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).

SALAD OF MIXED FRUITS.

Put in the centre of a dish a pineapple properly pared, cored and sliced, yet retaining as near as practicable its original shape.  Peel, quarter and remove the seeds from four sweet oranges; arrange them in a border around the pineapple.  Select four fine bananas, peel and cut into slices lengthwise; arrange these zigzag-fence fashion around the border of the dish.  In the V-shaped spaces around the dish put tiny mounds of grapes of mixed colors.  When complete, the dish should look very appetizing.  To half a pint of clear sugar syrup add half an ounce of good brandy, pour over the fruit and serve.

ORANGE COCOANUT SALAD.

Peel and slice a dozen oranges, grate a cocoanut and slice a pineapple.  Put alternate layers of each until the dish is full.  Then pour over them sweetened wine.  Served with small cakes.

When oranges are served whole, they should be peeled and prettily arranged in a fruit dish.  A small knife is best for this purpose.  Break the skin from the stem into six or eight even parts, peel each section down half way, and tuck the point in next to the orange.

CRYSTALLIZED FRUIT.

Pick out the finest of any kind of fruit, leave on their stalks, beat the whites of three eggs to a stiff froth, lay the fruit in the beaten egg with the stalks upward, drain them and beat the part that drips off again; select them out, one by one and dip them into a cup of finely powdered sugar; cover a pan with a sheet of fine paper, place the fruit inside of it, and put it in an oven that is cooling; when the icing on the fruit becomes firm, pile them on a dish and set them in a cool place.  For this purpose, oranges or lemons should be carefully pared, and all the white inner skin removed that is possible, to prevent bitterness; then cut either in thin horizontal slices if lemons, or in quarters if oranges.  For cherries, strawberries, currants, etc., choose the largest and finest, leaving stems out.  Peaches should be pared and cut in halves and sweet juicy pears may be treated in the same way, or look nicely when pared, leaving on the stems and iced.  Pineapples should be cut in thin slices and these again divided into quarters.

PEACHES AND CREAM.

Pare and slice the peaches just before sending to table.  Cover the glass dish containing them to exclude the air as much as possible, as they soon change color.  Do not sugar them in the dish—­they then become preserves, not fresh fruit.  Pass the powdered sugar and cream with them.

SNOW PYRAMID.

Beat to a stiff foam the whites of half a dozen eggs, add a small teacupful of currant jelly and whip all together again.  Fill half full of cream as many saucers as you have guests, dropping in the centre of each saucer a tablespoonful of the beaten eggs and jelly in the shape of a pyramid.

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