<h2>IX.<br/> <big>Most Everything.</big></h2>
<p>Many of the cooks in India make a very
simple puff paste.</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/013.png" width-obs="213" height-obs="400" alt="A FAKIR OF BOMBAY" title="" /></div>
<h3><SPAN name="Puff_Paste" id="Puff_Paste"></SPAN>80. Puff Paste.</h3>
<p>Make a dough out of a pound of flour and
sufficient water. Knead for fifteen minutes.
Roll in a damp cloth
and set aside.</p>
<p>After an hour or so
knead again. Then add
a spoonful of shortening
at a time until the
dough begins to crack
and looks rough.</p>
<p>Roll out in a sheet,
cut in four pieces, place
one upon the other, roll
again, cut in four pieces
again. Repeat this four
times, then roll it into
a sheet, spread it with
shortening of some
kind, cut in four pieces,
and place one over the
other. Then roll for
the last time. The advantage of this method is
that it takes comparatively little shortening<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></SPAN></span>
and is always light and flaky. It makes a delicious
pastry for cheese cakes.</p>
<h3>81. Cheese Cakes.</h3>
<p>Place two cups of pure milk over the fire
and when the milk begins to boil squeeze the
juice of a lemon into it. The milk will at once
curdle. Drain off the curds. To these curds
add the yolks of two eggs, a tablespoonful of
butter, a small cup of sugar, and a small cup of
ground almonds. Walnuts, pecans, or any other
nuts would do all right.</p>
<p>Mix all together smoothly. Line little patty
pans with the paste (No. <SPAN href="#Puff_Paste">80</SPAN>), and fill with the
curds. Dust powdered sugar over the top and
decorate with crossbars of pastry. Bake very
slowly.</p>
<p>These cheese cakes are always much in
evidence at afternoon teas, garden parties, and
all social functions in India.</p>
<h3>82. Banana Stew with Cocoanut.</h3>
<p>Boil six bananas. To boil bananas do not
remove the skins. Just pour enough boiling
water over them to cover them. Add a little
salt to the water. As soon as the skins crack
they are done. Remove and cool. When cool,
take off the skins, scrape the bananas a little
and split them.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Make a syrup of one cup of sugar and half
a cup of fresh cocoanut and half a cup of water.
Pour this over the boiled bananas and serve.
This dish is much appreciated by the children.</p>
<h3>Roselles.</h3>
<p>Roselles are a fruit belonging to the sorrel
family. The seed is sown in the vegetable garden
every year when other seeds are sown. The
plants have a vigorous growth. They grow as
tall or a little taller than currant bushes. Long
before the season is over the bushes are vivid
with wine-red flowers. From the waxen petals
of these flowers very delicious sauces, jams,
chutneys, and jellies are made.</p>
<p>Roselles can be grown any place as easily as
tomatoes or cabbage or any vegetable. It
would certainly pay any one to make the experiment.
The fruit is very rich in pectin, and
not only gives a beautiful color when combined
with any other fruit, but also adds much to the
flavor. Combined with peaches or strawberries,
cherries or guavas, or any other fruit that is
deficient in pectin, the roselle has very satisfactory
results.</p>
<p>When used by themselves a fine jelly is
made which is far superior to currant jelly. I
am sure any one will feel repaid who gives it a
trial. The seeds can be purchased from any
large dealer.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></SPAN></span></p>
<h3>83. Roselle Jelly.</h3>
<p>Remove the petals of the flower from the
seed; then mince finely by running through the
meat grinder. To every cup of minced petals
add three cups of water. Boil quickly as the
color is much better if it does not stand around.
After boiling about five minutes it will be ready
to strain. Strain and make as any other jelly.
In flavor and appearance this jelly can not be
surpassed.</p>
<h3>84. Roselle Sauce.</h3>
<p>Remove petals from the seed, and for every
cup of petals take two cups of water. Stew
gently for a few minutes, then add a cup of
sugar for every cup of fruit. These two things
must be remembered if one wishes to get the
best results from the fruit. It must be well
diluted and it must be cooked quickly, as it is
apt to lose its bright color if it stands around.</p>
<h3>Tipparees.</h3>
<p>Tipparees, or cape gooseberries, are also
another fruit which is much neglected in this
country. To many they are familiarly known
as ground cherries. These are much prized in
India, and they really are a fine fruit, which can
be grown any place and will more than repay
the little time spent in their cultivation. In
India the seeds are sown annually. I think in<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></SPAN></span>
this country it seeds itself for a few years at
least, but I am sure better results would be
brought about if the seeds were planted every
spring.</p>
<p>This berry is unequaled for making jam.
If any doubt it, buy ten cents' worth of seed
next spring, plant it in your garden. Let the
plants grow and spread and in the early fall
make jam according to the following:</p>
<h3>85. Tipparee Jam.</h3>
<p>Husk the fruit and prick each berry. Do
not add too much water, as the fruit is very
juicy. Cook until fruit is tender, but not broken.
For every cup of fruit allow a cup of sugar. Cook
rapidly and not too much at a time. It finishes
up very quickly. A good plan is to cook only
partially, turn onto platters, and expose to the
sun as one does any other sun preserve.</p>
<p>Tipparees are fine for making pies and tarts.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="Orange_Marmalade" id="Orange_Marmalade"></SPAN>86. Orange Marmalade.</h3>
<p>This marmalade can be made from oranges
or lemons or grapefruit, or by combining the
three, or by combining any two of them.</p>
<p>Either slice the fruit very thinly or run it
through a meat grinder. For every cup of
fruit take three cups of water. Let it stand for
twenty-four hours. Then boil it in the same<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></SPAN></span>
water until the rinds are soft. Let stand another
twenty-four hours in the same water.
Then measure again and for every cup of mixture
take a cup of sugar. The best results are obtained
if not over four cupfuls are boiled at a
time. Boil rapidly. If citrus fruits are boiled
slowly they are apt to grow dark and strong.
If oranges are used alone for this marmalade
they must be sour. A good combination is four
oranges, two lemons, and half a grapefruit.</p>
<h3>87. Orange Jelly.</h3>
<p>Mince the oranges, rind and all. For every
cup of oranges take three of water. Let stand
in water for twenty-four hours. Boil until fruit
is soft and let stand again for another twenty-four
hours. Up to this point the process is
exactly like No. <SPAN href="#Orange_Marmalade">86</SPAN>.</p>
<p>Now drain the juice from the fruit. Acidulate
with lemon juice. If six oranges have
been used, add the juice of two lemons. To
each cup of juice take a cup of sugar. Boil
about four cupfuls at a time and boil quickly.
It will soon become jelly. A cup of roselle juice
diluted is better to acidulate with than the
lemon juice. A beautiful ruby jelly is the result.</p>
<h3>88. Candied Grapefruit Peel.</h3>
<p>Cut the grapefruit peel in sections. About
eight pieces to a grapefruit is a good size. Prick<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></SPAN></span>
each piece and soak for three days. If the
weather is very hot, better scald the fruit instead
of soaking it. Change water every morning
and evening. On the morning of the fourth
day boil the skins until they can be easily
pierced. Remove them and squeeze them as dry
as possible. Place them on a tray and sun them
for several hours, or else dry them in an expiring
oven. Weigh the peels, and take once and
a half their weight in sugar. Make this sugar
with water into a thick syrup; then add the peels
and boil until they look clear. Take them out
and boil the syrup until it is quite thick. Return
the peels and stir around and around until the
sugar candies over them. Put them to dry in
the sun for a day. Orange and lemon peel, watermelon
rind, green muskmelons, and almost any
kind of fruit can be preserved in the same way.</p>
<h3>89. Banana Cheese.</h3>
<p>Take a dozen ripe bananas, skin them, and
mash them up with a cup of cream of wheat and
a cup of sugar; also add a tablespoonful of
butter and a little cinnamon. Cook slowly for
about three hours in a double boiler. When
cold cut as you would cheese. Fine for missionary
functions.</p>
<h3>90. Carrot Cheese.</h3>
<p>Boil a pound of carrots until very tender.
Then mash them perfectly smooth. Mix with<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></SPAN></span>
them a pound of sugar, a tablespoonful of butter,
and the juice of a large lemon. Also add a few
cardamon seeds. Cook over a slow fire until the
mixture hardens into a paste. Add a little
more butter just before removing from the fire.
Press into shallow pans and cut in neat squares
or diamonds like fudge.</p>
<h3>91. Fruit Cheese.</h3>
<p>Any fruit may be made into a confection
which, in India, is called "cheese." The fruit
part first wants to be reduced to a pulp. Then
take equal parts of fruit pulp and sugar, with as
much butter as you feel you dare use. If you
feel that you dare not use any, use crisco with
salt. Cook down until it becomes a paste that
can be cut with a knife. It must cook very
slowly. Sometimes when nearly finished nuts
are added. In apricot cheese the kernels are
used. They must be blanched and minced.
Guava cheese is perhaps the finest, as the flavor
improves much with cooking.</p>
<h3>92. "Fools."</h3>
<p>A fool is a drink made of fruit pulp and milk.
Mango fool is perhaps the most popular. Fools
are always best made of tart unripe fruits.
Pare, slice, and stew the fruit until it is quite
soft. Strain through a fine sieve or coarse
muslin. Add to the pulp as much sugar as is
desired and enough water to make it pour easily.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></SPAN></span>
Boil for a few minutes and turn into a jug.
When ready to drink it, fill the glass about half
full of the fruit mixture and then fill with rich
milk. Add ice. These "fools" are very nutritious
and refreshing. Often in the hot weather
one cares for little else.</p>
<h3>Hindustani Sweets.</h3>
<p>Hindustani sweets are very sweet, very
sticky, very greasy, and very dear to the heart
of India's children, both old and young. We do
not advise a steady diet of these, but it is well
to know how some of them are made, as such
knowledge always comes in handy when arranging
for missionary programs, Oriental booths
in bazaars, and at frequent other times.</p>
<h3>93. Jellabies (Best Beloved).</h3>
<p>Make a batter of one pound of flour and
water. Make it just about as thick as you
would for pancakes. Cover the vessel tightly
and let stand for three days. Then stir in about
a half a cup of thick sour milk. Pour a little
of this batter into a vessel with a hole in the
bottom. In India a cup made from half a cocoanut
shell is made for this purpose, one of the
eyes in the monkey face at the end being perforated.
Fill this cup with batter and let the
batter run through a little at a time into a pan
of boiling fat. While the batter is running out
through the hole keep the hand moving in a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></SPAN></span>
circle, so that the jellabies will take the form of
pretzels. Fry as you would doughnuts.</p>
<p>In the meantime have a dish of syrup ready.
Make this syrup from a pound of brown sugar
and water. Cook it until it is about as thick as
maple syrup. Keep this syrup in a warm place
and as the jellabies fry place each one for a few
minutes in the syrup. Remove and pile them
on oiled paper until needed. These are sure to
make a hit. Be sure and fry them until they
are quite brown. If one doesn't want to bother
with the batter standing around for three days,
they can be made up at once by adding a teaspoonful
of baking powder to the mixture and
beating it well. The milk must not be too sour
in that case.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="Gulab_Jamans" id="Gulab_Jamans"></SPAN>94. Gulab Jamans.</h3>
<p>Take a pound of rice flour. If one cannot
obtain rice flour use common flour. Put it in
a bowl. Crack into it two eggs, add a little
salt, and enough cocoanut and cocoanut milk
to make a soft dough. Use a ten-cent tin of
Baker's fresh cocoanut for this. Knead well
and cover for a little while with a damp cloth.
After a while mold this dough into little balls
about the size and shape of pecans. You will
have to keep your fingers oiled while doing this.
Fry them as you would doughnuts. Let stand
until perfectly cold.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Weigh them, and for every pound take a
quarter of a pound of white sugar. Make this
sugar into a syrup. When thick put in the
gulab jamans and stir them for a few minutes.
When they are well frosted, remove. Spread
out on oiled paper. These are really very nice.
Any kind of little cakes and nuts can be frosted
the same way. The syrup should be allowed to
cool a little before the cakes are put in it.</p>
<h3>95. Malpuas.</h3>
<p>Make a batter of one pound of cream of
wheat and water. This batter should be very
thick. Let stand two days. Then add a cup of
grated cocoanut, a cup of small raisins, two eggs,
a cup of sugar, half a cup of curds, and a little
flour. Fry as you would pancakes. These are
to be eaten cold. These are also very nice to
serve at functions. If each one of these little
cakes is made the size of a dollar, a large number
could be prepared. A heavy aluminum griddle
is very nice for frying these, as they would then
require but little fat.</p>
<h3>96. Crow's Nest Fritters.</h3>
<p>Pare and cut in very small strips a pound of
sweet potatoes. Steam until a little soft, but
not entirely so. Make a batter of flour, two
eggs, and water. Put a tablespoonful of batter
on a well-greased griddle, then a tablespoonful<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></SPAN></span>
of the potatoes. Cover these with another
tablespoonful of batter. When done on one
side, turn. Eat with melted brown sugar and
butter or with syrup.</p>
<h3>97. Hulwa.</h3>
<p>Fry a cupful of cream of wheat in half a
cup of butter or crisco. When it begins to have
a nutty flavor and to be slightly brown, add
three cups of water and one cup of sugar and a
few of the small inside seeds of the cardamon.
Boil slowly until it forms a thick rich paste.
Press into square cake pans and sprinkle over
the top minced nuts and also raisins, if desired.
Cut in squares like fudge. Very good and
wholesome.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="Bombay_Hulwa" id="Bombay_Hulwa"></SPAN>98. Bombay Hulwa.</h3>
<p>Bombay hulwa is noted all over India.
Soak a pound of cream of wheat in enough
water to cover it. Let it stand three or four
hours. Then rub it through a coarse strong
cloth until you get all the starch out. To do
this you must keep dipping the cloth in water
again and again. Let this water stand until
the starch has settled, then pour off the water.
Make two pounds of white sugar into a syrup.
Boil until it reaches the fondant stage, then add
the cream of wheat starch, and keep boiling
and stirring until it forms into a lump. Then
add about half a pound of butter. Crisco will<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></SPAN></span>
do as well if salt is used with it. Go on cooking
the hulwa until it begins to get so hard that
you can hardly manage it. Then add a wineglass
of rose water, some blanched and shredded
almonds and the little inside seeds of half a
dozen cardamons. Delicious and nourishing,
but rather expensive.</p>
<h3>99. Turkish Delight.</h3>
<p>This popular confection is made by a similar
method to No. <SPAN href="#Bombay_Hulwa">98</SPAN>, excepting gum arabic is
used instead of cream of wheat starch. The
right proportion is about an ounce of powdered
gum arabic to two pounds of sugar. The butter
also is omitted at the last, but the almond, rose
water, and cardamon seed are usually added.
Press into plates, cut in squares, and roll each
square in powdered sugar.</p>
<p>There is an easier way, however, to make it.
Melt gum-drops. This is easily done by adding
a little water and boiling, or by keeping hot in a
double boiler or fireless cooker for a while.</p>
<p>Add the almonds and cardamons and lemon
or orange juice if desired. Dust powdered sugar
in a square pan. Press in the paste, dust powdered
sugar over the top. Cut in squares.</p>
<h3>100. Frosted Bananas.</h3>
<p>Use rather green bananas for this. Peel,
slice crosswise, sprinkle lightly with salt and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></SPAN></span>
fry. Be careful to keep them whole and not to
burn them. Allow them to get thoroughly cold,
then frost as directed for gulab jamans (No. <SPAN href="#Gulab_Jamans">94</SPAN>).</p>
<h3>101. Sujee Puffs.</h3>
<p>Make the paste according to No. <SPAN href="#Puff_Paste">80</SPAN>. To
make the mince heat a cupful of cream of wheat
in a little butter. Do not fry this brown, but
heat all through. Stir into this half a cup of
dessicated cocoanut, two tablespoonfuls of
small seedless raisins, two tablespoonfuls of
almonds (blanched and sliced), and the seed of
six cardamons. Cook this mixture for a few
minutes, then add a cup of sugar and cook for
a few minutes longer. This will not be a paste,
for no water has been added; so don't think it
is not right if it is very crumbly; that is the way
it ought to be. Roll the paste out not too thin,
cut in circles with a pound-baking-powder tin.
Put as much of the sweetmeat as you think you
can enclose, fold over, make as fancy as you
like, and either fry or bake.</p>
<p>This is a favorite sweet at native weddings.</p>
<h3>102. Breadcrumb Balls.</h3>
<p>Mix dry breadcrumbs and grated cocoanut
together, and a few raisins, too, if liked. Take
a cup of sugar and half a cup of water, and boil.
When syrup has reached the stage that it forms
a hard ball in water, pour over the breadcrumb<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></SPAN></span>
mixture. Mold as if making popcorn balls. If
one likes, these may be rolled in powdered sugar
afterward. These are also a very fine sweet for
social and missionary functions of all kinds.</p>
<h3>103. Sujee Biscuits.</h3>
<p>One pound of cream of wheat and one pound
of sugar mixed intimately; then add half a cup
of lard or crisco and knead awhile. Form into
little balls and shape the balls as desired.
Usually they are simply flattened out into
squares. Bake a light brown. Be careful that
they are not crowded in the pan.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/014.png" width-obs="214" height-obs="400" alt="SALAAMS" title="" /></div>
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