The International Jewish Cook Book eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 533 pages of information about The International Jewish Cook Book.

The International Jewish Cook Book eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 533 pages of information about The International Jewish Cook Book.

The dumplings may be made of the same mixture and in the centre of each dumpling place stripes of bread one inch long and one-fourth inch thick which have been fried in chicken fat and onions.  Flour your hands well and make into dumplings.  Put into boiling-salted water, boil about twenty-five minutes.  Serve at once with chopped onions browned, or browned bread crumbs and chicken fat.

WIENER KARTOFFEL KLOESSE

Boil eight potatoes.  When they are very soft drain off every drop of water, lay them on a clean baking-board and mash them while hot with a rolling-pin, adding about one cup of flour.  When thoroughly mashed, break in two eggs, salt to taste, and flavor with grated nutmeg.  Now flour the board thickly and foil out this potato dough about as thick as your little finger and spread with the following:  Heat some fresh goose fat in a spider, cut up part of an onion very fine, add it to the hot fat together with one-half cup of grated bread crumbs.  When brown, spread over the dough and roll just as you would a jelly-roll.  Cut into desired lengths (about three or four inches), put them in boiling water, slightly salted, and boil uncovered for about fifteen minutes.  Pour some hot goose grease over the dumplings.

BAIRISCHE DAMPFNUDELN, No. 1

Soak one cake of compressed yeast in a cup of lukewarm milk with a teaspoon of sugar, a teaspoon of salt, and sift a pint of flour in a bowl, in which you may also stir a small cup of milk and one egg.  Pour in the yeast and work all thoroughly, adding more flour, but guarding against getting the dough too stiff.  Cover up the bowl of dough and let it raise until it is as high again, which will take at least four hours.  Flour a baking-board and mold small biscuits out of your dough, let them raise at least half an hour.  Then butter a large, round, deep pan and set in your dumplings, brushing each with melted butter as you do so.  When all are in, pour in enough milk to reach just half way up to the dumplings.  Bake until a light brown.  Eat hot, with vanilla sauce.

BAIRISCHE DAMPFNUDELN, No. 2

Make the dough just as you would in the above recipe, adding a tablespoon of butter, and after they have risen steam instead of baking them.  If you have no steamer improvise one in this way:  Put on a kettle of boiling water, set a colander on top of the kettle and lay in your dumplings, but do not crowd them; cover with a close-fitting lid and put a weight on top of it to keep in the steam, when done they will be as large again as when first put in.  Take up one at first to try whether it is done by tearing open with two forks.  If you have more than enough for your family, bake a pan of biscuits out of the remaining dough.  Serve dumplings hot with prune sauce.

APPLE SLUMP

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The International Jewish Cook Book from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.