Mary at the Farm and Book of Recipes Compiled during Her Visit eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 501 pages of information about Mary at the Farm and Book of Recipes Compiled during Her Visit.

Mary at the Farm and Book of Recipes Compiled during Her Visit eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 501 pages of information about Mary at the Farm and Book of Recipes Compiled during Her Visit.

One-half pound or about twenty-four small mushrooms were peeled, washed carefully in cold water, placed in a small stew-pan containing two generous tablespoonfuls of butter, covered closely and allowed to simmer or steam for twenty minutes in butter and liquid, drawn from the mushrooms by steaming, then uncover and allow liquid in sauce-pan and mushrooms to cook about ten minutes longer, then sprinkle two teaspoonfuls of flour over the mushrooms, brown a minute, stir into this 1/2 cup of milk, or enough to make a sauce the consistency of cream, season well with salt and pepper to taste.  Have ready prepared six crisply toasted and buttered slices of stale bread.  Place four mushrooms and a couple of tablespoonfuls of the mushroom sauce on each slice of bread and serve hot.  The combination of toast and mushrooms results in a particularly fine flavor.

STEWED TOMATOES

Scald ripe tomatoes by pouring boiling water over them and allowing them to stand a few minutes.  Skin them and cut in small pieces.  Place in a stew-pan with 1 tablespoonful of butter, season well with pepper and salt, cook about 25 minutes, add 1/2 teaspoonful of sugar and thicken with 1 teaspoonful of flour mixed smooth with a little water.  Let cook a few minutes, then serve.  If tomatoes are very tart a small pinch of baking soda, added when cooked, will counteract acidity.

SWEET CORN

Sweet corn on the cob should be cooked as soon as possible after taking it from stalk, as after being removed it soon loses its sweetness.  Do not remove the husk until it is to be boiled.  Place corn in a kettle of rapidly boiling water, not salted; rather add a pinch of sugar if corn is not as sweet as liked.  Cover the kettle to prevent steam escaping.  Do not use a large quantity of water.  Corn is sweeter if steamed.  Boil from ten to fifteen minutes.  If corn is not cooked in that time, it should be used uncooked for corn fritters, as corn if not young and tender may be grated and from it excellent corn fritters may be made.

FRIED TOMATOES WITH CREAM SAUCE

Cut large, solid, ripe tomatoes in half-inch slices; one ordinary tomato makes 3 slices.  Dredge thickly with flour.  Fry several slices of bacon in an iron pan, take bacon from pan when fried and put in warming oven.  Lay the well-floured slices of tomatoes in hot bacon fat and one tablespoon of butter and fry brown on both sides.  Serve on hot platter with bacon.  Or fry slices of well floured tomato in pan containing just enough butter and drippings to keep them from sticking to the bottom of pan, over a hot fire.  Fry quickly, browning on each side.  Season with salt and pepper.  If the tomatoes are very sour, sprinkle a very little sugar over them before frying.  When brown, lift the tomatoes carefully from pan and place in a circle around the inside edge of a warm chop plate, add a lump of butter to the pan and a small half cup of sweet milk.  Let come to a boil, thicken with a little flour mixed smoothly with a little cold milk, and cook until the consistency of thick cream.  Season with salt and pour in centre of chop plate, surrounded with fried slices of tomatoes.  Dust pepper over top and serve hot.

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Mary at the Farm and Book of Recipes Compiled during Her Visit from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.