Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 257 pages of information about Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery.

Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 257 pages of information about Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery.

By vegetarian jelly we mean jellies made on vegetarian principles.  To be consistent, if we cannot use anchovy sauce because it is made from fish, on the same principle we cannot use either gelatine or isinglass, which, of course, as everybody knows, is made from fishes.  For all this, there is no reason why vegetarians should not enjoy jellies quite equal, so far as flavour is concerned, to ordinary jelly.  The simplest substitute for gelatine, or what is virtually the same thing, isinglass, is corn-flour.  Tapioca could be used, but corn-flour saves much trouble.  Some persons may urge that it is not fair to give the name of jelly to a corn-flour pudding.  There is, however, a very great difference between a corn-flour pudding flavoured with orange, and what we may call an orange jelly, in which corn-flour is only introduced, like gelatine, for the purpose of transforming a liquid into a solid.

We also have this advantage in using corn-flour:  it is much more simple and can be utilised for making a very large variety of jellies, many of which, probably, will be new even to vegetarians themselves.  We are all agreed on one point, i.e., the wholesomeness of freshly picked ripe fruit.  We will suppose the season to be autumn and the blackberries ripe on the hedgerows, and that the children of the family are nothing loth to gather, say, a couple of quarts.  We will now describe how to make a mould of—­

BLACKBERRY JELLY.—­Put the blackberries in an enamelled saucepan with a little water at the bottom, and let them stew gently till they yield up their juice, or they can be placed in a jar in the oven.  They can now be strained through a hair sieve, but, still better, they can be squeezed dry in a tamis cloth.  This juice should now be sweetened, and it can be made into jelly in two ways, both of which are perfectly lawful in vegetarian cookery.  The juice, like red currant juice, can be boiled with a large quantity of white sugar till the jelly sets of its own accord; in this case we should require one pound of sugar to every pint of juice, and the result would be a blackberry jelly like red currant jelly, more like a preserve than the jelly we are accustomed to eat at dinner alone.  For instance, no one would care to eat a quantity of red currant jelly like we should ordinary orange or lemon jelly—­it would be too sickly; consequently we will take a pint or a quart of our blackberry juice only and sufficient sugar to make it agreeably sweet without being sickly.  We will boil this in a saucepan and add a tablespoonful of corn-flour mixed with a little cold juice to every pint to make the juice thick.  This can be now poured into a mould or plain round basin; we will suppose the latter.  When the jelly has got quite cold we can turn it out on to a dish, say a silver dish, with a piece of white ornamental paper at the bottom.  We now have to ornament this mould of blackberry jelly, and, as a rule, it will be found that no ornament can surpass natural ones.  Before

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Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.