The Whitehouse Cookbook (1887) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 805 pages of information about The Whitehouse Cookbook (1887).

The Whitehouse Cookbook (1887) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 805 pages of information about The Whitehouse Cookbook (1887).

KITCHEN PEPPER.

Mix one ounce of ground ginger, half an ounce each of black pepper, ground cinnamon, nutmeg and allspice, one teaspoonful of ground cloves, and six ounces of salt.  Keep in a tightly corked bottle. The Caterer.

PREPARED COCOANUT. (For Pies, Puddings, etc.)

To prepare cocoanut for future use, first cut a hole through the meat at one of the holes in the end, draw off the milk, then loosen the meat by pounding the nut well on all sides.  Crack the nut and take out the meat, and place the pieces of meat in a cool open oven over night, or for a few hours, to dry; then grate it.  If there is more grated than is needed for present use, sprinkle it with sugar, and spread out in a cool dry place.  When dry enough put away in dry cans or bottles.  Will keep for weeks.

SPICES.

Ginger is the root of a shrub first known in Asia, and now cultivated in the West Indies and Sierra Leone.  The stem grows three or four feet high and dies every year.  There are two varieties of ginger—­the white and black—­caused by taking more or less care in selecting and preparing the roots, which are always dug in winter, when the stems are withered.  The white is the best.

Cinnamon is the inner bark of a beautiful tree, a native of Ceylon, that grows from twenty to thirty feet in height and lives to be centuries old.

Cloves.—­Native to the Molucca Islands, and so called from resemblance to a nail (clavis).  The East Indians call them “changkek” from the Chinese “techengkia” (fragrant nails).  They grow on a straight, smooth-barked tree, about forty feet high.  Cloves are not fruits, but blossoms, gathered before they are quite unfolded.

Allspice.—­A berry so called because it combines the flavor of several spices—­grows abundantly on the allspice or bayberry tree; native of South America and the West Indies.  A single tree has been known to produce one hundred and fifty pounds of berries.  They are purple when ripe.

Black pepper is made by grinding the dried berry of a climbing vine, native to the East Indies.  White pepper is obtained from the same berries, freed from their husk or rind.  Red or cayenne pepper is obtained by grinding the scarlet pod or seed-vessel of a tropical plant that is now cultivated in all parts of the world.

Nutmeg is the kernel of a small, smooth, pear-shaped fruit that grows on a tree in the Molucca Islands, and other parts of the East.  The trees commence bearing in the seventh year, and continue fruitful until they are seventy or eighty years old.  Around the nutmeg or kernel is a bright, brown shell.  This shell has a soft, scarlet covering, which, when flattened out and dried, is known as mace.  The best nutmegs are solid, and emit oil when pricked with a pin.

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The Whitehouse Cookbook (1887) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.