Good Things to Eat as Suggested by Rufus eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 192 pages of information about Good Things to Eat as Suggested by Rufus.

Good Things to Eat as Suggested by Rufus eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 192 pages of information about Good Things to Eat as Suggested by Rufus.

SOUFFLE OF CARROTS—­Boil the carrots and mash them fine, add a little sugar to taste, a pinch of salt, a spoonful of flour and a good lump of butter, the well beaten yolks of four eggs, and lastly fold in the stiffly beaten whites.  Bake in a quick oven in the dish in which it may be served.

TOMATO SOUFFLE—­Stew three cupfuls of tomato down to two, add seasoning to taste and six eggs, the whites beaten stiff, and bake for ten or fifteen minutes or until set.  Serve as soon as done.

FILLING FOR CAKES

COFFEE CREAM FOR CHARLOTTE AND ECLAIR—­Flavor one pint of rich thick cream with one-fourth cup of black coffee and one teaspoon of lemon, add about a half a cup of sugar, chill and whip it until thick enough to stand.  Pour it into molds lined with thin sponge cake or lady fingers.  Fill them level and ornament the top with some of the cream forced through tube.

FILLING—­For the filling scald one cup of milk with three level tablespoons of ground coffee and let stand where it will be hot but not boil, for five minutes.  Strain, add one-half cup of sugar, three level tablespoons of flour and a pinch of salt.  Cook in a double boiler fifteen minutes, add one beaten egg and cook two minutes, stirring to keep smooth.  Cool and add one-quarter teaspoon of vanilla flavoring.  Fill the cream cakes and cover with cream beaten thick, sweetened with powdered sugar and flavored with a few drops of vanilla.

FILLING FOR CAKE—­Soak a level tablespoon of gelatin in one tablespoon of cold water for half an hour, add one tablespoon of boiling water and stir.  Beat one pint of cream stiff, then beat in the soaked gelatin, add powdered sugar to make sweet and a small teaspoon vanilla flavoring or enough to suit the taste.  Put this filling in thick layers between the cakes and cover the top one with a white icing.

FIG OR DATE FROSTING—­These frostings are excellent to use upon any kind of cake, but as they are rather rich in themselves, they seem better suited for light white cake.  If figs are preferred they should be chopped fine.  If dates, the stones and as much as possible of the white lining should be removed and then they should be chopped fine.  For a good size loaf of cake, baked in two layers, use a scant quarter of a pound of either the chopped dates or figs, put into a double boiler or saucepan with a very little boiling water, just enough to make the mass pliable.  Let them stand and heat while the syrup is boiling.  For this two cups of fine granulated sugar and half a cup of boiling water are required.  Boil without stirring till the syrup taken upon the spoon or skewer will “thread.”  Do not allow it to boil too hard at first.  When the sugar is thoroughly melted, move the saucepan to a hotter part of the stove so that it may boil more vigorously.  Have ready the whites of two eggs beaten dry, now to them add the fig or date paste and pour the boiling syrup in a fine stream over the two, beating all the time.  Beat occasionally while cooling, and when thoroughly cold add one teaspoonful of lemon extract, and it is ready for use.  These frostings may be a trifle sticky the day they are made, especially if the syrup is not boiled very long, but the stickiness disappears by the second day, even if kept in a stone jar.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Good Things to Eat as Suggested by Rufus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.