga grapes in half lengthwise, remove seeds, covei with French dressing and serve on lettuce leaves. A few nuts meats may be added if desired. STUFFED TOMATOES. Take nice round tomatoes, peel and cut a round piece from the stem end and scrape out the inside ; keeping them very cold until ready to serve. Then fill them with diced celery and mayonnaise adding two or three of the light celery leaves on the top. Lay a lettuce leaf on a plate, put a spoon of mayonnaise on it then place a tomato in the center. APPLE AND CELERY SALAD. Three parts finely cut celery, Two parts English walnut meats broken in pieces, One part diced apple. Mix together with enough mayonnaise to blend. Core and pare large fair apples and cut in cross slices form rings *4 inch thick. Dip at once in lemon juice to preserve the color and add flavor. When serving place an apple ring on white lettuce leaf, and place upon i^ a spoon- ful of the salad mixture. Garnish with a spoonful of mayon- naise and tinv balls of cream cheese into which two whole walnut meats are pressed. 94 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. COOKED SALAD DRESSING (WITH OIL). Yolks of 3 eggs, 4 tablespoons of oil, 1 teaspoon salt, j£* teaspoon dry mustard, 4 tablespoons of vinegar, 1 teaspoon sugar, 2-3 cup of milk, A dash of cayenne. Beat eggs lightly. Drop in the oil. Add the salt and mustard, then add the vinegar slowly. Put in the sugar and gradually beat in the milk. Cook over hot water till thick like cream, lastly add the cayenne. FRENCH SALAD DRESSING 3 tablespoons vinegar, Y-i teaspoon mustard, 3 tablespoons of oil, Beat until it thickens. y 2 teaspoon salt, Yolk of 1 egg, A DELICATE DRESSING FOR FRUIT SALADS. Prepare a French dressing (double the rule). Then beat y cup of cream until thick, and beat in the French dressing very slowly. It ought to be nearly as thick as mayonnaise when done. BOILED SALAD DRESSING NO. 1. 1 egg, - }4 teaspoonful salt, 1 teaspoon mustard, % teaspoon cayenne pep- per, 1 cup vingear, 2 tablespoons sugar, 1 tablespoon flour, 2 tablespoons olive oil or melted butter. Cook all together until thick and smooth. BOILED SALAD DRESSING, NO. 2. Yolks of 2 eggs, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 teaspoon mustard, 1 tablespoon sugar, x / 2 teaspoon salt, 5 tablespoons vinegar, A little pepper, 6 tablespoons milk. SALADS AND SALAD DRESSINGS. 95 Melt the butter in double boiler, then add vinegar, sugar, salt, pepper, mustard and eggs well beaten ; after it thickens add the milk and cook until thick as boiled custard. COOKED SALAD DRESSING. 2 eggs, 1 tablespoon dry mus- y 2 teaspoon salt, tard, Yi cup milk, y 2 cup butter (melted), 1 tablespoon sugar, i cup vinegar. Beat egg in bowl, put sugar, mustard and salt in a cup, mix them together and add them to the egg. Stir in milk and butter. Have vinegar boiling hot and stir in slowly. If not thick enough, set bowl in hot water to cook. A pinch of soda added to the vinegar for boiled salad dressing banishes the fear of curdling. FRENCH DRESSING. 1 salt spoon salt, y 2 salt spoon pepper, 3 to 5 tablespoons oil, i tablespoon vinegar, { l /\ teaspoon onion juice if liked). Put the salt and pepper in a bowl, dissolve them with the vinegar, add the oil slowly, beating well. This dressing is suitable for egg 01 vegetable salads, and is also used to marinate meat or fish salad before using the mayonnaise. Lemon juice may be used instead of vinegar. MAYONNAISE DRESSING. Yolks of 2 eggs, n i tablespoon vinegar, 1 tablespoon lemon juice Y\ teaspoon mustard, l / 2 teaspoon salt, l / 2 salt spoon pepper. 1 cup olive oil, Beat the yolks of eggs very light with salt, pepper and mustard. Then add l / 2 tablespoon vinegar and l / 2 table- spoon lemon juice and beat thoroughly. Add oil very slow- ly, beating all the time with Dover egg beater, until the dressing is so thick that it is hard to beat ; then add the rest of the vinegar and lemon juice and then more oil, beating thoroughly. It ought to be very thick when done. Stand on ice until time to serve. 96 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. PASTRY. PIE CRUST. 2 cups flour, 24 CU P lard, y 2 cup ice water, A little salt. Sift flour and salt together. Chop lard into flour with a knife. Add the ice water a little at a time. Mix lightly handling as little as possible. This will make one large pie with 2 crusts or i medium sized pie and shell for another. Never rub lard into flour, but leave it in small lumps. This will make crust more flaky. PLAIN PIE CRUST. To i lb. of pastry flour use y> a lb. of lard (or 3 cups of flour to 1 of lard) ; reserve ? part of the shortening to roll into the top crust ; wet with ice-cold water ; add a teaspoon- ful of salt. MOCK CHERRY PIE. 1 cup cranberries, 1 cup sugar, ]/ 2 cup chopped raisins, y 2 cup water, 1 tablespoon flour, Add bits of butter. Flavor with vanilla, Bake in two crusts. CRANBERRY PIE. 2 cups cranberries, 1 cup chopped raisins. 1 cup sugar, y 2 cup water, 2 tablespoons flour, 1 egg. Bake with two crusts. Serve warm with suear and cream. PASTRY. 97 MINCE MEAT, 3 lbs. meat, i lb. suet, 6 lbs. apples, I lb. raisins, i lb. Sultana raisins, ^41b. citron, 3^4 lbs. sugar, 2 lbs. currants, i qt. sherry, I pt. brand)-, i tablespoonful cloves, i tablespoonful allspice, 2 tablespoonfuls mace, 2 tablespoonfuis cinna- i tablespoonful nutmeg, mon. Mix all ingredients together and set away in jars until ready to use. MINCE MEAT (WITHOUT MEAT). \y 2 qts. green tomatoes. 2 qts. apples, 5 cups brown sugar, 3 cups molasses, 2 cups raisins, t cup currants, 1 cup citron, 4 teaspoons cinnamon, 2 teaspoons cloves, r / 2 nutmeg, 1 cup butter, \V 2 cups vinegar. Boil until well cooked then stir in 9 tablespoons of flour and remove from fire. MOCK MINCE PIE. 2^2 cups milk crackers, V 2 cup sugar, (rolled fine), T 4 cup vinegar, T / 2 cup molasses, y 2 cup chopped raisins, 54 cup buffer, Cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg, Stir all together, then add t cup boiling water, stir again. Bake with two crusts. APPLE PUFF PIE. Line a deep pie plate with rich pie paste. Wet the edge and lay a twist of the crust around. Fill three-quarters full of thinly sliced apples and cook. When apples are soft take from the oven sweeten and pour over the top a custard made of 1 cup milk 2 tablespoons sugar and yolks of 2 eggs 98 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. and ]/ 2 teaspoon of vanilla. Return to the oven and bake till the custard is set. Let partly cool, and cover witk a meringue made of the beaten whites of the eggs, one table- spoon of sugar and % teaspoon of baking powder and brown in the oven. APPLE TURNOVERS. Make a nice pastry. Roll and cut into pieces about five inches square. Place a spoon of good apple sauce in the center of each piece. Moisten the edges. Fold together and pinch well. Glaze with milk and bake in quick oven. RAISIN PIE. i cup chopped raisins, i cup water, Grated rind and juice of Rolled crackers to thick- i lemon, en. Boil the raisins in the water to soften, add more water if needed. Bake with two crusts. RHUBARE PIE, NO. i. Line a large pie plate with good crust. Fill a little more than half full with rhubarb cut in squares. Take i table- spoon of flour i egg, i cup sugar, and the grated rind and juice of i lemon. Beat together and pour over the top of the rhubarb. Cover with an upper crust and bake. RHUBARB PIE, NO. 2. 1 cup rhubarb, 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs, Pinch of salt. Chop rhubarb fine, bake in two crusts. RHUBARB PIE, NO. 3. 1 cup rhubarb (chopped 1 cup sugar, fine), 1 tablespoon cornstarch, Yolks of 2 eggs, Wet cornstarch with cold water, fill cup with boiling water, add a little grated lemon and orange rind and cook. Use whites of egg for frosting. PASTRY. 99 GOOSEBERRY PIE. Gooseberries must be cooked and sweetened before being used for a pie. They are baked with two crusts. RIPE CURRANT PIE. i cup ripe currants i cup sugar, mashed, Yolks of 2 eggs, 2 tablespoons of water, 1 tablespoon flour. Bake in one crust. Frost the top with the beaten whites of the eggs and 2 tablespoons sugar and brown in the oven. APPLE PIE. Line a pie plate with crust and fill with sour apples sliced thin. Lay the upper crust on. Press them to- gether very lightly and bake. When done remove from the oven and carefully lift, off the upper crust. Season with sugar, butter and nutmeg. Replace the crust. An apple pie baked this way will never run over in the oven, or the pie may be seasoned before baking and a narrow strip of cloth wet in milk bound around the edge. ORANGE PIE, NO. 1. 1 cup sugar, 3 eggs, 2 oranges, 1 cup milk. Take the grated peel of 1 orange the juice and pulp of 2, add the sugar and yolks of eggs, well beaten, then the beaten whites added to the milk. Mix all thoroughly and bake in one crust. ORANGE PIE, NO. 2. Line a pie plate with pie crust and bake. Cut the peel from 3 oranges close to the pulp and scoop out the sec- tions of pulp as whole as possible leaving the membrane on the core. Lay the pulp in a strainer and to the juice which drains through add the juice of one lemon and enough water to make one cupful. Put it on to boil and ! °° SUNSHINE COOK BOOK.. thicken it with one heaping tablespoon of Hour mixed with i cup of sugar. Cook ten minutes; add I tablespoon of butter. Take from the fire and add the beaten yolks of 2 eggs and pour into the baked crust. When cool cover with the drained sections of oranges. Just before serv- ing sprinkle thickly with powdered sugar or the pie may be covered with a meringue or with whipped cream. PINEAPPLE PIE. 1 cup chopped pineapple, 1 cup sugar, y 2 cup cream, The yolks of 2 eggs, 1 tablespoonful butter, 1 tablespoon cornstarch. Cook all together before putting into the crust, when done frost with the whites of 2 eggs beaten to a stiff froth with a tablespoon of sugar. Return to the oven and deli- cately brown. WASHINGTON PIE. y 2 cup sugar, 2 cups milk, 3 eggs, 34 teaspoon salt, 4 level tablespoons Karo 2 teaspoons vanilla, cornstarch, Beat the yoiks of eggs ; add the sugar, salt and cornstarch and beat again. Pour into the milk that has been heated in a double boiler. Stir till well cooked and smooth. Season and pour into a baked pie crust. Cover with the whites of 3 eggs beaten with 2 tablespoons of granulated sugar and Ya teaspoon of baking powder. Brown lightly in a hot oven. SOUR MILK PIE. 1 cup sour milk, 1 tablespoon cornstarch, 1 cup sugar, A little salt, vanilla and 1 cup chopped raisins, nutmeg. T pcro- x c t> & > Bake in two crusts. PASTRY. IOI CHERRY PIE. Sour cherries make the best pie and many think the stones improve the flavor. The under crust should be well coated with the white of an egg'. Bind an inch strip of white mus- lin that has been wet in milk around the edge of the pie to prevent running over in the oven. SOUTHERN PIE. i cup vinegar, I cup sugar, i cup water, 2 eggs, 2 heaping table spoons 1 teaspoon of lemon, cornstarch. Piece of butter size of an egg. Put water, sugar, vinegar and butter in double boiler. When nearly boiling add the yolks of the egg and cornstarch beaten together. Cook the mixture till it thickens. When, cool pour into a baked pie crust and cover with a meringue made of the whites of the eggs. CREAM PIE, NO. 1. Yolks of 3 eggs, cornstarch, 1 rounded ta b 1 e s p o o n 1 teaspoon orange extract, flour, y 2 cup sugar, 1 rounded ta b 1 e s p o o n 1 pt. milk. Cook in double boiler. Pour into a baked pie crust and frost with whites of the eggs. CREAM PIE, NO. 2. iy 2 pts. milk, 4 eggs, 3 tablespoonfuls corn- 4 tablespoonfuls sugar, starch, Heat the milk, stir into the beaten yolks of eggs the corn- starch and sugar and add to the hot milk. When thick enough, flavor and pour into a baked crust. Make meringue of beaten whites of eggs and 5 tablespoonfuls of fine sugar, spread over top of pie and brown. This is sufficient for two pies. 102 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. LEMON PTE, NO. i. i large lemon, 9 eggs, 5 heaping table spoons \]A cups sugar, flour, 3 cups water. Grate the whole lemon rind, skin and pulp, add to this 5 whole eggs and yolks of the other 4, sugar and flour and beat thoroughly, then add the water. Line two good sized pie plates with paste, pour in the mixture, and bake. Beat the whites of the four eggs until light, but not stiff, then add 4 tablespoons of granulated sugar and a pinch of baking powder and beat until the mixture will stand alone, place over the tops of the pies, put back in the oven and brown. OLD FASHIONED LEMON PIE. 2 lemons, ]/ 2 cup raisins, i J / 2 cups water, i l / 2 cups sugar, 2 eggs, 2 tablespoons cornstarch. Pinch of salt, Squeeze lemon juice, then chop lemons and raisins to- gether very fine, beat the eggs and add all together. Bake with two crusts. LEMON PIES, NO. 2. 3 lemons, chopped fine, 2 cups sugar, 2-3 cup molasses, 3 eggs-. Will make two pies. LEMON PIES, NO. 3. 1 lemon and grated 1 cup water, rind, 2 eggs (save one white 2 tablespoons cornstarch, for meringue). 1 large cup sugar, Cook water and cornstarch first, then cook all together. Bake in one crust. When done and partly cooled frost with the white of 1 egg beaten stiff to which add 1 tablespoon of granulated sugar and a pinch of baking powder. Return to the oven and brown lightly. PASTRY. IO3 LEMON PIE, NO. 4. One cup sugar and 1 tablespoon flour mixed. Add the juice of 1 lemon and the yolks of 2 large or 3 small eggs. Use a little of the grated peel of the lemon. Add at the last 1 cup milk and the whites of the eggs beaten very stiff. Bake in one crust. BAMBERRY TARTS. 2 cups sugar, 1 lb. raisins, chopped, Juice and grated rind of l 2 eggs, lemon, Make a rich pastry, cut with a small pail cover. Fill and double the edges together. Glaze the tops with milk and bake a delicate brown. SQUASH PIE, NO. 1. 2 cups milk, 2 cups squash, 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs, 1 tablespoon melted butter, season with cinnamon and ginger. Line a deep pie plate with crust. Pour in the squash and bake till firm. SQUASH PIE, NO. 2. 1 qt. milk, 1 tablespoon cornstarch, 2 cups strained squash, 2 cups sugar, 1 teaspoon ginger, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 2 eggs, Pinch of salt. Dissolve one large tablespoon cornstarch in a little of the milk, scald the rest of the milk, add cornstarch, cook until it thickens slightly, beat eggs, add squash, sugar, a small teaspoon ginger and cinnnamon and salt, pour in scalded milk, and fill the crusts of two large pies. Cook in a hot oven until brown. TARTLETS. Roll out a nice puff-paste and cut out with a biscuit cut- ter. With a smaller cutter cut out the center of three and 104 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. lay them on one that has not been cut. Bake them and when cold fill the centers with jelly. Cover with a merin- gue and brown slightly. They are -very nice for lunch. CHOCOLATE PIE. Bake a rich pie crust. Filling — y 2 cup grated chocolate, melted in I cup hot water, 2 tablespoons of flour, I teaspoonful vanilla, i cup sugar, Lump of butter. ~> pnroc To the chocolate and hot water, add butter size of an egg, then the sugar, flavoring and beaten yolks, thicken with either 2 tablespoonfuls cornstarch or flour, dissolved in a little cold water. Cook until it thickens, pour into crust and make meringue of whites of eggs. Brown. SWEETHEARTS. Roll some rich paste as for pies and cut in heart shapes. From one-half of the hearts cut three small rounds about the size of a five-cent piece. Hake all the hearts and on the whole ones put a spoonful of jelly. Lay the cut ones on top. Press lightly together and serve. The jelly will show through the openings and the hearts make a little pastry for teas. HOT DESSERTS. 105 HOT DESSERTS. STEAMED PUFFS. 2 eggs, s 1 cup milk, y 2 cup butter, 3 teaspoons baking pow- 2 cups flour, der. T /2 cup sugar, Butter cups put three half peaches or that amount of any fruit in the cups, then fill half full with a batter made with the above ingredients and steam 40 minutes. Serve with cream and sugar or whipped cream. More flour may be needed as the batter must be very thick. Preserved apri- cots are very nice in the place of the peaches. One half of this receipt makes four or five puffs. BAKED INDIAN PUDDING. Stir 4 tablespoons of corn meal into 1 cup of cold milk, then stir in one pt. of scalded milk. Add y 2 cup of sugar, Y2. cup of molasses, y 2 teaspoon of salt, 1 teaspoon of cinna- mon, y 2 teaspoon of ginger, 2 eggs thoroughly beaten and Yz cup of raisins. Bake in a buttered dish one half hour, then pour in y* cup of cold milk. Stir pudding thoroughly. Return to the oven and bake slowly about an hour and a half longer. PRIME PUDDING. y 2 cup pearl tapioca, y 2 cup cocoanut. 3 e gg s (beaten), y 2 cup sugar, 3 cups milk, y, teaspoon salt. Mix and bake y> hour. Serve hot with cream. RICE CUSTARD. 1 cup boiled rice, 2 cups milk, 1 egg (beaten), y> cup sugar, A little nutmeg, T 4 cup raisin-. 106 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Mix and bake for thirty minutes in a pudding dish ; set in a pan of hot water and serve either hot or cold. COCOANUT PUDDING. Yz cup bread crumbs, i tablespoon butter, 2 cups milk, i teaspoon lemon, x /z cup sugar, i egg. Y> cup cocoanut, Bake and serve either hot or cold. PRUNE PUDDING. i tablespoon vanilla, ]/ 2 lb. prunes, Y cup powdered sugar, 4 eggs. Soak the prunes ov?r night then stew, drain, stone and chop them to a paste. Beat the yolks of the eggs and sugar very light, add the vanilla and mix with the prunes. Beat the whites very stiff and add them last and bake in a moderate oven twenty minutes. Serve hot. DELICIOUS INDIAN PUDDING. 1 cup molasses, ^ cup bread crumbs, 1 cup raisins. Lump of butter size of i qt. milk, egg, 1 pt. water, , 2 tablespoons sugar, 2 eggs, Pinch of salt. i scant pt. yellow meal. Stir pudding over fire till thoroughly heated, then pour into buttered baking dish and bake three hours. SUET PUDDING. 2 cups suet, 1 cup chopped raisins, 2-3 cup molasses, 1 cup sweet milk. 1 teaspoon soda, 4 cups flour. Steam two hours ; serve with wine sauce. PRUNE PUDDING. Wash well and boil 1 lb. of prunes in water enough to cover them adding sugar to taste. When tender drain the HOT DESSERTS. 107 juice from the prunes and let them cool. Remove the pits and chop the prunes until they become like a paste. Beat the whites of 5 eggs very stiff, gradually adding 5 table- spoons of powdered sugar. Add the prunes and whip all together for a moment. Turn the mixture into a buttered pudding dish and bake in a moderate oven about twenty-five minutes. Serve with whipped cream. This makes enough for six or seven portions. BOILED PUDDING. 1 egg, Yi cup molasses, 1 cup sweet milk, 4 cups bread crumbs, y 2 teaspoon soda dis- 1^ cups mixed fruits, solved in the milk. (raisins, currants, cit- y 2 cup butter, creamed, ron). Put in buttered tin pail, cover tight and steam two hours. Serve with hard or foamy sauce. BROWN BETTY. Butter a baking dish; place in it alternate layers of bread crumbs and slices of sour apples. Sprinkle brown sugar, cinnamon and bits of butter over each layer, finish with crumbs. Bake for one hour and serve with cream or hard sauce. HARD SAUCE. Mix ^4 CU P of butter with y 2 cup of powdered sugar or maple syrup, flavor with nutmeg or vanilla. Heap lightly in a glass dish. STEAMED GRAHAM PUDDING. 1 cup molasses, 1 cup milk, 2 eggs, 2 cups graham flour. Yz cup currants, y> cup raisins, 1 teaspoon soda, Salt. Mix and steam three hours in buttered mould. lo8 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. PRUNE PUDDING. i cup sugar, i lb. prunes. Whites of 2 eggs. T i> box gelatine. Soak prunes over night in enough water to cover. In the morning remove the stones and stew prunes in the same water in which they were soaked. When perfectlv soft add sugar and when this is dissolved remove prunes from fire and put through a colander. There should be a full pint of pulp and juice. Bea^ whites of the eggs and add them to the pulp and stir well. Soak gelatine one hour in i cupful of cold water, then add enough boiling water to dissolve it. When lukewarm add this gelatine to the prune and egg mixture, turn into a mould and set away to stiffen. Serve with milk swetened and flavored with almond. CHARLOTTE PUDDING. i cup water, i cup sugar, 1-3 cup tapioca. 6 or 8 apples, Boil sugar and water in a saucepan. Pare and core the apples and cook them in the syrup three or four at a time turning them often till they are tender. When all are cooked put them in a baking dish, add enough water to the syrup to make three cups in all and stir in the tapioca. Cook till transparent and pour over the apples, sprinkle a little more sugar and nutmeg over the top and bake a few minutes. Serve with cream and sugar. DUTCH APPLE CAKE. 2 cups flour, 1 egg, 4 teaspoons baking pow- 2 tablespoonfuls butter, der, 2 tablespoonfuls granit- ic teaspoonful salt. lated sugar, }i cup milk, 1 large apple quartered and sliced. Sift flour, baking powder, salt and one-half the sugar to- gether. Cut in the butter with a knife. Add the beaten HOT DESSERTS. I Of) egg to the milk and stir into the dry mixture. Put in a buttered pan, place slices of apple (or peaches) edgewise in the batter. Sprinkle with the second tablespoonful of sugar and a little cinnamon. Bake 20 minutes. Serve with liquid sauce. APPLE SURPRISE. 1 egg (beaten), 2 tablespoons of sugar, y 2 cup sweet milk, 1 cup flour, 1 heaping teaspoon bak- Sliced apples, ing powder, Butter a pie pan and place in it a layer of sliced apples and pour over them the batter. Bake until the apples are soft, which should be twenty or twenty-five minutes. Use any sauce preferred. APPLE PUFF. Add the well beaten whites of 3 eggs and 3 tablespoons of powdered sugar to 1 cup of apple sauce seasoned with nutmeg, a bit of butter and sugar, and set in oven for a few minutes. SUET PUDDING. 1 cup chopped suet, 1 teaspoon soda, 1 cup molasses. 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1 cup stoned raisins, t teaspoon cloves, 1 cup milk (sour is best), V2 nutmeg, Pinch of salt. Flour enough to make a batter a little thicker than cake. Steam three hours. Serve with sauce. HUCKLEBERRY PUDDING. y 2 cup sugar, x /\ cup butter, J4 cup milk, 1 cup berries, 1 egg, 2 teaspoons baking pow- 1 cup flour, der. Bake. To be eaten with sauce. 110 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. COCOANUT PUDDING. y 2 cup cocoanut, i tablespoon melted Yz cup bread crumbs, . butter, i pt. milk, i egg, 2 tablespoons sugar, y 2 teaspoon salt. Soak cocoanut and bread in milk for an hour. Bake one- half hour. FLOAT. One cup sugar, 3 eggs, i l / 2 pts. milk, and 1 heaping table- spoon Duryeas' Cornstarch. Put in double boiler and cook till the mixture thickens. Flavor with vanilla and serve in glasses when cold. CHOCOLATE PUDDING. 1 cup bread crumbs, 1 square chocolate, y 2 cup sugar, 1 egg, 2 cups scalded milk, Little salt. Melt the chocolate in the scalded milk with the crumbs. Bake one-half hour. Serve with or without whipped cream. ORANGE SOUFFLE. Yolks 4 eggs, 2 lemons, 1 cup sugar, Juice and pulp of 2 large Whites of 4 eggs, oranges. Beat yolks thoroughly, add sugar and lemon and orange juice. Beat whites very stiff and cut and fold them into yolks and sugar. Bake in buttered baking dish placed in hot water like baked custard very slowly, from thirty to forty minutes. CHRISTMAS PUDDING. 1 cup suet chopped fine t cup New Orleans mo- 1 teaspoon of soda. lasses, 1 cup milk, y 2 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 3 cups flour. 1 cup of raisins. HOT DESSERTS. Ill Dissolve soda in 2 tablespoons of water and add to the molasses. Now add this to the suet, then add the milk, salt, cinnamon and lour. Beat for two minutes, then add the raisins floured. Pour into a well buttered mould, put on the lid and steam or boil for three hours. PLUM PUDDING. 1 lb. seeded raisins, Ya lb. stale bread crumbs 1 lb. of currants, y 2 nutmeg grated, 1/2. lb. minced candied ]/$ lb. brown sugar, orange peel, r /^ lb. flour, Grated rind of 1 lemon, 5 eggs, 1 lb. of suet chopped l /z pint of brandy, fine, Mix all the dry ingredients well together. Beat the eggs, add to them the brandy and pour over the dry ingredients and mix thoroughly. Pack into greased moulds. (This will make about six pounds) and boil six hours at time of making, and six hours when wanted for use. Serve with hard or brandy sauce. DUCHESSE PLUM PUDDING. 2 cups bread crumbs, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 2 tablespoons butter Ya cup molasses, (melted), 1 egg, 1 cup raisins, 1 cup flour, 1 cup boiling water, 1 teaspoon soda. Soften the bread crumbs with the hot water, beat all to- gether well and steam two hours and serve with Duchesse Pudding Sauce. DUCHESSE PUDDING SAUCE. 1 cup cream, 1 cup granulated sugar, 2 tablespoons Karo corn- 1 cup cold water, starch, *4 teaspoon salt. Dissolve sugar in the water and heat. When hot stir in the cornstarch mixed with a little waer, add the salt and 112 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. stir until cleai . Remove from the fire. Whip the cream, add to the sauce, when it is cool and whip two or three minutes. ENGLISH PLUM PUDDING. i lb. kidney suet, y 2 pt. brandy, i lb. raisins, t lb. flour, i lb. sultanas, r lb. currants, ]/ 2 lb. orange and lemon y 2 lb. citron, peel, i cup bread crumbs, 2 tablespoons mixed 6 eggs, spices, i cup milk. Mix all dry ingredients well together, working thorough- ly with the hands. Then add eggs and milk and lastly the brandy. This quantity will fill one quart bowl, and three or four smaller ones according to size and will keep any length of time. Butter the bowls very thoroughly. Fill nearly full. Cover with heavy muslin. Wet the muslin and dredge well with flour and tie over the top of bowls. As sooon as bowls are ready put them in a boiler of boiling water and boil steadily for ten hours. Keep covered all the time with boiing water. Take from the boiler, let drain and put away till needed. Then boil again in the same way an hour or two till heated through. COLD DESSERTS. I I 3 COLD DESSERTS. BISCUIT GLACE. 1 pt. whipped cream. i cup water, 1 doz. macaroons. y cup sugar, 3 eggs, i teaspoonful vanilla. Boil sugar and water together l / 2 hour. Beat eggs well, and stir into boiling syrup. Put saucepan into another pan of boiling water, and stir or beat eight minutes. Take from fire, and place in pan of cold water, and beat until cool. Add flavoring and whipped cream. Put into mould and pack in ice. Before packing, have macaroons chopped fine and sprinkle on top of mould. This receipt serves eight. SUPERB PUDDING. 1 pt. cream, l / 2 package gelatine, 1 cup grape juice. i cup pulverized sugar, y 2 cup boiled rice, y 2 cup chopped figs. y 2 cup chopped dates, Soak the gelatine in a cup of cold water for a half hour : then stand the dish in the hot water to be sure it is all dis- solved, then let it cool, but not stiffen. Whip the cream, stir in the gelatine, then add the other ingredients and freeze till smooth. NUT PUDDING. 1% cups chopped suet. y 2 lb. English walnuts, 1% cups flour, y> lb. dates, y 2 cup milk, Ya lb. figs, y 2 teaspoon soda, dissolved in warm milk. Steam two and one-half hours or longer. Serve with the following sauce : y 2 cup butter, 1 egg, 1 cup sugar. Grape juice or wine. 114 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. TALPICON OF FRUIT. i small pineapple, Maraschino cherries, 2 large oranges, Maraschino brandy, 2 bananas, I wineglass sherry or Ma- Yz lb. white grapes, deira, yi cup sugar, i large grapefruit. Shred pineapple, oranges, grapefruit, cut bananas in cubes, peel and stone grapes; put together in a mould, pour over it the Maraschino brandy and sherry and %. cup sugai. Set in ice box or almost frappe in ice cream freezer. Serve in punch glasses or grapefruit or orange shells. Serve very cold with two Maraschino cherries on top of each glass. FRUIT PUDDING. i box gelatine, 2 cups sugar, 2 oranges, 2 lemons, 6 figs, 9 dates, io English walnuts, 2 bananas. Dissolve gelatine in l / 2 pint of cold water add 24 pint boiling water, juice of lemons, oranges and sugar, strain and let stand until it thickens a little, then stir in the fruit and nuts cut fine. Serve with whipped cream. CHOCOLATE CHARLOTTE. i qt. milk, l / 2 box gelatine, 4 heaping teaspoons 3 eggs, grated chocolate, 2 teaspoons vanilla, 24 cup sugar, Salt. Soak gelatine in 1 cup milk. Melt the chocolate over the teakettle. Heat milk in double boiler. Beat yolks of eggs and sugar together, add chocolate to them. Add soaked gelatine to scalded milk and stir until dissolved. Then pour it very slowly into the beaten yolks, sugar and choco- late. Put back into double boiler and stir constantly until it almost boils, then stir it into the beaten whites. Serve cold with sweetened whipped cream. COLD DESSERTS. I I 5 BREAD PUDDING. 2 cups bread crumbs, 3 eggs, 1 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla. 4 cups milk, Beat the yolks of eggs add to the milk, then stir in sugar, crumbs and seasoning. Turn into a dish and bake ; when cold spread a layer of jelly over the pudding; beat the whites stiff with 3 tablespoons of granulated sugar. Add a pinch of baking powder; spread the meringue over the layer of jelly and brown a minute in the oven. ORANGE CREAM PUDDING. *4 box of gelatine, 3 eggs, 1 cup sugar, Juice of 3 oranges. Soak the gelatine in % cup of water then add boiling water to fill the cup. Beat the yolks of the eggs with the sugar till very light, add the orange juice and gelatine, then the whites of the eggs well beaten. Set away in a mould and serve cold. FRUITED GELATINE. Cut bananas in slices, oranges in small pieces, a few nut meats and a few raisins. Put these into tinted gelatine and mould. Serve with whipped cream. PINEAPPLE GELATINE. y 2 box gelatine, 1 cup cold water, 1 cup pineapple chopped, Yz cup sugar. Soak gelatine in cold water, then add 1 cup of pineapple juice that has been brought to the boil with the sugar. Pour this over the chopped pineapple and pour into a mould, Color red if desired. CHARLOTTE RUSSE. 2 dessertspoons Peter Cooper's gelatine, 1 cup scalded milk, 1 pt. cream. Il6 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Dissolve gelatine in a little cold milk. Let stand a few minutes then mix with the scalded milk. When it begins to thicken, stir it gradually into i pint of cream that has been whipped, sweetened, and flavored. Line a deep dish with slices of sponge cake, pour cream over it. When ready to serve place on top small pieces of coffee jelly or Maras- chino cherries. TIPSY PARSON. Take sponge cake moistened with sherry and lay in glass dish. Make custard of one pint milk, yolks 2 eggs and I heaping teaspoon Duryeas ' Cornstarch. Pour over cake while hot. Just before serving sprinkle blanched almonds freely over top. Beat whites of eggs into stiff froth with 2 tablespoons powdered sugar and 1 cup sweet cream. PINEAPPLE SPONGE. 1 small pineapple, 1 cup sugar (scant), 1/2 box gelatine, 1^2 cups water. W r hites of five eggs. Soak the gelatine in 7 <4 cup cold water; chop the pineapple and put it in a saucepan with the sugar and the remaining cup of water and simmer ten minutes. Add the gelatine; take from the fire, strain and when cool add the whites of the eggs and beat until the mixture begins to thicken. Pour into a mould and let it harden. Serve with soft custard. PINEAPPLE MOUSSE. One cup chopped pineapple, 1 cup sugar and a cup water. Cook these ten minutes and strain. In 1 cup of this hot juice dissolve 1 envelope Minute Gelatine (Plain). When beginning to "jell" beat into it 1 cup cream well whipped. Canned pineapple may be used. OAT MEAL JELLY. Soak 1 cup oatmeal in i l / 2 pts. water over night. In the morning strain off the water through a sieve and boil it (OLD DESSERTS. 1 '7 fifteen minutes. Turn it into moulds, set in a cool place and in twenty minutes it will jelly and be sufficiently warm to eat as a breakfast cereal with cream and sugar. In summer time set on the ice and serve cold with hulled strawberries or sliced peaches, sugar and cream. MINUTE CHOCOLATE WALNUT JELLY. Dissolve I package chocolate Minute Gelatine (Flavored) in i pt. hot milk and set to cool. When beginning to con- geal beat to a stiff froth, adding / 2 cup walnut meats and V* dozen figs cut tine. Serve with whipped cream. CRANBERRY SAUCE. i qt. cranberries, I pt- of water. 2 cups sugar, Wash the cranberries, put water and berries in a covered saucepan over the fire. Let them simmer till each berry bursts open. Then remove the cover of the saucepan, add the sugar and let them boil for twenty minutes. Cran- berries must never be stirred while cooking. WINE SAUCE. ]/ A cup butter, Nutmeg to taste, t cup powdered sugar, 2 teaspoons Karo corn- t forr starcn, i cup boiling water, Add egg well beaten. y 2 cup wine, Cream butter and sugar, dissolve cornstarch in a little cold water, add the boiling water and cook five minutes. Pour this over the butter and sugar and add wine and nut- meg. CREAMY SAUCE. 14 CU p butter. S teaspoons cream, 1 cup powdered sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Set in dish of hot water until dissolved. Il8 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. PUDDING SAUCE (HARD SAUCE). Yolk of i egg, Y A cup butter, i cup powdered sugar, Vanilla and nutmeg. Mix all together and soften with a little boiling water. PUDDING SAUCE. i cup powdered sugar, White of i egg beaten Small piece of butter, stiff. Beat all together, flavor with vanilla and nutmeg. GRAPE FRUIT. Take y 2 grapefruit, remove the center, loosen from the skin, fill the center with sugar and sherry. Set on ice before serving. STRAWBERRY SAUCE FOR COTTAGE PUDDING. i cup powdered sugar, i cup berries, i tablespoon butter. Mash berries fine. Rub the butter and part of sugar to- gether, add part of berries, then sugar and berries alternate- ly until all is used. Beat thoroughly and set on ice until time to serve. SPANISH CREAM. i pt. sweet milk, 2 eggs, 2 cooking spoons of gela- y 2 cup sugar, tine, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Cook milk and gelatine in double boiler until gelatine is dissolved. Rub the yolks of eggs, sugar and vanilla to- gether, stir it into the milk and cook till smooth ; remove from the fire and stir in the well beaten whites of the eggs and pour into a mould to harden. Serve with cream. MARSHMALLOW CREAM. 1 tablespoon powdered Whites of 4 eggs. gelatine, 1 cup chopped English 1 cup sugar, walnuts, y 2 cup boiling water, Juice y 2 lemon. COLD DESSERTS. I 19 Dissolve the gelatine in y 2 cup of boiling water. When dissolved fill the cup with cold water, pour slowly into the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs add sugar and lemon juice, beat until it begins to set, add nuts and put in mould and serve with whipped cream. MOUNTAIN DEW PUDDING. 3 crackers rolled, I pt. milk. Yolks 2 eggs, y 2 cup sugar. Bake one-half hour. Do not let boil. Serve with merin- gue made with whites of the 2 eggs, y 2 cup sugar, little salt and flavoring. Spread and brown. Serve cold. ANGEL PUDDING. 2 cups water, 3 tablespoons of sugar, Pinch of salt, 2 tablespoons cornstarch. Whites of 2 eggs, Boil all but the eggs a few minutes, then remove from the fire and stir in the whites beaten to a stiff froth and boil one minute longer. SAUCE — Take V/z cups sweet milk, y 2 cup sugar, yolks of 2 eggs, flavor with vanilla. Cook like custard. COFFEE JELLY. Cook fifteen minutes in 3 cups coffee, y 2 cup Minute Tap- ioca, y 2 cup sugar a^d a little salt. Flavor with vanilla and serve cold with cream and sugar. MACAROON CREAM. 1 tablespoon Knox gela- 1 1-3 cup stigar, tine, 54 cup cold water, 2 cups milk. 2 eggs, 2-3 cup powdered maca- 1-8 teaspoon salt. roons, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Soak the gelatine in water. Make a custard of the yolks of the eggs, milk and sugar and salt, adding gelatine when 120 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. dissolved. Strain, let cool, add the macaroons and vanilla and stir till it thickens ; then add the whites of the eggs beaten stiff and pour in form. Serve with whipped cream. It is better if made the day before it is to be served. ORANGE CHARLOTTE. 1^2 tablespoons granulated gelatine, i cup sugar, Whites of 3 eggs, 3 tablespoons lemon Yz cup cold water. juice. J/2 cup boiling water. 1 cup orange juice ana pulp. Soak the gelatine in cold water for half an hour, then add boiling water to dissolve. When dissolved add sugar, lemon and orange juice. Cool, put on ice, and when it be- gins to harden beat about ten minutes with tgg beater, then add stiffly beaten whites of eggs. Serve with whipped cream. MOCHA CREAM. t cup strong coffee, t cup rich milk, V 2 cup sugar. t tablespoon cocoa. 1 tablespoon corn starch dissolved in a little cold milk. Cook about ten minutes in double boiler. Serve cold with whipped cream. This is very good served over baked tapioca pudding and makes enough for three or four people. PINEAPPLE TAPIOCA. Boil y 2 cup Minute Tapioca and )A cup sugar in 3 cups water till clear. Pour this over 1 pt. canned pineapple. When sufficiently cold decorate the top of pudding with currant jellv and serve with sweetened whipped cream. PINEAPPLE JULEP. Cut very ripe pineapple in four and remove core. Shred flesh with fork and scrape from skin with silver knife. Lay in bowl and strain over it juice two sweet oranges. Add Y\ COLD DESSERTS. 121 pt. raspberry syrup, ]/ 2 cup Karo Corn Syrup. Before serv- ing, pour over cracked ice. CHERRY BAVARIAN CREAM. Soak % box gelatine in 1-3 cup cold water, then set over hot water until melted. Whip 1 pt. cream solid, gradually add 1-3 cup powdered sugar and the melted gelatine. As it thickens add teaspoon of vanilla and 2-3 cup of cherries soaked in sherry, or use Maraschino cherries. Mould in in- dividual forms and serve with pink frosted cakes. LEMON JELLY. juice 2 lemons, 2 eggs beaten separately, i l / 2 cups sugar, 1 teaspoon Duryeas' Cornstarch and y 2 teaspoon lemon ex- tract. Boil in double boiler until thick. Serve with sponge cake or crackers. 122 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. LOAF CAKE. SUNSHINE CAKE. II yolks of eggs, 2 cups sugar, 1 cup milk, 1 teaspoon cream tartar, 3 cups flour, Yz teaspoon soda. 1 cup butter, Cream butter, add sugar gradually and work it in well ; add eggs well beaten, milk, then flour and flavor. Dissolve soda in milk. Sift cream tartar in flour. Bake in moderate oven. SUNSHINE CAKE. Whites of 7 eggs, 1 cup sugar, Yolks of 5 eggs, ]4 cup flour, 1-3 teaspoon cream tar- 1 teaspoon vanilla, tar, Pinch of salt. Sift flour and sugar separately eight or nine times. Beat yolks very light then beat the whites very stiff. When the whites are beaten a little add the salt. When beaten till quite foamy add the cream tartar. When whites are very stiff, fold in the sugar, then fold in the yolks and seasoning, then fold in the flour, folding as little as possible. Bake from 45 to 60 minutes in slow oven. QUICK CAKE. 1-3 cup soft butter, 2 teaspoons baking pow- 2 eggs, der, lY* cups brown sugar, y 2 teaspoon nutmeg, y 2 cup milk, y 2 lb. dates or raisins. \Y\ cups flour, stoned or cut. y 2 teaspoon cinnamon. LOAF CAKE. 1 23 Put all ingredients into a bowl without separate mixing and beat thoroughly for three minutes. Bake in shallow pan, ice with soft frosting. ANGEL CAKE. 9 to 11 whites of eggs (i cup whites), 1 cup pastry flour (sift four or five times and measure), 1% cups sugar (sift several times), 1-8 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon almond and six or eight drops of rose or i teaspoon vanilla and % teaspoon lemon, 1 teaspoon cream tartar Method of mixing. Chill the eggs add salt, beat with whisk beater. While beating add cream of tartar, beat un- til light but not stiff and dry. That makes cake more moist if not beaten too much ; add sugar gradually while beating add flavoring, fold in the flour with as few strokes as possible. Bake fifty to sixty minutes. ANGEL FOOD CAKE. Whites of 9 large eggs. I cup flour, IJ4 cups granulated y 2 teaspoon cream tartar, sugar, A pinch of salt. Add cream tartar and salt to the whites of the eggs and beat very stiff; stir sugar in thoroughly and flour lightly, flavor to taste. Bake forty to sixty minutes. WHITE CAKE WITH YELLOW FROSTING. Whites of 2 eggs, i cup granulated sugar, 1 teaspoon baking pow- Butter and milk, der. Mix flour, sugar and baking powder together. Break whites of 2 eggs into measuring cup and fill cup half full with warm (not melted) butter, then fill up with warm milk. Put all together, flavor and beat five minutes. Add powdered sugar to the beaten yolks until thick enough to spread well for the frosting. 124 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. DELICATE CAKE. 2 cups granulated sugar 2]/ 2 cups flour, i cup sweet milk, 3 teaspoons baking pow- y 2 cup butter, der. Whites of 5 eggs. Bake in moderate oven if baked in one loaf, or this makes a good four layer cake. QUICK CAKE. 1-3 cup soft butter, y 2 cup milk, 2 eggs, 3 teaspoons baking 1 24 c ups flour, powder (level), y 2 teaspoon cinnamon, y 2 teaspoon nutmeg, 1 1-3 cups brown sugar, y 2 lb. dates stoned and cut in pieces. Put all the ingredients in bowl and beat three minutes. Bake in loaf thirty-five or forty minutes. Better eaten the day it is baked. FRUIT CAKE, NO. 1. 8 eggs, 1 lb. sugar, 1 lb. butter, 1 lb. flour, 2 lbs. citron, 2 lbs. raisins, 2 lbs. currants, 2^2 teaspoons cloves, 2.y> teaspoons cinnamon, 2J/2 teaspoons nutmeg, 1 teaspoon soda, 2 tablespoons molasses. y 2 cup brandy, Mix the brandy, molasses and spices together and let stand an hour before mixing the cake. Bake in a loaf. WHITE FRUIT CAKE. 1 cup sugar. y 2 cup butter, White of 1 egg, 1 cup milk, 2 cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking 1 cup raisins and sliced powder, citron, 1 teaspoon sherry. LOAF CAKE. 125 Cream butter and sugar. Beat white of egg. Flour the fruit. Sift flour and baking powder together. Bake in bread tin forty to fifty minutes. FRUIT CAKE, NO. 2. 1 lb. butter, 1 lb. brown sugar, 1 lb. currants, 1 lb. flour (or more), i T / 2 lbs. raisins, l / 2 lb. citron, 10 eggs, 1 nutmeg, 1 teaspoon cloves, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1 small tablespoon soda. r tumbler molasses. Bake three hours in a pan lined with paper. FRUIT CAKE UNCOOKED. 3^2 lbs. raisins, 3^ lbs. dates, 4 lbs. figs, 5 lbs. mixed nuts. 1 lb. of citron, Chop, mix and press. Use plain frosting. SPONGE CAKE (WITHOUT WATER). 5 e g§ s (beaten separate- 1 cup sugar, ly), 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 1 cup flour, Bake 45 minutes. 1-8 teaspoon salt, Beat the yolks till yellow. Beat the whites till dry then add sugar to the whites ; add the lemon juice to the yolks and fold in the whites, then fold in the flour. Put into very moderate oven and after it begins to rise increase the heat a little. SPONGE CAKE. 2 eggs, 1 teaspoonful baking 1 cup granulated sugar, powder, 1 cup sifted flour, ^cup hot water. Beat the eggs very light, then beat in the sugar, 1 cup flour, a little at a time, then the second cup of flour into which the baking powder has been sifted, and last the hot 126 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. water, a little at a time. Flavor with lemon and bake in a moderately hot oven. PLAIN CAKE. \y 2 cups of sugar, 2 tablespoons of butter, 2 eggs, 1 cup of warm water, 2^2 cups pastry flour, 2 teaspoons baking 1 teaspoon lemon, powder. Cream the butter, add the sugar gradually then beat in the yolks of the eggs; add the water and seasoning. Sift baking powder and flour together and add to the mixture, beat well, then fold in the beaten whites of the eggs. Bake in a loaf or it will make three layers. PORK CAKE. 1 cup chopped fat salt 1 teaspoon soda, dis- pork, solved in hot water, 1 cup hot water or coffee, All kinds of spices, 1 cup sugar, Enough flour to make 1 cup molasses, stiff enough to hold up 1 cup chopped raisins. a tablespoon. Simmer the pork and water a little while, then add other ingredients. Bake one hour. POUND CAKE. 2 cups flour, l / 2 teaspoon baking 94 cup butter, powder, V/2, cups sugar, Yz cup of eggs (3 or 4 according to size). Cream butter and flour. Beat sugar and eggs very light. Put all together and bake in loaf. CARAMEL CAKE (INEXPENSIVE). 1 tablespoon of butter, y 2 cup of milk, 1 cup of sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Yolk of 1 egg, Va cup flour (scant), Y-2. cup of milk, Vi teaspoon of soda. 2 squares of chocolate, LOAF CAKE. 127 Cook chocolate and ^ cup of milk till thick then let it cool. Cream butter, sugar, egg and the other y 2 cup of milk and stir into the first mixture. Then add flour in which a scant teaspoon of soda has been sifted. Bake in square pan and use the white of the egg for boiled frosting. ROLLED JELLY CAKE. 4 eggs, 1 cup sugar, i teaspoon baking pow- 1 cup flour. der, 2 tablespoons hot water Beat the yolks and add the sugar gradually. Beat the whites and add lightly to the yolks. Sift flour and baking powder together and add it slowly to the batter then add 2 tablespoons of hot water. Line a long tin with buttered paper, pour in the mixture to the depth of one-fourth inch. Bake for eight or ten minutes in a moderate oven. When done remove the cake from the pan, tear off the paper, spread the cake with jelly or melted sweet chocolate and roll. Roll a napkin tightly around the cake to keep it in place till cool. GOLD CAKE. ji cup butter, Yolks 4 eggs, 1 cup sugar, l / 2 cup milk, 1 teaspoon baking pow- i l / 2 cups pastry flour, der, Bake in a loaf in moderate oven. ORANGE CAKE, NO. 1. 1 cup sugar, 1^4 cups flour, 1-3 cup butter. 2 teaspoons baking pow- 2 eggs, der, J A cup milk, Orange peel (grated). To the sugar, butter, yolks of the eggs and milk, add the flour slowly, into which sift the baking powder, lastly whites of eggs. Grate in orange peel, ice with a cup of confec- tioners' sugar, wet with orange juice. 128 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. ORANGE CAKE, NO. 2. % cup butter, 1 cup milk, 2 cups fine granulated 2 teaspoons baking pow- sugar, der, 4 eggs, 1 teaspoon orange ex- 4 cups pastry flour, tract. Cream the butter, then add the sugar a little at a time and stir well together. Sift flour and baking powder three or four times, then add 1 tablespoon of thfs prepared flour to the creamed sugar and butter; then add the eggs one at a time without first having beaten them, and stir thoroughly. Add one tablespoon of flour, before breaking in each egg and continue adding the flour alternately with the milk. Bake in moderate oven. The beauty of this cake is in the amount of beating. FROSTING. — Mix together yolk of one egg, 1 tablespoon of water, y 2 teaspoon orange extract, and enough confec- tioners' sugar to spread well. APPLE SAUCE CAKE. i]/2 cups sugar, 1^2 cups unsweetened 1 cup raisins, apple sauce, t teaspoon cloves, y 2 cup butter, A little nutmeg, 1 teaspoon cinnnamon, 2 level teaspoons soda, 2 good cups flour. Bake in loaf in moderate oven. CINNAMON CAKE. 1 cup sugar, 1 egg, y 2 cup milk, 2 level teaspoons baking 1^4 cups flour, powder. 54 cup butter, Cream butter and sugar. Add the milk, the beaten egg, and the flour and baking powder sifted together. Bake in a biscuit tin from twenty-five to thirty-five minutes. Be- LOAF CAKE. l2 g fore placing in the oven sprinkle ground cinnamon, chopped nuts and granulated sugar over the top. Cut in squares. COFFEE CAKE. Yz cup sugar, y 2 cup butter, i egg, i cup molasses, y 2 cup cold coffee, i teaspoon ground cloves I teaspoon cinnamon, y teaspoon nutmeg, 2y 2 cups flour, iy 2 teaspoons baking 1 cup fruit, powder. Cream sugar and butter. Sift together flour and baking powder. Beat the egg and put together in order given. Bake in a loaf for nearly one hour. SPICE CAKE, NO. i. t cup sugar, i cup raisins, y cup butter, 2 eggs, y cup sour milk, Y 2 teaspoon soda in the y cup molasses, milk, Spice, currants, citron, 1 pt. bread flour. SPICE CAKE, NO. 2. y cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs beaten separately 1 teaspoon baking pow- cup coffee (can use der, mi lk), 1 >4 cnps pastry flour, 1 tablespoon mixed spice, y cup raisins cut in 2 or y cup walnut meats (cut 3 pieces. fine). Cream butter. Add sugar, add beaten yolks, add wetting and flour alternately. Put the baking powder in the last part of the flour. Add the *pice, then the beaten whites and beat vigorously. Save a little of the flour to flour the nuts and fruit. Fold in fruit and nuts. Bake in loaf about fortv-five minutes. 130 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. CHOCOLATE CAKE. 2 cups dark brown sugar, ? cups flour, Yz cup butter (scant), " ]/ 2 cup sour milk, t teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon vanilla. 2 eggs, leaving out one white, Y\ cake of chocolate dissolved in hot water ; let it cool and stir in last. FROSTING. — White of 1 egg not beaten; 1 tablespoon cold water, enough confectioners' sugar to make proper con- sistency. WALNUT SPICE CAKE. 1 cup sugar, y 2 cup butter, 1 egg (beaten), 1 cup sour milk, 1 teaspoon soda, 2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon each of cloves 1 cup chopped raisins, and cinnamon, 1 teaspoon vanilla. 3/4 cup chopped walnut meats, Bake in a loaf in a moderate oven. MOLASSES SPONGE CAKE. l / 2 cup molasses, 1 egg, y 2 cup shortening, y 2 cup water, 1 tablespoon vinegar, 1 teaspoon soda (heap- 2.y 2 cups flour (pastry), m g), y 2 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon each of cloves, cinnamon and ginger. Bake in gem pans. GINGERBREAD. 2 tablespoons melted y 2 teaspoon cinnamon, butter or drippings, 1 egg, 24 cup molasses (dark y 2 cup sour milk, molasses), 2 cups flour, LOAF CAKE. 131 i teaspoon soda, y> teaspoon cloves. 1 teaspoon ginger, Mix as a plain batter. Bake twenty minutes. SOFT GINGERBREAD. y 2 cup molasses, y 2 cup butter. ]/ 2 cup sugar, x /z cup sour cream, y 2 tablespoon ginger, t egg, y 2 dessert spoon soda. Ground spice according 1 pt. sifted flour, to taste. Mix butter and sugar to a cream, then add the other ingredients. OLIVE'S GINGERBREAD. 2 tablespoons melted 1 teaspoon soda, butter, 3 tablespoons sugar, 1 cup molasses. 2-3 cup hot water, y 2 teaspoon ginger, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1 egg, 1 teaspoon allspice. Dissolve soda in hot water, mix ingredients in order given ; add enough flour to make the batter thicker than pancake batter. Bake in a sheet pan. JERSEY CAKE. 2 cups sugar. 1 cup milk, 3 eggs, 2 teaspoons baking pow- 3 cups flour, der, t teaspoon lemon, 1 tablespoon molasses, 1 cup chopped raisins, Currant jelly, 2-3 cup butter, y 2 teaspoon of cloves, cinnamon and nutmeg. Cream sugar and butter, add the beaten eggs, milk and flour and baking powder sifted together. Flavor two-thirds of the batter with the lemon and bake in two layers. To the other third add the molasses, raisins and spice and bake in one layer. Put the three cakes together with currant jelly placing the spice cake in the center. I3 2 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. A GOOD ONE EGG CAKE. i cup sugar, i e gg, i cup milk, 2. teaspoons baking pow- 2 cups Hour, der. Seasoning, 2 tablespoons butter (melted), Bake in three layers. And use cocoanut cream rilling or lemon filling. DATE CAKE. i J / 2 cups sugar. 3 eggs — reserve whites l / 2 cup butter, of 2 for filling, 1 cup milk, 2 teaspoons baking pow- 2 l / 2 cups flour, der. FILLING — Stone 1 lb. dates and chop fine, add 1 table- spoon lemon juice and stir into the boiled icing (made of 2 cups of sugar, 6 tablespoons of water and the 2 whites of eggs) after it is cool and ready to spread. DEFOREST LAYER CAKE. DARK PART. y 2 cup brown sugar, Yolks of 2 eggs, l / 2 cup sour milk, t cup chopped raisins, J / 2 teaspoon nutmeg, y> teaspoon cinnamon, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 cup flour, y 2 teaspoon soda dissolved in a little of the milk. Bake in one layer. LIGHT PART. 1 cup granulated sugar, Whites of 3 eggs, y 2 cup sweet milk, 2 teaspoons baking pow- 2 scant cups of flour, der, y 2 cup butter. 1 teaspoon vanilla. Bake in two layers. LOAF CAKE. 1 33 Lemon Jelly for filling. 1 lemon, i cup sugar, Yolk of 1 egg, 1 cup cold water, 1 dessert spoon cornstarch. Boil till thick. Put cake together with the dark layer in the center; this cake will keep moist a week or more. PLAIN LAYER CAKE. 2 eggs, (separate), i cup sugar, j4 cup melted butter, y 2 cup milk, 1^2 cups pastry flour, t teaspoon vanilla. 1 teaspoon cream tartar and V2 teaspoon soda or 1^ teaspoons baking powder. Beat yolks, add sugar then the softened butter. Add the milk and flour alternately and add the baking powder with the last ]/2 cupful of flour; arid flavoring and last of all the beaten whites. Beat well after adding the whites but do not stir. Bake in layer pans or in a sheet twenty minutes. LADY BALTIMORE CAKE. 1 cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 3^2 cups flour, 1 cup sweet milk. Whites of 6 eggs, 2 level teaspoons baking 1 teaspoon rose water, powder. Bake in three layers and use this filling: — 3 cups granulated sugar, 1 cup chopped raisins, Whites 3 eggs, 1 cup chopped pecan 5 figs cut in thin strips, nuts. 1 cup boiling water, Boil sugar and water til 1 it threads, then pour gradually over the stiffly beaten whites of eggs stirring constantly, then add raisins, nuts and figs. PERFECT LAYER CAKE. 1 cup butter, 1^2 cups sifted Hour. t^4 cups sugar, x /i cup Karo cornstarch. 134 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. 4 e gg s , 2 level teaspoons baking i teaspoon vanilla, powder. y 2 cup milk, Mix cornstarch and baking- powder with the flour, cream the butter, add sugar, and when well mixed add the well beaten yolks and the flavoring. Beat the whites stiff, then add milk and flour alternately and lastly the whites. Bake in three shallow pans in moderate oven. Use receipt for coffee filling. PEACH CAKE. 3 eggs, i cup sugar, y 2 cup cold water, ? cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking pow- Seasoning, der, Beat eggs hard for five mintues, add sugar and beat three minutes, then add water, flour and baking powder and bake in two deep round tins. Split each cake and spread with cut-up peaches ; sprinkle with fine sugar and cover with whipped cream. Put on the top cake sprinkle with pow- dered sugar and serve as a dessert. Omit the peaches, use more cream flavored with cherry or vanilla and serve as Cream Cake with pieces of jelly on the top of the cake. DARK CHOCOLATE CAKE. i cup sugar, 1-3 cup butter, 1 egg, t cup milk, 2 scant cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking pow- 1 cup grated chocolate, der. Cream sugar and butter. Sift flour and baking powder together. Bake in two layers. Put together with boiled frosting. DEVIL FOOD. Yolk 1 egg, 2 squares chocolate, y 2 cup strong coffee 1 cup brown sugar. LOAF CAKE. 135 Stir these together, cook until smooth and let cool. 1 cup brown sugar. Scant y 2 cup butter, 1 egg and yolk of another, y 2 cup strong coffee. 1 cup flour, Stir this together, then add the boiled part, and 1 teaspoon soda, dissolved in i teaspoon milk, 1 teaspoon vanilla, i teaspoon powdered 1 cup flour. charcoal. Bake in two layers. FILLING — 1 cup brown sugar, i cup white sugar, i cup water, I tablespoon vinegar. Boil together until it thickens, then stir into the well beaten whites of 2 eggs, and beat very stiff. MOCHA CAKE. 2 eggs, (beaten light). Pinch of salt, i 1 /* teaspoons baking 1 cup sugar, powder, 1 cup flour. Lastly add l / 2 cup of boiling milk, into which 1 teaspoon of butter has been melted. FILLING — Take l /\ cup of butter, creamed, 1 teaspoon cocoa, 1 heaping cup confectioners' sugar, 1 teaspoon vanil- la, 2 tablespoons strong coffee. Mix with spoon and spread between layers and over the top. CHOCOLATE CAKE. 1 cup sugar, t cup milk, 3 eggs, 2 teaspoons baking pow- 2 cups flour, der. 1-3 cup butter, Cream sugar and butter, add the beaten yolks of the eggs. milk and flour in which the baking powder has been sifted, then the well beaten whites of two eggs reserving one white for the frosting. Bake in two tins from twenty to thirty minutes. I36 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. CHOCOLATE FROSTING. 2 squares of chocolate, 3 tablespoons of sugar, }4 cup boiling water, l teaspoon vanilla. Boil this stirring often until smooth, thick and glossy; add the beaten white of one egg and vanilla; spread on the cake when it is cool using more confectioners' sugar to thicken the frosting if it seems too thin. BLACK CHOCOLATE CAKE. 2 cups granulated sugar. t teaspoon saleratus dis- y 2 cup sour milk, solved in milk, 1 cup grated chocolate. 2 teaspoons baking pow- dissolved in 1 cup of der, hot coffee. Yolks of 3 eggs, well t large tablespoon butter, beaten and added the 2 cups flour, last thing. Bake in two layers. Whites For Boiled Frosting. — Add 1 cup walnut meats chopped fine and 2 cnps sugar. DELICATE LAYER CAKE. Whites of 4 eggs, 1 cup sugar, l /X cup butter, 2 large teaspoons baking 2.y 2 cups flour, powder, ■kj cup milk, r teaspoon lemon. Cream sugar and butter, add milk ; sift flour and baking powder together, add flavonng and last add the beaten whites of the eggs. Stir carefully after the whites of the eggs are put in. This makes three layers and is very nice with lemon filling or whipped cream filling. CAKE FILLING AND FROSTING. 1 37 Cake Filling and Frosting. COCOANUT CREAM FILLING. 1 egg, Ya cup milk, 1 heaping tablespoon Ya cup sugar, flour, 1 teaspoon seasoning. Cook in double boiler till thick and smooth ; a cup of grated cocoanut may be added if desired, then put a little of the filling on the top of the cake and sprinkle cocoanut thick- ly over it. LEMON FILLING. 1 lemon, grated rind and i tablespoon flour, juice, 1 egg and yolks of two 1 cup sugar, more. Y cup water. Beat flour, sugar and eggs together, add the lemon and water and cook ; if to be used for filling for a large cake double this receipt. COFFEE FILLING. 1 cup boiling water, 3 tablespoons ground cof- A little milk, fee, Yi cup granulated sugar, 1 very heaping table- A small piece of butter, spoon of flour, Yolks of 4 eggs, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Pour hot water over coffee. Strain and pour back into the cup and fill up the cup with milk. Beat eggs, sugar aim flour together till it will run from the spoon. Scald in milk and coffee till thick like cream. Add butter and vanilla. When cold put between layers of cake. Put boiled frosting on top made with coffee instead of water. I38 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. WHIPPED CREAM FILLING. 1 pt. cream (whipped), ]/ 2 cup pulverized sugar, 2 squares chocolate 1 .teaspoon vanilla, (melted), Stir sugar into whipped cream, add chocolate and vanilla and enough pulverized sugar to make it the consistency of frosting. Spread between layers and on top of the cake. ALMOND FILLING AND FROSTING. Use the receipt for boiled frosting and add J/2 cup of blanched and chopped almonds and a little almond extract. COCOANUT FILLING AND FROSTING. Make a boiled frosting and stir in y 2 cup of cocoanut and sprinkle cocoanut on the top of the frosting. COCOANUT AND RAISIN FILLING. 1 cup raisins, chopped Yi cup almonds, fine, White of egg. Yi cup cocoanut, (grated) CHOCOLATE FILLING. 2 ozs. chocolate, 1 cup boiling water, t tablespoon Karo corn- ^4 cup sugar, starch, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 tablespoon butter, Cook until smooth. NUT FILLING. 1 cup chopped raisins, 2 tablespoons sugar, 1 cup chopped walnuts, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 cup milk, Little salt. 1 egg, Cook milk, egg, sugar and salt together, thickened with little cornstarch. After it has cooled, flavor and add nuts and raisins. Spread between layer cake. CAKE FILLING AND FROSTING. 1 39 CHOCOLATE NUT FILLING. Yi cup sugar, i square chocolate White of i egg (beaten), melted. *4 cup water, Boil sugar and water till it threads. Pour over the egg. Add the chocolate and stir till thick enough to spread. FRUIT FILLING FOR CAKE, NO. i. Take z / 2 cup each of nuts, cherries and raisins, i cup sugar, y 2 cup water, whites of 2 eggs. Boil sugar and water until it hairs, pour it over the beaten whites and beat until smooth. Then add nuts and fruits. FILLING FOR CAKE. 1 cup brown sugar, y 2 cup milk, 1 cup white sugar, 1 cup chopped nuts. 1 tablespoon butter, Cook sugar, milk and butter until it begins to thicken, remove from stove, add nuts and stir till it creams. BOILED FROSTING, NO. 1. 1 cup sugar, % cup water, White of 1 egg, 1 teaspoon seasoning. Boil sugar and water about eight minutes or until the syrup hairs when dropped from the spoon. Have ready the white of the egg beaten stiff. Ponr the syrup slowly over the egg stirring constantly. Flavor and use when thick enough not to run. FIG FROSTING. Make a boiled frosting and add 1 cup of chopped figs. Boil together l / 2 lb. of chopped figs, 1 cup sugar and y 2 cup water till soft and smooth. Flavor with orange or lemon juice. MAPLE SUGAR FROSTING. Boil 2 cups of maple c yrup or 1 cup brown sugar with l /\ cup of water until it hairs v hen dropped from spoon. Re- 14° SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. move from the tire and pour slowly upon the beaten white of an egg stirring all the time. Stir till stiff enough to spread. UNCOOKED FROSTING. 1 cup fine powdered sugar, 2 tablespoons hot water or milk. Mix and spread on cake smooth with a knife wet in cold water. This frosting makes a good foundation for mocha, coffee and chocolate frostings by adding butter and cocoa and substituting coffee for milk. BOILED FROSTING, NO. 2. l /2 cup granulated sugar, Yi teaspoon lemon extarct or \\A teaspoons lemon juice, 34 cup water, "White of 1 egg. Stir the sugar and water in a saucepan till the syrup boils. Then boil it without stirring till it threads. A little before it reaches this point beat the white of egg stiff. When the syrup threads turn it into the egg in a fine stream beat- ing till smooth but not thick enough to drop. Flavor and pour over cake spreading with a knife. If beaten too long- thin with a few drops of lemon juice or water and wet the knife in cold water. FRUIT FILLING, NO. 2. 4 tablespoons chopped citron, 4 tablespoons fine chopped raisins, T 4 lb. fine chopped figs, l / 2 cup tine chopped blanched almonds. Whites of 3 eggs, V2 cupful pulverized sugar. Beat eggs very stiff, add the sugar, then the other ingre- dients and spread between the layers of cake while they are hot. CAKE FILLING AND FROSTING. «4 ! CHOCOLATE FROSTING, NO. i. i cup powdered sugar, Butter size of an egg, 2 tablespoons coffee, Vi teaspoon vanilla, 2 tablespoons cocoa, CHOCOLATE FROSTING, NO. 2. 1 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla. 5 tablespoons milk, Boil five minutes and pour on 1 square of melted choco- late. MOCHA FROSTING. 1 cup powdered sugar, 1 tablespoon melted 2 teaspoons strong boil- butter, ing coffee, 2 teaspoons cocoa or 1 teaspoon vanilla, chocolate. Add hot coffee to sugar, butter, cocoa and flavoring. 142 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Small Cakes and Cookies. FRIED CAKES. 6 eggs, 6 tablespoons butter, i teaspoon of cream tar- 12 tablespoons sugar, tar, Vanilla and flour. y 2 teaspoon soda, Roll rather thin and cook in hot fat. COCOANUT BALLS. Cut angel or nice white cake in small squares and roll in icing then in grated cocoanut. BROWNIES. 1 cup sugar, y 2 cup butter, 2 eggs, 2 squares chocolate, y> cup flour, 1 teaspoon vanilla. 1 cup nuts chopped fine, Pour into a large pan after mixing, and bake until done, then cut in squares. GINGER SNAPS. Rub x /z cup butter with a pint of flour, y 2 teaspoon ginger and a little salt. Mix well with y 2 cup molasses. Roll thin and bake in quick oven. HERMITS. ij^ cups sugar, namon, cloves and all- y 2 cup butter, spice, 3 eggs well beaten, y 2 teaspoon soda dis- 1 cup raisins chopped solved in 1 tablespoon fine, boiling water, y 2 cup citron chopped Flour enough to make fine, stiff. 1 teaspoon each of cin- SMALL CAKES AND COOKIES. 1 43 RAISIN COOKIES. i cup sugar, I teaspoon vanilla, l eo .g ? y 2 cup lard or butter, 3 teaspoons baking pow- V'2 cup milk, der, 3^ C "P S flour - RAISIN COOKY FILLING. 1 large cup of raisins X A cup boiling water, chopped fine, 2 teaspoons flour. y 2 cup sugar. Cook till it thickens. Roll cookies thin. Cut them out. Put on one teaspoon of filling, cover with another thin cooky and bake. HERMITS. 1 cup molasses, I teaspoon soda, y 2 cup sugar, Flour enoueh to make a 1 egg beaten. soft dough, y 2 teaspoon each of J /> cup butter, cloves, cinnamon and J /> cup milk, nutmeg, 1 cup chopped raisins. Drop in spoonfuls on buttered tins and bake quickly or add more flour to stiffen. Roll V A "^ in thickness and cut with a small cutter. PEANUT MACAROONS. 1 cup chopped peanuts, I cup powdered sugar, t large tablespoon flour, Whites of 2 eggs. Beat the whites of eggs very stiff, mix, drop on buttered paper. Bake a light brown in a moderate oven. SOUR MILK COOKIES. 1 cup lard, t cup sour milk, „ po .o. Q 1 teaspoon baking pow- 2 cups sugar, der - 1 teaspoon soda. Season with nutmeg or lemon. 144 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. SUGAR COOKIES. i l / 2 cups sugar, 2 eggs> 1 CUp lard > X cup' sweet milk. Add a little flour, then i teaspoon of soda dry, and 2 tea- spoons baking powder, nutmeg and salt. Add more flour to roll. OATMEAL CRISPS. &t " 72 cup sugar, 1 tablespoon of butter y 2 teaspoon baking pow- 1 heaping cup of dry oat- der. meal, Mix butter and sugar, add egg and oatmeal mixed with baking powder. Flour the hands before trying to form the cakes. Bake in a moderately hot oven. OATMEAL COOKIES. 1 cup sugar, 2 teaspoons baking pow- 2 eggs (not beaten), der, 3 cups oatmeal, y 4 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon butter, l teaspoon vanilla. Roll out thin and bake. MOLASSES COOKIES. 1 cup sugar, r cup Jard> I72 cups molasses, 1 e gg. 1 teaspoon ginger. Add 1 cup of flour before putting in 1 cup sour milk, and 3 teaspoons soda. Add flour sufficient to roll out nicely. SHREWSBURY CAKES. 1 lb. flour, 34 lb. sugar, Ya lb. butter, 4 eggs, 1 nutmeg, r _ 3 cup s h er ry or brandy. 1 cup currants, Drop from spoon and bake in moderately hot oven. SMALL CAKES AND COOKIES. 145 MARSH MALLOW MARGUERITES. Slightly butter thin unsweetened crackers ; put marsh- mallow in the center with a tiny piece of butter on top. Place in oven long enough for the marshmallow to melt and spread and brown a little on top. MARGUERITES, NO. i. i cup brown sugar. 1-3 teaspoon baking pow- *4 teaspoon salt, der, t cup pecan nuts, 2 eggs slightly beaten y 2 cup sifted flour, Beat eggs slightly, add sugar, salt, flour and baking pow- der, lastly the chopped nut meats. Butter round gem pans very generously, put one teaspoon of mixture in each pan, bake until done. English walnuts can be used instead of pecans, and they are nicer to put one whole nut meat on top of cake before baking. (No frosting). MARGUERITES, NO. 2. Whites of 2 eggs beaten 1 cup powdered sugar, stiff, 1 cup nuts chopped fine. Mix together and spread on butter thins, and brown in the oven lightly. 146 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Ice Creams, Sherbets and Beverages. CAFE MOUSSE, NO. 1. 1 tablespoon gelatine, 1 cup strong coffee, \]/ 2 cups cream, 1 cup sugar. Whites of 2 eggs, Soak gelatine in water enough to cover and when dis- solved pour it into the coffee. Whip the cream and sugar till a little stiff. Beat the whites of the eggs and when gelatine begins to thicken beat it into the eggs. When foaming stir with the cream and sugar. Put in a mould and pack with salt and ice and let stand four or five hours. COFFEE MOUSSE. Add y 2 cup clear black coffee and 2-3 cup powdered sugar to 1 pt. of cream. Peat the mixture until it is solid to the bottom of the bowl. Turn it into a mould lined with paper, filling the mould to overflowing. Spread a paper over the top of the cream, put on the cover, and pack in equal measures of crushed ice and salt for two or three hours. Serve in slices with a spoonful of whipped cream on top. MAPLE MOUSSE. 1 cup maple syrup, 4 eggs, 1 pt. cream. Heat the syrup, add the beaten yolks of eggs, cook until it thickens, stirring constantly. When cold fold in the beaten whites and the cream whipped. Turn into mould, pack in ice and salt. ICE CREAMS, SHERBETS AND BEVERAGES. 147 .CAFE MOUSSE, NO. 2. \y 2 cups rich cream, t cup sugar, 1 tablespoon gelatine, Whites of 2 eggs. t cup strong coffee, Soak 1 tablespoon gelatine in water to cover, pour on it 1 cup strong coffee (hot). Whip cream until stiff, add sugar. When the gelatine and coffee begin to stiffen, beat it into the whites of 2 eggs already beaten stiff. When foaming beat with cream and sugar. Put in moulds or pail and pack in a pail of salt and ice, and let it stand four 01 five hours. ICE CREAM, NO. 1. 1 pt. cream, e 1 cup milk, 1 cup sugar, 2 teaspoons vanilla. Pour into freezer and pack using three parts finely crushed ice to one part rock salt. When the cream is hard remove the beater. Pack the cream in a mould putting a piece of paraffine paper over the top Put on the cover and sink the mould in ice and salt for one hour longer. This amount makes one quart. FROZEN PUDDING, NO. 1. Flavor the above receipt with one tablespoon of Mara- schino or Madeira wine and when nearly frozen add I cup of candied fruits cut into bits and soaked in wine. FROZEN PUDDING, NO. 2. 1 quart milk. t quart cream, 2 cups sugar, 2 eggs, y 2 cup flour (scant), 1-3 box gelatine. One pound candied cherries cut in halves and soaked in sherry wine over night or longer if convenient. Cover gelatine with water two hours before wanted. Rub the flour smooth in a little of the milk. Let the rest of the milk come to a boil. Beat the eggs, sugar and flour to- gether and stir in the boiling milk and cook twenty minutes 148 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. stirring constantly, then add the gelatine. When cold add the whipped cream and the wine from the cherries if any is left. Freeze ten minutes then add the cherries and finish. This makes four quarts. ICE CREAM, NO. 2. 5 pts. milk, y A cup cornstarch. 7 eggs, Sugar and flavoring. For 1 gal. of cream put 1 qt. of milk on the stove to heat. When this comes to the boiling point stir in the cornstarch dissolved in a little cold milk and cook thoroughly. Have ready the yolks of the eggs and 1 cup of sugar well beaten. Into this stir the milk and cornstarch, being sure *he corn- starch is well cooked, and beat the eggs and sugar until all is cooked and looks frothy. While it is still hot beat in the whites of the eggs beaten to a stiff froth, add the rest of the milk, sweeten and flavor to taste and freeze. ICE CREAM. (VERY NICE.) 3 pts. milk, 3 tablespoons powdered T 4 lb. sugar, arrowroot. t pt. cream, Scald the milk, add the sugar, then arrowroot dissolved in a little cold milk. Cook until it thickens slightly. Strain and when cold add cream, and flavoring of any kind, and freeze. COFFEE ICE CREAM. r qt. cream, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup milk, l / 2 cup strong coffee. Whites of 2 eggs, Mix all together, adding the whites of eggs beaten stiff last. Freeze as usual. GRAPE JUICE SHERBERT WITH WHIPPED CREAM. One-fourth package Lemon Minute Gelatine (Flavored), 1 qt. water, 1 pt. sugar, 1 pt. grape juice, the juice of 2 ICE CREAMS, SHERBETS AND BEVERAGES. [49 lemons. Boil the water and sugar fifteen minutes; add the Gelatine (Flavored) and, when cold, the grape and lemon juice, and strain into the can of the freezer; freeze as usual. Serve in cups with a spoonful whipped .cream on the top of each cup. GRAPE ICE. To 1 pt. prepared grape juice add enough sugar and Karo Corn Syrup in the proportion of one of the latter to two of the former, to make quite sweet. To this put beaten whites of four eggs just before freezing. Freeze as ice cream. CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM. 1 qt. cream, 2 eggs, 1 pt. milk, \]/ 2 cups sugar, 2 squares chocolate, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Melt chocolate with part of the sugar. Beat yolks of eggs with remainder of sugar. Heat milk, add chocolate, sugar and yolks of eggs. Cook in double boiler five minutes. When cold add cream, vanilla and whites of eggs beaten stiff. PEACH ICE CREAM. Slice ripe peaches and force through a puree strainer or colander. To 2 cupfuls of peach pulp add 1 cupful of sugar, and let stand until sugar is dissolved, then add gradually while stirring constantly, y 2 pt. of heavy cream, y 2 pt. rich milk and a few grains of salt. Freeze, using three parts finely crushed ice to one part rock salt. Turn crank slowly at first, and near the end of freezing turn more rapidly. COFFEE PARFAIT. 1 cup sugar, 1-3 cup strong coffee. 1 pt. of cream, Whip the cream, add sugar and coffee, pack in ice and salt for two or three hours. RASPBERRY PARFAIT. 1 cup sugar, 1-3 cup raspberry juice. 1 pt. cream, 150 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Whip cream, add sugar and fruit juice ; pack in ice and salt for two or three hours. SULTANA ROLL WITH CLARET SAUCE. Line 1 lb. baking powder boxes with pistachio ice cream. Sprinkle with Sultana raisins which have been soaked one hour in brandy. Fill centers with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream sweetened and flavored with vanilla. Pack in salt and ice and let stand two hours. CLARET SAUCE. 1 cup sugar, l / A cup water. 1-3 cup claret, Boil sugar and water eight minutes, cool and add claret. CHOCOLATE SAUCE. 34 cake Baker's chocolate, Y cup powdered sugar, Yi cup boiling water. Boil on stove, stirring con=tantly until it thickens. One- half cup chopped English walnuts is an improvement. Add them just before pouring on ice cream. Use quite hot. HOT CHOCOLATE SAUCE TO SERVE WITH ICE CREAM. Put 6 oz. chocolate in a saucepan with 4 ozs. sugar, melt it over the teakettle and b^t with a spoon until perfectly smooth, gradually adding a small glassful of hot water, very little at a time. Boil this slowly, pour in a few spoon- fuls of cream. Serve hot. This should serve twenty-five persons. RUGBY CHOCOLATE SAUCE. y 2 cup sugar, % cup water, t square chocolate, ^2 teaspoon vanilla, 3/2 cup good cream. Boil sugar and water to t> syrup then add chocolate, va- nilla and cream. Serve hot over vanilla ice cream. ICE CREAMS, SHERBETS AND BEVERAGES. I 5 I STRAWBERRY SAUCE. Clean and mash a quart of berries. Heat and strain them through a piece of cheese cloth. Add i cup of sugar and boil down to a thick syrup. Serve cold over ice cream. HOT COFFEE SAUCE. 1 cup strong coffee, i cup sugar. %. cup water, Boil sugar and water together two or three minutes, then add the coffee and boil to a syrup. Serve hot over vanilla ice cream. TEA. Green and black mixed as you like. One teasponful for each person ; place the dry tea in the teapot and let stand five or six minutes on back of stove, until leaves smell and exhale quite a fragrance when you lift the teapot cover, then put in about half the quantity of boiling water needed (the water should have just come to the boil), then steep five minutes, then add the rest of boiling water, and steep five minutes more. COFFEE. First, the coffeepot must be bright and clean and the water fresh and cold. Put in a bowl fine freshly-ground coffee — one tablespoon for each cup and one for the pot. Wash a fresh egg and beat it, shell and all, with the coffee, adding cold water gradually until the number of cups you wish to serve are all used. Then add half a pint more to allow for soaking up the coffee. Put over a clear fire and heat to just below the boiling point. Draw back and let it stand a few minutes where it will not quite boil, but keep very hot. When it ha* settled and clarified it is done. Have milk heated — not boiled — let the cups stand a mo- ment in hot water to prevent cooling the coffee. The milk or cream and sugar should *;e put in the cup first and then the hot coffee added. Keep the pot tightly covered while I52 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. making the coffee, as the aroma is lost if the steam escapes, and much of the flavor is lost as well. AFTER DINNER, OR BLACK COFFEE is made by filtering or boiling. The proportion of coffee should be twice that for ordinary breakfast coffee, as it should be dark and strong, very clear and served without milk or cream. Don't wash the coffee pot with soap. Wash in hot water and dry thoroughly. FRUIT PUNCH. Juice of 12 oranges, 1 can pineapple, Juice of 10 lemons, 6 bananas (sliced), 1 pt. cherries, 4 cups sugar. Boil sugar in 1 qt. of water for five minutes. Cool, add 4 qts. of water, then the juice and fruit. GRAPE JUICE. Express the juice from grapes (wild preferred) by cook- ing slowly till soft with very little water. Strain through jelly bag. Bring juice to a boil and add : /+ lb. of sugar to each quart. Cork tightly in bottles and keep in cool place. The juice of strawberries, currants or red raspberries may be prepared in the same way, and is especially useful in making gelatine desserts. RASPBERRY SHRUB. Add to 8 qts. of fine, ripe. Mack raspberries enough vine- gar to reach the top, but no! cover them. Let stand in a stone jar twenty-four hours Then strain through a colan- der, mashing the berries well. Strain again through cheese- cloth and measure the juice. Allow 1 lb. of sugar for 1 pt. of juice, put the juice in a preserving kettle and boil for twenty minutes, add the sugar and boil ten minutes longer. Seal in fruit jars or bottles. ICE CREAMS, SHERBETS AND BEVERAGES. 1 53 PURPLE PUNCH. 3 oranges, i cup grape juice. 3 lemons, i cup grated pineapple, 3^2 qts. water, 2 cups sugar. 2 cup freshly made tea, Cook grated pineapple with 1 pt. water for fifteen minutes, strain through cheesecloth, add 1 pt. of water and 2 cups of sugar which have been boiled ten minutes, y 2 cup of tea, juice of lemons, oranges and grape juice, and 2^2 qts. water. Put in punch bowl with large lump of ice. Serve chilled in sherbert glasses. CHERRY CUP. Put into bowl 1 pt. stoned and bruised cherries, the juice of 4 lemons, the grated rind of 1 lemon, 1 cup sugar and 1 qt. water. Let stand one hour, strain. Add 1 pt. claret and set on ice. Serve in punch glasses with handles. To each put a spoonful of shaved ice, a few fine cherries cut small and a sprig of green borage. ACIDULATED RASPBERRY SYRUP is made by putting 6 lbs. of raspberries in jar with 6 qts. of water in which has been dissolved 2 ounces of tartaric, or preferably citric acid ; let it s^and for a day and a night, and then strain. To each pint of liquor add \ T /i lbs. of loaf sugar, stirring until the sugar dissolves. Leave it in cool place for a few days, then bottle for future use. Use a tablespoonful of gelatine and the white of an egg in making sherberts. The other ingredients are a cup of fruit juice and a cup of sugar to two of water. 154 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. Pickles and Preserves. TO CAN RED RASPBERRIES. 20 qts. of berries, 12 or 14 lbs. of currants, 10 lbs. of sugar. Pick the berries over and put them in the jars uncooked filling the jars nearly full. Heat the currants and mash to get all the juice out the same as for jelly. Strain the juice, stir the sugar into it and pour it into the jars, filling them within an inch of the top. Put on the tops without the rubber. Lay a thin piece of peach basket or little pieces of shingle in the bottom of the wash boiler; stand the glass jars on these strips, 15 or 16 qt. jars will stand in an ordi- nary boiler. Put enough cold water in the boiler to come to the shoulder of the jars and bring to a boil. Let it boil 20 minutes, then lay a cloth wet in hot water in the sink; lift three or four of the jars and stand them on the cloth ; take off the covers, put on the rubbers ; pour enough hot currant juice in a jar to run over the top and seal up quickly. Stand the jar on its head to see if it leaks. CANNED PEACHES. Pare the peaches, cut them in two, remove the pit and drop them cut side down in glass fruit jars. Stir a scant coffee cup of granulated sugar in just enough water to dis- solve and pour into the jar and put on the cover without the rubber and cook in the boiler the same as the raspberries, be sure to cover the boiler tightly to keep in the steam. After cooking 20 minutes in the boiler fill the jar with hot water and seal at once. The pits may be left in if preferred. CANNED BLACKBERRIES. Put them in the jars, dissolve a coffee cup of sugar in cold water and fill into the jar and proceed the same as with peaches. PICKLES AND PRESERVES. I 55 RASPBERRIES. Both red and black raspberries may be canned the same as peaches. TOMATO BUTTER. 16 lbs. of ripe tomatoes, T qt. of vinegar, 8 lbs. of sugar, 2 tablespoons cinnamon, 1 teaspoon cloves, 1 teaspoon of allspice, 1 tablespoon mace. Peel the tomatoes and cook them with the vinegar and sugar till about half done. Add spice and cook until very thick being careful not to let it burn. DUTCH SALAD. (PICKLE). 1 bunch celery, I qt. green tomatoes, 6 small green peppers, 1 cabbage, 1 cauliflower, I qt. onions, 10 teaspoons dry mustard, 1 oz. tumeric powder. Chop all together, sprinkle with ]/ 2 a cup of salt, then let stand one-half hour. Add 2.y 2 cups brown sugar, 1 cup flour, 2 qts. vinegar. Dissolve the tumeric powder and flour in a little of the vinega r . then boil until tender — an hour or so. CUCUMBER SALAD. (PICKLE.) Take 3 or 4 doz. small cucumbers sliced thin. Peel 3 onions, salt and let stand over night with cucumbers. Drain well, add 1 pt. vinegar, y 2 cup salad oil, y 2 cup white mus- tard seed. Mix and bottle. VENISON JELLY. 1 peck wild grapes, 1 qt. vinegar, Y /\ cup whole cloves, 6 pounds sugar, Va, cup stick cinnamon. Put first four ingredients into a preserving kettle, heat slowly to a boiling point and cook until grapes are soft, strain through a double thickness of cheesecloth or jelly J 56 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. bag. Boil liquid twenty minutes, then add sugar, heated, and boil five minutes. CHILI SAUCE. 30 large ripe tomatoes, 5 green peppers, 10 onions, 4 tablespoons of salt. 3 cups of vinegar, 20 tablespoons of sugar. Chop tomatoes, onions and peppers, and boil all three hours. CHOPPED PICKLE. 1 peck green tomatoes, 3 tablespoons salt, 4 large onions chopped 3 green peppers, fi ne > 2 qts. vinegar, x /z pt. white mustard 1 qt. white sugar, seed, 2 tablespoons cloves, 1 tablespoon allspice. Drain the water from the tomatoes while chopping. Put the spice in a bag excepting the mustard seed which is to be mixed with the pickle. Stir all together two hours. To be eaten with cold meat. MIXED PICKLES. 300 very small cucum- 4 green peppers, bers, 3 small heads cabbage 2 large heads cauliflower, (one red), 1 qt. green beans, 1 qt. green tomatoes. Slice peppers fine, also the cabbage ; cut beans one inch long, slice tomatoes. Let this mixture stand in strong brine twenty-four hours. Drain three hours, then sprinkle in *4 lb. black mustard l /$ lb. mixed spices, seed, 1 lb. brown sugar, % lb. white m u s t a r d 1 tablespoon black ground seed, pepper. Let come to a boil in just vinegar enough to cover. Can while hot. This makes twenty-one quarts. PICKLES AND PRESERVES. FRENCH PICKLE. '57 12 medium sized cucum- 3 onions, bers, l / A cup olive oil. ]/ 2 cup salt, y± cup mixed mustard 1 pt. vinegar, seed, 1 tablespoon celery seed. Pare and slice cucumbers and onions. Scatter salt over them and let stand over night In the morning turn off the water, add olive oil, vinegar, mustard and celery seed. Mix thoroughly and put into jars and keep in the dark. DANDELION WINE. Pour 4 qts. of boiling water over 5 qts. of dandelion flowers. Let them stand three days, then strain and add 3 lbs. of sugar, 2 oranges sliced, 1 lemon sliced, l / 2 lb. of raisins cut in halves and 1 cake of compressed yeast. Let this stand three weeks in covered crock stirring occasional- ly, then strain and bottle. DUTCH CHOW CHOW. 2 qts. green tomatoes, 1 oz. tumeric. 1 head of cauliflower, 1 qt. small white onions, 6 peppers, 1 doz. cucumbers, 1 cup sugar, 2 qts. vinegar, 3 tablespoons mustard 4 tablespoons mustard, seed, 2 tablespoons flour. Cut tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers and onions (if the onions are large ones) in small pieces and sprinkle wth salt, and let stand over night. Scald cauliflower about five minutes; pick in pieces, put all together and let stand till morning, then scald in their own brine. Scald vinegar with a bag of spice. Mix mustard, tumeric and flour with cold vinegar, stir it into the hot vinegar and pour over the pickles. Put away in a covered crock. 158 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. CFOW CHOW. 1 pk. green tomatoes, 6 onions, ]/ 2 pk. ripe tomatoes, 3 small heads cabbage, 1 doz. green peppers, 3 red peppers (seeds re- (seeds removed), moved), Chop all together, sprinkle with salt and put in a coarse bag. Drain over night. In the morning put in a porcelain lined kettle with 2 lbs. brown sugar, l / 2 cup grated horse- radish, 1 tablespoon each of ground black pepper, mustard, whole white mustard seed, celery salt, and mace. Cover with vinegar and boil until clear. Seal up in jars. TOMATO KETCHUP, NO. 1. 24 ripe tomatoes, peeled 4 medium sized onions, 4 green peppers, 2 tablespoons salt, 4 tablespoons sugar, 1 tablespoon ginger, 1 tablespoon cinnamon, 1 tablespoon mustard, 2 qts. vinegar. Chop the peppers and onions, boil all together about three hours, stirring frequently. Bottle while hot. COLD CATSUP. t pk. ripe tomatoes, 6 cups sugar, 5 green peppers, ]/ 2 cup whole mustard 5 onions, seed, 1 qt. vinegar (scant), y 2 cup salt. Peel tomatoes and chop and drain well. Chop peppers after seeds are removed, chop onions and mix all together. Ready for use any time. TOMATO KETCHUP, NO. 2. Stew and sift tomatoes. To one gallon of juice add one pint of vinegar and 4 level tablespoons of 4 level tablespoons of salt, black pepper, t level tablespoon of all- 2 level tablespoons of spice, cayenne, PICKLES AND PRESERVES. 1 59 3 level tablespoons of 2 level tablespoons of mustard, cloves. Make a paste of spices arc! vinegar, add this to the hot tomato juice. Boil down, strain and bottle. SPICED TOMATO SAUCE. 1 qt. tomatoes, y 2 scant cup vinegar, 2 heaping teaspoon cin- }4 cup sugar, namon, 1 teaspoon cloves, 1 teaspoon peppei. Pinch of cayenn? pepper. Boil down to a pint. CRANBERRY SAUCE. Put cranberries in colande r and pour boiling water over them until thoroughly scalded. Then cook in water using 1 pt. of water for every quart of cranberries. Boil until ten- der, add 2 cups of sugar for each quart of cranberries, boil five minutes and put away in glass or earthen jar to cool. GINGER PEAR. 4 lbs. pear (chopped fine) 3^2 lbs. sugar, }4 lb. ginger root, 2 lemons. Chop ginger fine. Boil lemons until tender and chop them fine. Boil the pears and sugar one hour, add the lemon and boil one hour longer. Put in jars hot. PEPPER RELISH. 1 qt. vinegar. 3 tablespoons salt, 12 red peppen»- 12 green peppers, 15 onions, 2 cups sugar. Remove all seeds from peppers and put onions and peppers through meat chopper; cover with boiling water, drain, cover with cold water, bring to the boil and drain again. Put vinegar, sugar and salt in granite kettle and when scalding hot pour over peppers and onions. Cook a minute and it is ready to seal up. l6o SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. GRAPE CATSUP. 5 lbs. grapes, I pt. vinegar, 3 lbs. sugar. i tablespoon ground all- i teaspoon ground cloves.. spice, i teaspoon ground cinna- i teaspoon pepper, nioii, y 2 teaspoon salt. Crush the grapes, cook them and rub them through the strainer. Then add the other ingredients and boil till thick. TOMATO KETCHUP, NO. 3. 4 green peppers, 24 ripe tomatoes, 4 medium sized onions. Peel the tomatoes, chop the onions and peppers. Add 2 tablespoons salt, 1 tablespoon cinnamon, 1 tablespoon ginger, 2 qts. vinegar. 1 tablespoon mustard, 4 tablespoons brow 11 sugar, Boil together about three hours stirring frequently. Bottle while hot. STRAWBERRIES UNCOOKED. Use perfect berries, no matter how small. Mash thoroughly with a silver fo r k, taking a few at a time. Put together in a bowl and ^dd the same measure of fine granu- lated sugar. Let stand a few hours, stirring occasionally. Fill glass jars to the brim, put on covers and keep in a dark, cool place. Will keep a year or more and have the fresh fruit flavor when opened. Raspberries can be done the same way. CANNED RHUBARB. Cut the rhubarb without peeling into small pieces. Fill glass jars full. Put in big pan of cold water, fill and hold under water until it is through bubbling, then seal. PICKLES AND PRESERVES. jgj ORANGE MARMALADE. 5 seedless oranges, j_ i emon Slice the fruit very thin and let stand over night in water allowing- 3 pts . D f water to r lb. of fruit. In the morning boil for three-quarters of an hour, and let stand over night again. The next morning boil again three-quarters of an hour (or longer) with sugar, allowing iy 2 lbs. of sugar to each pound of fruit. Pour into jelly glasses. APPLE GINGER. 4 lbs. apples, 4 lbs> of sugai% i oz. green ginger. Make a syrup of the sugar by adding i pt. of water. Chop apples and ginger into small bits. If you cannot get green ginger use white ginger root. RHUBARB JAM. 7 lbs. rhubarb, ? i bs . sugar, Juice of 3 whole orange?— i finely chopped. Cut up rhubarb, add sugar and let stand over night. Add oranges just before cooking and boil one-half hour, or longer if syrup is not thick enough. AMBER MARMALADE. Shave very thin i orange, i grapefruit, i lemon, rejecting only seeds and cores. Measure-add three times the quant tity of water. Stand in earthen bowl over night Next morning boil for ten minutes only, let stand again over night, then add pint for pim of sugar and boil steadily for nearly two hours until it jellies. This makes from n to h glasses acording to size of fruit used. Very nice and very little trouble to make. Pineapple and rhubarb cooked together make a pleasino- combination using about one-third pineapple to two-thirds rhubarb. Do not pare *he rhubarb. Fine for pies. 1 62 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. OIL PICKLES. 50 medium sized cucumbers pared and sliced, 2 cups vinegar, y 2 cup salt, 1 cup olive oil, 2 tablespoons mustard 1 tablespoon celery seed, seed. Mix thoroughly and can. PEAR CONSERVE. 3 lbs. of pears, weighed after they are pared and cored. 1 lb. of figs, 3 lbs. of sugar. Put pears and figs through meat chopper and boil about two hours. English walnut? chopped fine may be added a short time before removing from the fire. PICKLED PEACHES OR PEARS. 7 lbs. of peaches, 3J4 lbs. sugar. 1 pt. vinegar, y 2 oz. cinnamon, y 2 oz. cloves. y 2 oz. mace. Bring vinegar, sugar and spice to the boil, if vinegar is too strong put in water, then put in the peaches being care- ful not to cook them too much. SWEET PICKLED BEETS. Cut oft" the tops about an inch above the beet, being care- ful not to break the skin ; wash thoroughly and boil until tender. Drain, cover with cold water and rub off the skin, cut in slices and put in fruit jars. Fill the jars with a syrup made of one cup vinegar, one-half cup water, two cups sugar, stick cinnamon and a handful of whole cloves. One must be governed somewhat by the taste of this syrup, for if the syrup tastes too strongly of vinegar the beets will not be good. Seal the same as any canned fruit. CANDY. 163 CANDY. TURKISH DELIGHT. Soak two envelopes Whitman's Minute Gelatine in one- half cup of water till thoroughly dissolved. Bring to the boiling point one pound granulated sugar and one-half cup cold water, then add the soaked gelatine and boil steadily for twenty-five minutes. Watch very carefully, as it will readily "catch" and burn. Jt is well to stir most of the time while boiling. When it has boiled twenty-five minutes, take from the fire and add juice and grated rind of one and one-half oranges and one lemon. Add one large cup Eng- lish walnut meats, one-third pound candied cherries cut in small pieces. Wet a large platter in cold water ; turn the mixture in. When jellied, cut in squares and roll in pow- dered sugar. It requires several hours to jelly well. Do not cool in refrigerator. KARO CANDY. Boil together one-half cup rich milk (or cream), one cup Karo Corn Syrup, one and one-half cups dark brown sugar. When almost done (which may be discovered by testing in cold water) add small lump butter and one-half cup chopped walnuts. When done, beat until creamy as it cools. CREAM CANDY. i lb. crushed sugar, nilla, 2 tablespoons vinegar, ]/ 2 cup water, i teaspoon lemon or va- i teaspoon cream tartar. Boil in a porcelain kettle, without stirring, until iv is of the consistency of molasses candy. Pour out on buttered plates, and when cool enough, pull. 164 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. FUDGE CAKE CANDY. 1 cup sugar, y 2 cup butter, 1 cup nut meats, y 2 cup flour, 2 eggs, 2 squares chocolate. Bake one-half hour. Cut while hot. MAPLE CREAMS. Put into a pan 1 lb. maple sugar, set in pan of boiling water till melted. Add ]/ 2 cup cream and boil ten minutes. Pour on a well buttered dish, spread with walnut meats. When cool, cut in squares. BUTTER SCOTCH. 1 cup sugar, Butter, size of an egg, 1 cup molasses, 1 teaspoon flavoring. Boil until brittle when dropped in cold water. Add the flavoring just before removing from the stove. Pour out very thin in buttered pans. When cold, it is easily broken. PEPPERMINT DROPS. 1 lb. sugar, 6 tablespoons water, 7 drops oil of peppermint, 34 teaspoon cream tartar. Boil sugar and water until it hairs. Remove from the stove and add the flavoring mixed in a little sugar and % teaspoon cream of tartar. Stir with fork until thick enough to drop on waxed paper. MARSHMALLOW CANDY. *4 lb. marshmallows, 1 cup English walnuts or 1 tablespoon butter, Pecan nuts, chopped, 3 cups Coffee A. sugar, t cup thin cream. Boil sugar, cream, marshmallows and butter together 20 minutes, or until it forms in a ball when tried in cold water. Take from the fire and beat with egg beater until it begins to thicken, then add nuts and pour into pan. The nuts may be omitted. CANDY. 165 COCOANUT BARS. 3 lbs. granulated sugar, water, Yz cup cream, or l /\ cup 1 cocoanut grated. Take sugar, milk of the cocoanut, cream or water, stir to- gether and cook to a thick syrup. Remove from fire and add 1 oz. of butter. Stir into the syrup the grated cocoanut, and beat until white and thick. Cut into bars. FIG CANDY. 1 cup sugar, 1-3 cup water. l / 2 lb. figs (chopped fine), l /\ teaspoon cream tartai. Boil sugar and water together without stirring them until the mixture is a pale amber color. Stir in the cream of tartar, add the figs and turn into a buttered dish. Cut into squares when almost cold. STUFFED DATES. Take out stone and substitute an almond. A few minced dates added to fudge as it comes from the stove will give a novel and dainty confection. BUTTERCUPS. 2 cups sugar. y 2 cup butter. t/i cup sweet milk, Cook over fire until it will form a soft ball between the fingers when dropped in cold water. Add a pinch of soda when cooked and pour into buttered pan. When cool, pull until white and cut in small pieces. LICORICE DROPS. At a drug store, purchase one stick of pure licorice and break it into small pieces. Pour over it one pint of boiling water, and keep it warm until dissolved. Add to it two pounds of granulated sugar, and boil until it will get very hard in water. Pour into shallow buttered tins, and mark off into squares. l66 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. These candies, being' pure, and containing no harmful drugs, may be safely given to children. COCOANUT CANDY. One cup white sugar, one cup grated cocoanut ; moisten the sugar with the cocoanut milk. Put the mixture on the lire to boil, stirring constantly. When the candy begins to return to sugar, put in the grated cocoanut and stir quickly for one minute. Spread upon buttered dishes and when cooled a little mark off into squares. FONDANT FOR CHOCOLATE OR WALNUT CREAMS. 5 cups sugar, ij4 cups water. Boil without stirring until it hairs when dropped from a fork. Remove from stove and set in a cold and dry place. Let stand until cool enough to bear the hand in it. Remove crust from the top and stir until thick enough to mold. SALTED ALMONDS. i lb. of almonds, i cup of salt, i lb. of lard, Blanch i lb. of almonds, boil them ten minutes in i qt. of water and i cup of salt. Remove to a colander and drain. Heat i lb. of lard very hot, fry the almonds like doughnuts, being careful to take them out before they are too brown. Drain on brown paper. No salt adheres to the almonds. To blanch almonds, cover with boiling water, let them stand five minutes. Keep them wet while removing the skins or they will stick again. CHOCOLATE PEPPERMINTS. White of i egg, Confectioners' sugar, peppermint or wintergreen. y 2 cake Baker's choco- late. Beat the white of egg very stiff and stir in sugar till the mixture is verv thick, flavor with a few drops of peppermint CANDY. 167 or wintergreen, mould with the fingers into small, flat cakes and lay on sheets of oiled paper. Melt the chocolate and take up the cream pats on the flat part of a fork and pour the chocolate over them with a spoon. Put them back on the oiled papei to harden. WALNUT CARAMELS. 4 cups brown sugar, 1 cup milk, 1 cup walnut meats, t teaspoon vanilla. Cook twenty minutes and take from the fire and beat un- til sugary. Add nuts last. SULTANA CARAMELS. 2 cups sugar, Yz cup milk. J 4 cup molasses, 34 CU P butter, 2 squares chocolate cut 1 teaspoon vanilla, fine, Yi cup sultana raisins, y 2 cup English walnut meats, or hickory nuts cut in pieces. Put butter into saucepan. When melted add sugar, milk, molasses. Heat to boiling point and boil seven minutes. Add chocolate and stir till chocolate is melted, then boil seven minutes longer. Remove from fire, beat till creamy, add nuts, raisins and vanilla. CHOCOLATE CARAMELS. y 2 lb. of Baker's choco- 2 cups of sugar, late, 1 cup sweet milk, 1 cup molasses, 1 teaspoon vanilla. y 2 cup butter, Boil chocolate, sugar, molasses, milk and butter fifteen or twenty minutes and add vanilla just before taking from the fire. Pour into shallow buttered pans, and when nearly cold, cut in squares. These caramels should be neither sticky nor brittle, but have about the consistency of cheese. l68 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. MAGIC SILVER CLEANER. i qt. gasoline, ]/ 2 lb. whiting, l /s oz. olic acid. Shake well together. A woolen cloth dipped in this mix- ture and dried is excellent to clean silver. MILDEW. The English method of removing mildew is to moisten the spots with warm water, rub on a little soap, then sprin- kle well with powdered chalk and salt and dry in the sun. If the hands are rubbed on a stalk of celery after peeling onions, the smell will be entirely removed. TO STOP MOUSE HOLES. Fill the mouse hole with laundry soap and stick a few sharp-pointed nails through the soap. TO THAW OUT A FROZEN WATER PIPE. Pour into the pipe a cupful or more of common salt. Usually the drain will soon be all right after this has been done. Chloride of lime should be scattered, at least once a week, under sinks and in all places where sewer gas is liable to lurk. TO REMOVE INK SPOTS FROM A THIN WHITE DRESS. Soak the dress in a kerosene bath, rubbing all the ink spots with common yellow soap. At the end of half an houi wash it with soap and water and no trace of ink will remain. Turpentine and black varnish put into any good stove polish is the blacking used by hardware dealers for polish- HOUSEHOLD HINTS. 169 ing heating stoves. If properly put on, it will last through- out a season. If oatmeal is soaked over night in water it requires only about one-half the time to cook. If eggs are to be boiled hard, have the water boiling when the eggs are put in it. This will prevent the yolks turning dark. Preparatory to frying liver or veal, cover it for a minute or two with boiling water. Pat dry with a clean towel, roll in flour and fry (in a covered pan) until brown. CLEANING FLUID. Y% oz. of ammonia, )/% oz. of bay rum, % oz. of ether, }i oz. oil of wintergren, V% oz. of chloroform, i qt. of deoderized ben 20 grs. powdered borax, zine. 1 oz. of alcohol, Do not shake before using, but pour out a small quantity into a cup. The easiest way to clean a coffee pot is to boil it in water containing soda. Put lye into the water that you soak your granite kettle with, in which somehing ha c beer, burned black, and you will have no trouble washing it the next morning. TO DESTROY BED BUGS. Take good alcohol and put as much corrosive sublimate in it as it will dissolve; then take a small paint brush and wash all places where they are about once or twice a week and they will soon disappear. TO CLEAN HAIR BRUSHES. Clean hair brushes and combs by washing them in a quart of water in which has been stirred three or four tea- spoons of ammonia. I-O SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. WHEN A KETTLE THREATENS TO BOIL OVER. Grease the rim lightly all around with a bit of butter. The contents will touch this danger line, but will not pass it. Stewpans, in which vegetables are boiling, may be treated in the same way. TO TURN THE HEMS OF NEW TABLE NAPKINS. It is a good plan to put the napkins through the narrow hemmer of an unthreaded sewing machine. This gives a more narrow and more even hem than can be turned by hand, and the needle, going through the linen, gauges fine stitches for the- hand sewer. Tubs will not warp or crack open if the precaution is taken to put a pail of water into each, directly after use. TO KEEP EGGS. Slack i pt. of lime and y 2 pt. salt in 3 gallons of cold water. Stir once in a while for three days, then stir thoroughly and pour over eggs that have been packed in jars. Have the eggs covered with brine. FRESHENING UP POTATOES. If the potatoes are old and the cook has reason to fear that they will turn black in cooking, she should add a little milk to the water in which they are to be boiled. This is certain to prevent such unsightly discoloration. BAKING POWDER. y 2 lb. tartaric acid (com- t lb. corn starch, mercial), Ya lb. baking soda. Sift together three times. Use as you would Royal Bak- ing Powder. WASHING FLUID. 1 lb. Babbitt's lye, y 2 oz. salts of tartar, ]/ 2 oz. ammonia. Dissolve in 1 gal. of warm water. Use one cupful for large washing. When whipped cream is to be served, always add the HOUSEHOLD HINTS. 171 white of one egg for each pint of cream used. Beat the egg white a little before adding it to the sweetened and flavored cream. Note how fine and firm the cream will be. To test jars: — Wash and rinse the jar, fill about half full with hot water, place a new rubber and cover on it, fasten securely and invert the jar on a newspaper spread on the table, leave for a few minutes, and if any sign of moisture oozes from the jar, change the top or rubber or both and try again. If the paper is perfectly dry the jar is tight, and you can be sure your labor will not be for naught. If cabbage is soaked an hour in salted cold water, then boiled uncovered, there will be scarcely any odor. Six dozen lemons will make ten quarts of lemonade and will serve seventy persons. Peel the lemons for use. Six quarts of ice cream will serve thirty-six persons. To mix a smooth batter easily use at first very little milk or water and make a thick, smooth paste, then add the re- maining liquid. TO DESTROY CARPET BUGS. Take V 2 lb. of tobacco (long cut) and l /i lb. camphor gum, put together in an old pan and melt to a powder. Sprinkle wherever troubled with carpet bugs and it is a sure remedy. HOW TO GIVE CHILDREN CASTOR OIL. Take one cup of milk, one of molasses, half a cup of sugar, y 2 cup of castor oil, a teaspoonful of carbonate of soda, 2 teaspoons of ginger, a little salt, and enough flour to make a stiff paste. Roll out like cookies, cut into fancy shapes and bake in a quick oven. One or two of these cook- ies are as good as a dose of oil. Rice has a better flavor if washed in hot water instead of cold, before cooking. If rice is not disturbed diving the process of boiling, the berries will be whole, dry and easily digested. A few drops 172 SUNSHINE COOK BOOK. of lemon juice added to the water will make it whiter and finer flavored. Canned vegetables, like canned fruit, are improved in flavor, standing open an hour or two to restore the oxygen that was eliminated in cooking. The smaller a roast of meat, the hotter should be the oven at first, that the least possible amount of its delicate juices may escape. The small paper bags that fine groceries come in are a better protection to the hand than gloves for blacking stoves. POPCORN. Put a quarter cup of lard into a large kettle over the fire. When it melts put in a scan* cup of corn and a teaspoon of salt and stir until it begins to pop, then put on a cover, holding it to one side a little and with a long handled spoon stir rapidly until enough corn has popped so it will not snap out of the kettle. Then remove the cover and stir as long as it will pop, then take from the fire and stir a minute longer to make it tender. TO CHOP SUET. Break the suet in small pieces. Sprinkle with flour and chop in a cool place. TO SEED RAISINS. Pour boiling water over them, cover and let stand about ten minutes, then pinch them and the seeds will come out clean. TO REMOVE THE SKINS FROM TOMATOES. Lay them in a wire basket and let them stand in boiling- water two or three minutes. TO REMOVE IRON RUST OR FRUIT STAINS FROM LINEN. Dip the portion in a strong solution of oxalic acid made by dissolving the oxalic acid in hot water. When the stain disappears wash the cloth thoroughly in warm water. A GOOD HOUSEKEEPER. I 73 A GOOD HOUSEKEEPER. How can T tell her? By her cellar; Cleanly shelves and whitened wall. I can guess her By her dresser; By the backstaircase and hall. And with pleasure Take her measure By the way she keeps her brooms. Or the peeping At the keeping Of her back and unseen rooms, By her kitchen's air of neatness, And its general completeness, Where in cleanliness and sweetness The rose of order blooms. Menus for Afternoons and Evenings Salmon Croquettes, Tomato Jelly Bread and Butter Sandwiches Fruit Salad Marguerites Cake Coffee Stuffed Tomatoes Brown Bread Sandwiches Frozen Pudding Cake Coffee Nuts Bon-Bons Fruit Salad Cheese Crackers Sultana Roll with Claret Sauce Sponge Cake Punch Cranberry Sandwiches Coffee Salted Peanuts Candy Cheese and Olive Sandwiches Lemon Jelly Whipped Cream Wafers Coffee Grapefruit Chicken Salad Olives Hot Buttered Rolls Coffee Creamed Chicken in Patty Cases Celery Olives Small Buttered Biscuit Ice Cream Cake Coffee Chicken Salad Saltines Olives Ice Cream Cake Chocolate Jellied Chicken Cream Cheese Sandwiches Olives Cake Coffee Apples Sweet Cider Pop Corn Cookies Pumpkin Pie Cottage Cheese Coffee Doughnuts Cider Brown Bread Sandwiches Bouillon with Whipped Cream Brown Bread Sandwiches Biscuit Sunshine Cake Coffee Breakfast Grapefruit Ham Omelet Muffins Coffee Breakfast Scrambled Eggs Fried Potatoes Corn Cake Coffee Breakfast Fruit Creamed Codfish on Toast Doughnuts Coffee Breakfast Strawberries Rice Croquettes with Maple Syrup Coffee Breakfast Oranges Cereal with Cream Graham Muffins Coffee Breakfast Baked Sausage Hashed Brown Potatoes Muffins Coffee Breakfast Stewed Prunes Fried Salt Pork with Milk Gravy- Hashed Potatoes Rolls Coffee Breakfast Oranges Baked Omelet Muffins Stewed Prunes Coffee Breakfast Shredded Wheat with Straw- berries and Cream French Fried Potatoes Rolls Coffee Breakfast Stewed Rhubarb Fried Scrapple Doughnuts Coffee Luncheon Cream of Celery Soup Broiled Chops Potato Croquettes Fruit Salad Cheese Straws Coffee Mousse Luncheon Fish Balls Tomato Sauce Green Salad Thin Slices of Bread and Butter Mountain Dew Pudding Tea Rolls Luncheon Cold Chicken Celery Salad Strawberries Coffee Luncheon Corned Beef Hash Sweet Pickled Beets Baking Powder Biscuit Honey Tea Luncheon Apple Fritters with Sauce Filled Raisin Cookies Cheese Tea Luncheon Deviled Clams Lettuce Salad Rolls Olives Luncheon Potato Dumplings Bread and Butter Apple Pie Cheese Tea Luncheon Lettuce Salad, garnished with Hard Boiled Eggs Strawberry Shortcake Tea Luncheon Baked Macaroni and Cheese Nut Bread Peaches and Cream Cake Tea Rolls Luncheon Jellied Vegetables Tongue Prune Whip Chocolate Dinner Tomato Soup Braised Beef with Brown Gravy Mashed Potatoes Buttered Beets Cabbage Salad Chocolate Charlotte Coffee Dinner Watermermelon Piled on Plate with Wreath of Cress Baked Fillets of Fish Creamed New Potatoes Green Corn Lettuce Salad Apple Pie Cheese Coffee Dinner Roast Lamb with Mint Sauce Stuffed Potatoes Peas in Turnip Cups Apple Salad Wafers Coffee Dinner Clear Soup Roast Beef Yorkshire Pudding Browned Potatoes Buttered Onions Radishes Spanish Cream Coffee Dinner Chicken with Noodles Mashed Potatoes Parsnips Fried in Butter Baked Onions Lemon Pie Coffee Dinner Baked Bean Soup Baked Pork Chops, Apple Sauce Baked Potatoes Mashed Turnips Rolls Steamed Puffs Coffee Dinner Oyster Cocktails, Horseradish Sauce Celery Clear Soup Salted Almonds Pickles Creamed Salmon Cheese Straws Seasoned Roast Beef, Mushroom Sauce French Rolls Potato Croquettes Asparagus Shrimp Salad Wafers Vanilla Ice Cream Chocolate Sauce Table of Weights and Measures i Teaspoonful i Teaspoonful i Tablespoonful % Cup or Wineglassful V 2 Pint 60 Drops, .... 4 Saltspoonfuls, 3 Teaspoonfuls, 4 Tablespoonfuls Liquid, . 1 Cup of Liquid, 4 Rounded Tablespoons of Butter, 1 Cup of Butter, 4 Cups of Flour, 3 Cups of Cornmeal, 2 Cups of Granulated Sugar, . 9 Large Eggs, .... 1 Cup of Chopped Meat, 1 Teaspoon of Soda to One Cup of Molasses. 1 Teaspoon of Soda to One Pint of Sour Milk. 1 Teaspoon Baking Powder to One Cup of Flour 1 Ounce A Pound 1 Pound 1 Pound 1 Pound 1 Pound A Pound INDEX TO RECEIPTS. SOUP. Page Asparagus, Cream of 7 Bean, Baked 8 Bean, Lima, Cream of 8 Celery 7 Cheese, Cream of 6 Chicken 9 Clam Bisque 11 Clam Bouillon 10 Clam Chowder 10 Corn , Cream of 5 Corn Chowder 12 Corn Puree 5 Croutons 5 Page Egg 9 Milk 9 Onion, Cream of 7 Pea, Green 6 Pea, Split 6 Potato Puree 9 Rice and Onion 8 Salmon, Cream of 10 Shrimp Bisque 11 Spinach , Cream of 8 Stock Soup 5 Tomato 11 Vegetable 10 FISH, OYSTERS AND CLAMS. Bluefish, Baked 18 Clam Cakes 21 Clams, Deviled 20 Clam Fritters 21 Clam Pie 2 1 Codfish Balls 14 Codfish Cakes 14 Codfish, Creamed 14 Codfish Puff 15 Fillets of Sole 19 Fish, Baked, Cod or Haddock... 13 Fish, Boiled 17 Finnan Haddie 19 Frogs, Fried 21 Halibut, Baked 13 Halibut, Fillets 14 Haddie, Creamed 19 Hollandaise Sauce 13 Lobster, Buttered 19 Lobster, Newburg 20 Oysters, Broiled 15 Oyster Cocktail 16 Oysters, Creamed 17 Oysters, Fried 15 Oyster Ramekins 16 Oyster Royalle 16 Oyster Scalloped 16 Pigs in Blankets 15 Salmon, Baked 18 Salmon, Creamed, Baked 17 Salmon Cutlets 17 Salmon, Escalloped 18 Salmon Loaf 18 Scallopes a la Newburg 20 Seal lopes a la Tartar 19 Tartar Sauce 19 MEAT AND POULTRY. Bacon, Breakfast 30 Beef Loaf 26 Beef Pot Pie with Dumplings. . .23 Beef Hash 23 Beef, Braised 22 Beef Roast, Seasoned 23 Beefsteak, How to Broil 22 Beef, Frizzled 24 Page Beef, Corned, Creamed 23 Cecils 25 Calf's Heart, en Casserole 23 Chicken, Browned in Gravy 31 Chicken Canape 32 Chicken Croquettes 33 Chicken , Creamed 32 Chicken, en Casserole 31 Chicken, Fried 32 Chicken, Imperial 31 Chicken, Jellied 33 Chicken with Noodles 31 Chicken Stew, Plain 30 Crust for Chicken or Meat Pie- .33 Casserole, Dutch 25 Ham with Creamed Gravy 29 Ham, Delicious, Boiled 29 Lamb Roast 28 Lamb and Mutton Chops 28 Liver, Fried as Cutlets 28 Page Liver, Larded 25 Mutton Stew 28 Pork Chops 28 Pork, Fried with Gravy, Salt. ...29 Pot Roast 22 Sausage, Baked 30 Sausage and Eggs 30 Sausage to Fry 30 Sweetbreads 26 Steak, Hamburg, How to Cook. .24 Steak, Hamburg, Baked 24 Stuffing for Roast Turkey 34 Veal Cutlets 27 Veal Cutlets, Breaded, with Tomato Sauce 27 Veal Loaf 26 Veal Lunch 27 Veal, Pressed 26 Veal Brown Stew of 26 Yorkshire Pudding 25 FISH AND MEAT SAUCES. Sauce, Brown 35 Sauce, Egg, Cold 36 Sauce, Egg, for Fish 36 Sauce, Fish 36 Sauce, Horseradish 35 Sauce, Mint 35 Sauce, Onion 35 Sauce, Tartare 36 Sauce, Tomato, No. 1 35 Sauce, Tomato, No. 2 37 Sauce, White 36 LEFT-OVERS. Balls, Meat 42 Beef, Smothered 40 Breakfast Dish 39 Breakfast Dish, Delicious 41 Beef, Escalloped 41 Croquettes. Emergency 39 Chicken a la Creole 42 Egg Gems 44 Ham, Scalloped Macaroni 41 Ham, Minced 38 Hash, Meat 42 Oyster Mock 43 Pie Meat 38 Pie Meat with Crust 39 Pie Beef 43 Pie Beef Steak 42 Pie, Shepherd's 39 Rissoles 40 Shredded Wheat Oysters 40 Souffle Meat 39 Toast 38 Toast Marmalade (Supper) 43 Toast , Pru ne 43 Toast, Mince Meat on 38 Toast, Savory, for Luncheon or Supper 43 Woodcock, Scotch 40 VEGETABLES. Page Beans and Pork 52 Beans with Brown Sauce 52 Beans, Baked, with Tomato 53 Beets, Baked 55 Cabbage, Baked 55 Cabbage, Fried 54 Celery, Creamed 52 Corn, Sweet, to Boil 48 Corn, Baked 49 Corn, Escalloped 49 Corn Fritters, No. 1 49 Corn Fritters, No. 2 49 Corn Fritters, No. 3 49 Cauliflower 51 Cauliflower, Fried 51 Cucumbers to Stew 56 Egg Plant, Fried 56 Lentils 51 Macaroni, Stewed 50 Melon Croquettes 50 Onions, Baked 53 Onions, Buttered 53 Onions, Spanish Fried 53 Parsnip Balls 54 Parsnips or Carrots Boiled 54 Parsnips, Fried in Butter 54 Peas in Turnip Cups 57 Peppers, Stuffed 56 Potatoes, Creamed 48 Potato, Crown 47 Potatoes, Cheese 47 Potato Cakes 46 Potato Croquettes 45 Potatoes, Fried French 45 Potatoes, Whole Fried 48 Potatoes, L y onnaise 47 Potato Dumplings 46 Potato Rolls 46 Potato, Scalloped, No. 1 45 Potato, Scalloped, No. 2 46 Potato, Saratoga 45 Potatoes, Hashed, Baked 46 Potatoes, Stuffed 47 Potatoes, Sweet, Baked in Syrup. 48 Potatoes, Sweet, Scalloped 48 Rice, Boiled 54 Rice, as Cooked in the South ... 53 Rice Croquettes 54 Rice Croquettes with Peas 53 Sprouts, Brussels 51 Spinach 57 Squash, Winter, Baked 55 Squash, Stuffed 55 Tomatoes, Baked 50 Tomatoes, Escalloped 49 Tomatoes, Scalloped 50 Tomato, Rice 50 Vegetables, Jellied 57 MUSHROOMS. Mushrooms, Creamed 5S Mushrooms, with Chicken and Eggs 58 Mushrooms, to Pickle 58 Mushrooms, Stew • -58 Mushrooms on Toast 58 Mushrooms on Toast 59 BREAD, BISCUITS, MUFFINS, Etc. Delicious Nut Bread 60 Bread, Graham, Nut 64 Bread, Raisin 61 Bread, Oatmeal 67 Bread, Graham, No. 1 67 Bread, Graham, No. 2 68 Bread, Graham, without Yeast.-68 Biscuit, Shredded Wheat with Strawberries 65 Biscuit, Baking Powder 62 Biscuit, Milk, Sour 63 Biscuit, Shredded Wheat for Breakfast 66 Bread, White or Parker House Rolls (made in one-half day). 60 Bread, Corn, No. 1 65 Page Bread, Corn, No. 2 66 Bread, Brown, Shredded Wheat -62 Bread, Brown, Steamed, with Squash 63 Buckwheat Cakes, Raised 69 Bread, White 60 Brown Bread (two receipts). ...64 Cake, Corn 65 Cake, Corn, Egg 66 Cake, Johnny 66 Fritters, Apple 69 Fritters, Sauce for 69 Fritters, Bread 69 Gems, Huckleberry 65 Gems, Graham 67 Griddle Cakes (very good) 68 Page Griddle Cakes, Green Corn 68 Griddle Cakes, Sour Milk 68 Muffins, Cream 67 Muffins, Squash 66 Muffins as Brownies 65 Rusks, No. 1 61 Rusks, No. 2 62 Rolls, French 63 Rolls, Vienna 63 Rolls, Quick Yeast 61 Sally Lunn 64 Scrapple Lottie's 70 Toast, Spanish 70 Waffles 62 Waffles, Quick 64 EGGS AND OMELETS. Bird's Nest 75 Eggs, Curried 72 Eggs, Emergency 76 Eggs, Luncheon 73 Eggs, Parsley 74 Eggs for a Picnic 74 Eggs Poached in Milk with Grated Cheese 75 Eggs, Sauce for 72 Eggs, Scrambled 76 Eggs, Shirred 71 Eggs, Spanish 73 Eggs, Supper for 73 Egg Toast 74 Eggs, Tabasco 72 Ham and Eggs 73 Omelet, Baked 7* Omelet, Baked 74 Omelet, Corn 71 Omelet, Cheese 73 Omelet, Egg 76 Omelet, Fish 75 Omelet, Ham 73 Omelet without Milk 71 Omelet, Peach 75 Omelet, Plain 74 CHEESE. Baked Eggs and Cheese 79 Baked Rice and Cheese 81 Cheese Balls 79 Cheese, Cottage 79 Cheese Croquettes 78 Cheese, Escalloped, No. 1 78 Cheese, Escalloped, No. 2 78 Cheese Filling 81 Cheese Fondu 80 Cheese Souffle 81 Cheese Straws 80 Cheese Toast 78 Dream Cakes 79 Lunch Pastry 81 Macaroni Baked 80 Rarebit, Bean 78 Rarebit, Venetian v . . . • 77 Rarebit, Welsh, No. 1 77 Rarebit, Welsh, No. 2 77 SANDWICHES. Page Sandwiches a la Motor 84 Sandwiches, Celery 84 Sandwiches, Cheese 83 Sandwiches, Cheese and Celery 82 Sandwiches, Cheese and Egg... 83 Sandwiches, Cracker and An- chovy 82 Sandwiches, Cranberry 83 Sandwiches, Dried Beef 84 Sandwiches, Egg 83 Sandwiches, filling for 85 Sandwiches, Ham 82 Sandwiches, Queen 83 Sandwiches, Marble 82 Sandwiches, Sardine 84 Sandwiches, Toast 82 Sandwiches, Toasted 82 Sandwiches, 1, 2,3, 4, 5, 6, 7. .83, 84 SALADS AND SALAD DRESSINGS. Salad, Apple 90 Salad, Apple, Banana and Eng- lish Walnut 91 Salad, Apple and Celery 93 Salad, Apple and Grape Fruit.. 92 Salad, Apple and Nut 88 Salad, Beet 91 Salad, Cabbage 89 Salad, Cherry 87 Salad, Cheese 91 Salad, Chicken. . 87 Cold Slaw 91 Salad, Cucumber 92 Salad, Cucumber and Corn .... 90 Dressing, Boiled Salad, No. i . . 94 Dressing, Boiled Salad, No. 2.-94 Dressing for Cabbage Salad. ... 90 Dressing, Cooked Salad 95 Dressing Cooked with Oil 94 Dressing for Fruit Salad 92 Dressing, delicate for Fruit Salad 94 Dressing, French 95 Dressing, French Salad 94 Dressing, Mayonnaise 95 Salad, Egg 89 Salad, Egg 89 Salad, Egg and Banana 88 Salad, Fish 88 Salad, Fruit 87 Salad, Fruit 88 Salad, Fruit S8 Salad, Fruit 90 Salad, German Potato 86 Salad, Golf 91 Salad, Malaga Salad (to serve with game) 93 Salad, Mock Chicken 87 Salad, Orange 90 Salad, Pineapple 89 Salad, Potato 86 Salad, Potato, with French Dressing 86 Salad, Royal 89 Salad, Baked Apple 93 Salad, Shrimp 87 Salad, Sweetbread 92 Salad, Tomato Aspic 92 Tomatoes Stuffed 93 PASTRY. Pie, Apple 99 Pie, Apple Puff 97 Apple Turnovers 98 Banberry Tarts 103 Pie, Cherry 101 Pie, Chocolate 104 Pie, Cranberry 96 Pie, Cream, No. 1 101 Pie, Cream, No. 2 101 Pie Crust 96 Pie Crust, plain . 96 Pie, Current, ripe 99 Pie, Gooseberry 99 Pie, Lemon, No. 1 102 Pie, Lemon, No. 2 102 Pie, Lemon, No. 3 102 Pack Pie, Lemon, No. 4 103 Pie. Lemon, (old fashioned). • • 102 Mince Meat 97 Mince Meat (without meat) 97 Pie, Mock Cherry 96 Pie, Mock Mince 97 Pie, Orange 99 Pie, Orange 99 Pie, Pineapple 100 Pie Raisin 98 Page Pie, Rhubarb, No. 1 98 Pie, Rhubarb, No. 2 98 Pie, Rhubarb, No. 3 98 Pie, Sour Milk 100 Pie, Southern 101 Pie, Squash 103 Pie, Squash 103 Pie, Sweet Hearts 104 Pie, Tartlets 103 Pie, Washington 100 HOT DESSERTS. Apple Purl 109 Apple Surprise 109 Boiled Pudding 107 Brow n Betty 107 Charlotte Pudding 108 Chocolate Pudding 1 to Christmas Pudding no Cocoanut Pudding 106 Cocoanut Pudding no Dutch Apple Cake Pudding 108 Float 1 10 Graham Pudding, Steamed. ... 107 Hard Sauce 107 Huckleberry Pudding 109 Indian Pudding, Baked 105 Indian Pudding, Delicious 106 Orange Souffle no Prime Pudding 105 Prune Pudding 106 Prune Pudding 106 Prune Pudding 108 Plum Pudding m Plum Pudding, Duchesse 1 1 1 Plum Pudding, English 112 Pudding Sauce, Duchesse 11 1 Rice Custard 105 Steamed Puffs 105 Suet Pudding 106 Suet Pudding 109 COLD DESSERTS. Angel Pudding 119 Biscuit Glace 113 Bread Pudding 115 Charlotte Russe 115 Chocolate Charlotte 114 Cherry Bavarian Cream 121 Coffee Jelly 119 Fruit Pudding 114 Gelatine, Fruited 115 Gelatine, Pineapple. 1 15 Grape Fruit 118 Lemon Jelly 121 Macaroon Cream 119 Marshmallow Cream 118 Minute Chocolate Walnut Jelly. 117 Mocha Cream. 120 Mountain Dew Pudding 119 Nut Pudding 113 Oatmeal Jelly 116 Orange Charlotte 120 Orange Cream Pudding 115 Pineapple Sponge 116 Pineapple Mousse 116 Pineapple Tapioca 120 Pineapple Julep 120 Sauce, Cranberry 117 Sauce, Creamy 117 Sauce, Pudding 118 Sauce, Pudding (Hard) 118 Sauce, Strawberry, for Cottage Pudding 118 Sauce, Wine 117 Spanish Cream 118 Superb Pudding 113 Talpicon of Fruit 1 14 Tipsy Parson 116 LOAF AND LAYER CAKES. Cake, Angel Cake, Angel Food Cake, Apple Sauce Cake, Caramel (Inexpensive) Cake, Chocolate Cake, Cinnamon Cake, Coffee Cake, Delicate Cake, Fruit, No. i Cake, Fruit, No 2 Cake, Fruit, White Cake, Fruit, Uncooked Cake, Gingerbread Cake, Gingerbread, Olive's-. Cake, Gingerbread, Soft Cake, Gold Cake, Molasses Sponge Cake, Mocha Cake, Orange, No. 1 Cake, Orange, No. 2 Cake, Plain, Cake, Pork Cake, Pound Cake, Quick, No. 1 Page 23 23 28 26 30 28 29 2 4 24 25 24 25 30 3i 31 27 30 35 27 28 26 26 26 Page Cake, Quick, No. 2 124 Cake, Spice, No. 1 129 Cake, Spice, No 2 129 Cake, Spice, Walnut 130 Cake, Sponge 125 Cake, Sponge, Without Water. 125 Cake, Sunshine, No. 1 122 Cake, Sunshine, No. 2 122 Cake, White With Yellow Frosting 123 Cake, A Good One Egg 132 Cake, Chocolate 135 Cake, Chocolate, Black 136 Cake, Chocolate, Dark 134 Cake, Date 132 Cake, Deforest Layer 132 Cake, Delicate Layer 136 Cake, Devil Food 134 Cake, Jersey 131 Cake, Lady Baltimore 133 Cake, Peach 134 Cake, Perfect Layer 133 Cake, Plain Layer 133 CAKE FILLING AND FROSTING. Fill Fill Fill Fill Fill Fill Fill Fill Fill Fill Fill n g. n g. ng- n g. ng' n g> ng, ng, ngi ng, ng, Cake, for 139 Chocolate 138 Chocolate, Nut 139 Cocoanut Cream 137 Cocoanut and Raisin.. 138 Coffee 137 Fruit, No. 1 139 Fruit, No. 2 140 Lemon 137 Nut 138 Whipped Cream 138 Filling and Frosting, Almond • . 138 Filling and Frosting, Cocoanut- 138 Frosting, Boiled, No. 1 139 Frosting, Boiled, No. 2 Frosting, Chocolate, No. 1 Frosting, Chocolate, No. 2 Frosting, Fig Frosting, Maple Sugar Frosting, Mocha- 140 141 ,141 139 *39 141 Frosting, Uncooked 140 SMALL CAKES, COOKIES AND DOUGHNUTS. Brownies 142 Cocoanut Balls 142 Fried Cakes 142 Ginger Snaps 142 Hermits, No. 1 142 Hermits, No. 2 143 Marguerites, No. 1 145 Marguerites, No. 2 145 Marshmallow Marguerites 145 Molasses Cookies 144 Oatmeal Cookies 144 Oatmeal Crisps 144 Peanut Macaroons 143 Raisin Cookies 143 Raisin Cookie Filling 143 Shrewsbury Cakes 144 Sour Milk Cookies 143 Sugar Cookies 144 ICE CREAMS, SHERBETS AND BEVERAGES. Chocolate Sauce, To Serve Hot With Ice Cream. 150 Chococolate Sauce 1 ?o Chocolate Sauce, Rugby 1 Coffee Sauce, Hot 1 Claret Sauce 1 Strawberry Sauce 1 H7 149 152 Frozen Pudding, No. 1 o 50 5i H7 Frozen Pudding, No. 2 Grape Ice Grape Juice Grape Juice Sherbet With Whipped Cream 148 Ice Cream, No. 1 147 Ice Cream, No- 2 148 Ice Cream, Coffee 148 Page Ice Cream Chocolate 149 Ice Cream Peach 149 Ice Cream, (Very Nice) 148 Mousse Cafe, No. 1 146 Mousse Cafe, No. 2 147 Mousse Coffee 146 Mousse Maple 146 Parfait Coffee 149 Parfait Raspberry 149 Page Sultana Roll With Claret Sauce- 150 Cherry Cup 153 Coffee 151 Coffee, After Dinner or Black.. 152 Punch Fruit 1152 Punch Purple 1153 Raspberry Shrub 152 Raspberry Syrup, Acidulated. .153 Tea 151 PICKLES AND PRESERVES. Amber Marine lade 161 Apple Ginger 161 Blackberries, Canned 154 Chili Sauce 156 Chow Chow 1 i^S Chow Chow, Dutch 157 Cold Catsup 158 Grape Catsup 160 Cranberry Sauce 159 Cucumber Salad (Pickle) 155 Dutch Salad (Pickle) 155 Ginger Pear 159 Oil Pickles 162 Orange Marmalade 161 Pepper Relish 159 Peaches, Canned. ... 154 Pear Conserve 162 Pickle, Chopped 156 Pickle, French 157 Pickle, Mixed 156 Pickled Beets (Sweet) 162 Pickled Peaches or Pears 162 Rhubarb, Canned 160 Rhubarb Jam 161 Raspberries 15 c Raspberries, to can 1 54 Strawberries, Uncooked 160 Tomato Butter 151; Tomato Ketchup, No. 1 158 Tomato Ketchup, No. 2 1158 Tomato Ketchup, No. 3 160 Tomato Sauce, Spiced 159 Venison Jelly 1^15 Wine, Dandelion 157 CANDY. Almonds, Salted 166 Fondent for Chocolate or Wal- Buttercups i6<; Butter Scotch 1 64 Cocoanut Bars 165 Cocoanut Candv 166 Chocolate Caramels • • 167 Chocolate Peppermints 166 Cream Candy 163 Dates, Stuffed 165 Fig Candy 165 nut Creams 166 Fudge Cake Candy 164 Karo Candy 163 Licorice Drops 165 Marshmallow Candy 164 Maple Creams 164 Peppermint Drops 164 Sultana Caramels 167 Turkish Delight 163 Walnut Caramels. 167 HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Baking Powder 170 Cleaning Fluid 169 Castor Oil, how to give to chil- dren Freshening up Potatoes. 170 Iron Rust, to Remove 172 Magic Silver Cleaner 168 Mildew 168 Mouse Holes, to stop 168 Popcorn 172 Suet, to chop 172 To Clean Hair Brushes 169 To Destroy Bed Bugs 169 To Destroy Carpet Bugs 171 To Keep Eggs 170 To Remove Ink Spots 168 To Seed Raisins 172 To Remove the Skin from To- matoes 172 To Thaw a Frozen Water Pipe. 168 To Turn the Hem of New Table Napkins 170 Washing Fluid 170 When a Kettle Threatens to Boil Over 1 70 1780 — For 130 Years — 1910 BAKER'S Cocoa and Chocolate have been the leaders. No other Food Products have a like record in Years, Honors and World Wide Use. 52 HIGHEST AWARDS IN EUROPE AND AMERICA The trade-mark, n La Belle Chocolatiere," on every genuine package. A beautifully illustrated book- let of new recipes for Home Made Candies and Dainty Dishes sent free. Registered TJ. S. Pat. Office Drop a postal to WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. DORCHESTER, MASS. Every Good Cook Knows That the first essential of good cooking is the use of good ingredients. EVERY EMBROIDERER Should know that the first essential of successful em- broidery is the use of the BEST EMBROIDERY SILKS obtainable. It is alike a waste of time and money to use inferior silks that are likely to run in washing and render the finished piece worthless after the first washing. INSURE SUCCESS BY USING Brainerd & Armstrong's Embroidery Silks. Dwight's Cow Brand IN RECIPES CALLING FOR SODA OR SALERATUS ALWAYS use'DWIGHTS cow brand GUARANTEED BY CHURCH S OWIGHT C0..UH0ER IHE FOOOA DRUGS ACT. JURE 30.1906 ESTABLISHED LARGE PACKAGE Over 70 Years. TO AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT. INSIST UPON HAVING COW BRAND IN ORIGINAL PACKAGES, AND DON'T BE PUT OFF WITH CHEAP, INFERIOR SUBSTITUTIONS CHURCH &. DWIGHT CO., New York. 9EN0 ADDRESS FOR COW BRAND COOK BOOR-FREE. No Help for a Weary Housekeeper like a WHITE MOP WRINGER. Because it is the neatest, easiest and most perfect machine. It ...WRINGS HOPS... Thereby saving one-half the labor of mopping floors, linoleums, oil-cloths and carpets. Family Sizes $1.50 and $1.75. Write for Booklet. WHITE MOP WRINGER CO., - - Fultonville, N. Y. BUY Fleischmann's Yeast HAS NO EQUAL. JONES DAIRY FARM ...FOR... Sausage, Sliced Bacon, Ham, Lard, Maple Goods and Buckwheat Flour, Any year between October ist and May. JONES DAIRY FARM, Ft. Atkinson, Wis. TRY THE RECIPES IN THIS BOOK FOR MINUTE TAPIOCA. (Requires no soaking.) MINUTE GELATINE (PLAIN) (Dissolves Instantly) MINUTE GELATINE (FLAVORED) (All Flavored for you). They are three products whose high quality has placed them in a class by themselves. Ask your grocer for them. " " Look for the Minute- Man on the package." MINUTE TAPIOCA CO., - - Orange, Mass. Dr. J. M. Underhill, •Proprietor of- NEW LONDON CITY Veterinary Hospital Veterinary Surgeon and Dentist Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College. Also member of the Conn. State Veterinary Medical Association. Office and Hospital, 29 Golden Street. Special Care and Treatment Given to Dogs and Small Animals. RESIDENCE, 307 HUNTINGTON STREET. Telephone Connection. The As=Moon ..LABORATORY.. New London, Conn. No. 26,591. Guaranteed by the AS-MOON Laboratory Under the Pure Food and Drug Act. Hay Fever and Asthma. Suffocating agony, difficulty in breathing, choking sensation. Asthma most aggravating and long standing, cured with AS-MOON, THE GREAT REMEDY. Get It. Try It. Be sure it is the AS=MOON HAY FEVER and ASTHMA REflEDY. -MOON TWO Prescriptions of a Famous Specialist. Price $1.50 For sale by druggists everywhere. HAY 20 1910 TF you would have soups and gravies perfect in every respect — in flavor, consistency and smooth- ness — thicken them with DURYEAS' Corn Starch This pure, dainty, wholesome product imparts to nearly all dishes a new and pleasing qual- ity of goodness. How it helps you to better foods and daintier desserts is explained in our "Book of Recipes and Cooking Suggestions" by two famous authorities. Free on request. Grocers — pound packages — JOc. NATIONAL STARCH COMPANY, NEW YORK ^his is the great syrup for candy, table use and all kinds of cooking. Makes the finest taffy, butter scotch and fudge you ever ate. JQirp CORN SYRUP spread on bread is fine for children. It is the one wholesome syrup for griddle cakes. In cooking it imparts a natural flavor where some sweet is needed. Agrees with everybody. Send for free "Karo Cook ==3^ Book," showing the »] many uses of Karo in cooking and candy making. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING CO. NEW YORK P. O. Box 161 I I Sunshine Cook Book DELICIOUS CAKE YOUR Cake, Biscuit and Muffins will be light, delicate and of the finest texture if made with RUM FORD "THE WHOLESOME" BAKING POWDER RUMFORD excels all other baking powders in purity and healthfulness. and food made with it will always be nutritious and easily digested. JT restores to fine wheat flour the nutritious and health-giving properties removed in the process of bolting. IT imparts neither a bitter or baking powder taste to the food. Does not impair the most delicate flavoring which may be used. Each can contains an order for a Practical Cook Book, compiled by the Principal of the Boston Cooking School. M I p LE N '10 I