<h3>CHAPTER XIV.</h3>
<h4><span class="smcap">a chapter for people of very small means.</span></h4>
<p><span class="smcap">I am</span> sorry to say in these days this chapter may appeal
to many, who are yet not to be called "poor people,"
who may have been well-to-do and only suffering
from the pressure of the times, and for whose cultivated
appetites the coarse, substantial food of the laboring man
(even if they could buy it) would not be eatable, who
must have what they do have good, or starve. But, as
some of the things for which I give recipes will seem
over-economical for people who can afford to buy meat
at least once a day, I advise those who have even fifty
dollars a month income to skip it; reminding them, if
they do not, "that necessity knows no law."</p>
<p>A bone of soup meat can be got at a good butcher's
for ten or fifteen cents, and is about the best investment,
for that sum I know of, as two nourishing and
savory meals, at least, for four or five persons can be
got from it.</p>
<p>Carefully make a nice soup, with plenty of vegetables,
rice, or any other thickening you like. Your bone will
weigh from four to six pounds, perhaps; put it on with
water according to size, and let it boil down slowly until
nice and strong. If you have had any scraps of meat or
bones, put them also to your soup.</p>
<p>When you serve it, keep back a cup of soup and a few<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</SPAN></span>
of the vegetables, and save the meat, from which you
can make a very appetizing hash in the following way:
Take the meat from the bone, chop it with some cold
potatoes and the vegetables you saved from the soup.
Cold stewed onions, boiled carrots or turnips, all help to
make the dish savory. Chop an onion very fine, unless
you have cold ones, a little parsley and thyme, if liked,
and sometimes, for variety's sake, if you have it, a pinch
of curry powder, not enough to make it hot or yellow,
yet to impart piquancy. If you have a tiny bit of fried
bacon or cold ham or cold pork, chop it with the other
ingredients, mix all well, moisten with the cold soup,
and, when nicely seasoned, put the hash into an iron
frying-pan, in which you have a little fat made hot;
pack it smoothly in, cover it with a pot-lid, and either
set it in a hot oven, or leave it to brown on the stove.
If there was more soup than enough to moisten the hash,
put it on in a tiny saucepan, with a little brown flour
made into a paste with butter, add a drop of tomato catsup,
or a little stewed tomato, or anything you have for
flavoring, and stir till it boils. Then turn the hash out
whole on a dish, it should be brown and crisp, pour the
gravy you have made round it, and serve. For a change
make a pie of the hash, pouring the gravy in through
a hole in the top when done.</p>
<p>It is not generally known that a very nice plain paste
can be made with a piece of bread dough, to which you
have added an egg, and some lard, dripping, or butter.
The dripping is particularly nice for the hash pie, and,
as you need only a piece of dough as large as an orange,
you will probably have enough from the soup, if you
skimmed off all the fat before putting the vegetables in
(see <i>pot-au-feu</i>); work your dripping into the dough,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</SPAN></span>
and let it rise well, then roll as ordinary pie-crust. Potato
crust is also very good for plain pies of any sort, but
as there are plenty of recipes for it, I will not give one
here.</p>
<p>One of the very best hashes I ever ate was prepared
by a lady who, in better times, kept a very fine table.
And she told me there were a good many cold beans
in it, well mashed; and often since, when taking "travelers'
hash" in an hotel, I have thought of that savory
dish with regret.</p>
<p>Instead of making your chopped meat into hash, vary
it, by rolling the same mixture into egg-shaped pieces,
or flat cakes, flouring them, and frying them nicely in
very hot fat; pieces of pork or bacon fried and laid
round will help out the dish, and be an improvement
to what is already very good.</p>
<p>To return once more to the soup bone. If any one of
your family is fond of marrow, seal up each end of the
bone with a paste made of flour and water. When done,
take off the paste, and remove the marrow. Made very
hot, and spread on toast, with pepper and salt, it will be
a relish for some one's tea or breakfast.</p>
<p>In this country there is a prejudice against sheep's
liver; while in England, where beef liver is looked upon
as too coarse to eat (and falls to the lot of the "cats-meat
man," or cat butcher), sheep's is esteemed next to
calf's, and it is, in fact, more delicate than beef liver.
The nicest way to cook it is in very <i>thin</i> slices (not the
inch-thick pieces one often sees), each slice dipped in
flour and fried in pork or bacon fat, and pork or bacon
served with it. But the more economical way is to put
it in a pan, dredge it with flour, pin some fat pork over
it, and set it in a hot oven; when very brown take it out;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</SPAN></span>
make nice brown gravy by pouring water in the pan and
letting it boil on the stove, stirring it well to dissolve the
glaze; pour into the dish, and serve. The heart should
be stuffed with bread-crumbs, parsley, thyme, and a <i>little</i>
onion, and baked separately. Or, for a change, you
may chop the liver up with a few sweet herbs and a little
pork (onion, or not, as you like), and some bread-crumbs.
Put all together in a crock, dredge with flour,
cover, and set in a slow oven for an hour and a half;
then serve, with toasted bread around the dish.</p>
<p>It is very poor economy to buy inferior meat. One
pound of fine beef has more nourishment than two of
poor quality. But there is a great difference in prices of
different parts of meat, and it is better management to
choose the cheap part of fine beef than to buy the sirloin
of a poor ox even at the same price; and, by good
cooking many parts not usually chosen, and therefore
sold cheaply, can be made very good. Yet you must
remember, that a piece of meat at seven cents a pound,
in which there is at least half fat and bone, such as
brisket, etc., is less economical than solid meat at ten or
twelve.</p>
<p>Pot roasts are very good for parts of meat not tender
enough for roasting, the "cross-rib," as some butchers
term it, being very good for this purpose; it is all
solid meat, and being very lean, requires a little fat pork,
which may be laid at the bottom of the pot; or better
still, holes made in the meat and pieces of the fat drawn
through, larding in a rough way, so that they cut together.
A pot roast is best put on in an iron pot, without
water, allowed to get finely brown on one side, then
turned, and when thoroughly brown on the other a little
water may be added for gravy; chop parsley or any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</SPAN></span>
seasoning that is preferred. Give your roast at least
three hours to cook. Ox cheek, as the head is called, is
very good, and should be very cheap; prepare it thus:</p>
<p>Clean the cheek, soak it in water six hours, and cut
the meat from the bones, which break up for soup;
then take the meat, cut into neat pieces, put it in an
earthen crock, a layer of beef, some thin pieces of pork
or bacon, some onions, carrots, and turnips, cut <i>thin</i>, or
chopped fine, and sprinkled over the meat; also, some
chopped parsley, a little thyme, and bay leaf, pepper
and salt, and a clove to each layer; then more beef and
a little pork, vegetables, and seasoning, as before. When
all your meat is in pour over it, if you have it, a tumbler
of hard cider and one of water, or else two of water,
in which put a half gill of vinegar. If you have no
tight-fitting cover to your crock, put a paste of flour and
water over it to keep the steam in. Place the crock in a
slow oven five or six hours, and when it is taken out remove
the crust and skim. Any piece of beef cooked in
this way is excellent.</p>
<p>Ox heart is one of the cheapest of dishes, and really
remarkably nice, and it is much used by economical people
abroad.</p>
<p>The heart should be soaked in vinegar and water three
or four hours, then cut off the lobes and gristle, and
stuff it with fat pork chopped, bread-crumbs, parsley,
thyme, pepper, and salt; then tie it in a cloth and very
slowly simmer it (large end up) for two hours; take it
up, remove the cloth, and flour it, and roast it a nice
brown. Lay in the pan in which it is to be roasted some
fat pork to baste it. Any of this left over is excellent
hashed, or, warmed in slices with a rich brown gravy, cannot
be told from game. Another way is to stuff it with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</SPAN></span>
sage and onions. It must always be served <i>very hot</i> with
hot plates and on a very hot dish.</p>
<p>Fore quarter of mutton is another very economical part
of meat, if you get your butcher to cut it so that it may
not only be economical, but really afford a choice joint.
Do not then let him hack the shoulder across, but, before
he does a thing to it, get him to take the shoulder out in
a round plate-shaped joint, with knuckle attached; if
he does this well, that is, cuts it close to the bone of the
ribs, you will have a nice joint; then do not have it
chopped at all; this should be roasted in the oven very
nicely, and served with onion sauce or stewed onions. If
onions are not liked, mashed turnips are the appropriate
vegetable. This joint, to be enjoyed, must be
properly carved, and that is, across the middle from the
edge to the bone, the same as a leg of mutton; and like
the leg, you must learn, as I cannot describe it in words,
where the bone lies, then have that side nearest you and
cut from the opposite side.</p>
<p>You have, besides this joint, another roast from the
ribs, or else cut it up into chops till you come to the
part under the shoulder; from this the breast should be
separated and both either made into a good Irish stew,
or the breast prepared alone in a way I shall describe,
the neck and thin ribs being stewed or boiled.</p>
<p>The neck of mutton is very tender boiled and served
with parsley or caper sauce; the liquor it is boiled in
served as broth, with vegetables and rice, or prepared as
directed in a former chapter for the broth from leg of
mutton.</p>
<p>The mode I am about to give of preparing breast of
mutton was told me by a Welsh lady of rank, at whose
table I ate it (it appeared as a side dish), and who said,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</SPAN></span>
half laughingly, "Will you take some 'fluff'? We are
very fond of it, but breast of mutton is such a despised
dish I never expect any one else to like it." I took it,
on my principle of trying everything, and did find it
very good. This lady told me that, having of course a
good deal of mutton killed on her father's estate, and the
breast being always despised by the servants, she had invented
a way of using it to avoid waste. Her way was this:</p>
<p>Set the breast of mutton on the fire whole, just covered
with water in which is a little salt. When it comes
to the boil draw it back and let it <i>simmer</i> three hours;
then take it up and draw out the bones, and lay a forc=emeat
of bread-crumbs, parsley, thyme, chopped suet,
salt and pepper all over it; double or roll it, skewer it,
and coat it thickly with egg and bread-crumbs; then
bake in a moderate oven, basting it often with nice dripping
or butter; when nicely brown it is done, and eats
like the tenderest lamb. It was, when I saw it, served on
a bed of spinach. I like it better on a bed of stewed
onions.</p>
<p>I now give some dishes made without meat.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Ragout of Cucumber and Onions.</span>—Fry equal
quantities of large cucumbers and onions in slices until
they are a nice brown. The cucumber will brown more
easily if cut up and put to drain some time before using;
then flour each slice. When both are brown, pour on
them a cup of water, and let them stew for half an hour;
then take a good piece of butter in which you have
worked a dessert-spoonful of flour (browned); add pepper,
salt, and a little tomato catsup or stewed tomato.
This is a rich-eating dish if nicely made, and will help
out cold meat or a scant quantity of it very well. A
little cold meat may be added if you have it.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</SPAN></span>
<span class="smcap">Onion Soup.</span>—Fry six large onions cut into slices
with a quarter of a pound of butter till they are of a
bright brown, then well mix in a tablespoonful of flour,
and pour on them rather more than a quart of water.
Stew gently until the onions are quite tender, season
with a spoonful of salt and a little sugar; stir in quickly
a <i>liaison</i> made with the yolks of two eggs mixed with
a gill of milk or cream (do not let it boil afterwards),
put some toast in a tureen, and serve very hot.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Pea Soup.</span>—Steep some yellow split peas all night, next
morning set them on to boil with two quarts of water to a
pint of peas; in the water put a tiny bit of soda. In another
pot put a large carrot, a turnip, an onion, and a
large head of celery, all cut small and covered with water.
When both peas and vegetables are tender, put them
together, season with salt, pepper, and a little sugar,
and let them gently stew till thick enough; then strain
through a colander, rubbing the vegetables well, and
return to the pot while you fry some sippets of bread a
crisp brown; then stir into the soup two ounces of butter
in which you have rolled a little flour.</p>
<p>This soup is simply delicious, and the fact of it being
<i>maigre</i> will not be remembered.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Potato Soup</span> is another of this good kind, for meat is
scarcely required, so good is it without.</p>
<p>Boil some potatoes, then rub them through a colander
into two quarts of hot milk (skimmed does quite well);
have some fine-chopped parsley and onion, add both
with salt and pepper, stew three quarters of an hour;
then stir in a large piece of butter, and beat two eggs
with a little cold milk, stir in quickly, and serve with
fried bread. There should be potatoes enough to make
the soup as thick as cream.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</SPAN></span>
Do not be prejudiced against a dish because there is
no meat in it, and you think it cannot be nourishing.
This chapter is not written for those with whom meat,
or money, is plentiful; and if it be true that man is
nourished "not by what he eats, but by what he assimilates,"
and, according to an American medical authority,
"what is eaten with distaste is not assimilated"
(Dr. Hall), it follows that an enjoyable dinner, even
without meat, will be more nourishing than one forced
down because it lacks savor; that potato soup will be
more nourishing than potatoes and butter, with a cup of
milk to drink, because more enjoyable. Yet it costs no
more, for the soup can be made without the eggs if they
are scarce.</p>
<p>Or say bread and butter and onions. They will not
be very appetizing, especially if they had to be a frequent
meal, yet onion soup is made from the same materials,
and in France is a very favorite dish, even with
those well able to put meat in it if they wished.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</SPAN></span></p>
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