<h4>33</h4>
<h4>LAMB OMELET</h4>
<h4>(Agnello in frittata)</h4>
<p>Cut in little pieces a loin of lamb, which is the part that lends itself
best for this dish, and fry in lard: a little quantity of lard is
sufficient, because the meat of the loins is rather fat. When half
cooked season with salt and pepper and when fully cooked pour over four
or five whole eggs slightly beaten also seasoned moderately with salt
and pepper. Mix, taking care that the eggs do not harden.</p>
<h4>34</h4>
<h4>FRIED CHICKEN</h4>
<h4>(Pollo fritto)</h4>
<p>Wash a spring chicken and keep in boiling water for one minute. Cut into
pieces at the joints, roll them in flour, season with salt and pepper
and dip in two whole beaten eggs. After leaving the pieces of chicken
for half an hour, roll them in bread crumbs, repeating the operation
twice if necessary. Put into a saucepan with boiling oil or fat, seeing
that the pieces of chicken are well browned on both sides. Keep the fire
low. Serve hot with lemon.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></SPAN></span></p>
<h4>35</h4>
<h4>CHICKEN ALLA CACCIATORA</h4>
<h4>(Pollo alla cacciatora)</h4>
<p>Chop one large onion and keep it for more than half an hour in cold
water, then dry it and brown it aside. Cut up a chicken, sprinkle the
pieces with flour, salt and pepper and sauté, in the fat which remains
in the frying pan. When the chicken is brown add one pint fresh or
canned tomatoes and half a dozen sweet green peppers and put back the
onion. When the gravy is thick enough add hot water to prevent the
burning of the vegetables. Cover the pan tightly and simmer until the
chicken is very tender. This is an excellent way to cook tough chickens.
Fowls which have been boiled may be cooked in this way, but of course
young and tender chickens will have the finer flavor.</p>
<h4>36</h4>
<h4>CORN MEAL WITH SAUSAGES</h4>
<h4>(Polenta con salsicce)</h4>
<p>Cook in water one cup of yellow cornmeal making a stiff mush. Salt it
well and when it is cooked spread out to cool on a bread board about
half an inch thick. Then cut the mush into small squares.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Put in a saucepan several whole sausages with a little water, and when
they are cooked skin and crush them and add some brown stock or tomato
sauce.</p>
<p>Put the polenta (or cornmeal mush) in a fireproof receptacle, season
with grated cheese, the crushed sausages and a piece of butter. Put it
in the oven and serve when hot.</p>
<h4>37</h4>
<h4>POLENTA PIE</h4>
<h4>(Polenta Pasticciata)</h4>
<p>Make a very stiff mush of cornmeal cooked in milk. Salt it well and
spread out on the bread board in a sheet about one inch thick. When
cold, cut in little diamonds or squares and place these in a buttered
baking dish. Prepare the <b>Bolognese sauce</b> according to the following
recipe: Chop ¼ lb. round steak, a slice of pork or bacon, one small
carrot ¼ onion, one large piece celery. Put the meat and vegetables
over the fire with a piece of butter. When the meat has browned add half
a tablespoon of flour and wet the mixture with hot water or broth,
allowing it to simmer from half an hour to an hour. It is done when it
is the consistency of a thick gravy.</p>
<p>Make a smooth white sauce with milk cornstarch and butter. Over a layer
of the polenta, cut as above and placed in the baking dish sprin<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></SPAN></span>kle
some grated cheese and a few tablespoons each of the white sauce and the
meat sauce. Repeat until the dish is full. Bake until the top is nicely
browned. This dish seems very elaborate, but it is very delicious and a
meal in itself.</p>
<p>The Bolognese sauce is also used to season macaroni or spaghetti in lieu
of the tomato sauce or the brown stock.</p>
<h4>38</h4>
<h4>STUFFED ROLLS</h4>
<h4>(Pagnottelle ripiene)</h4>
<p>Take some rolls, and by means of a round opening on the top, as large as
a half dollar piece or less, extract nearly all the crumb, leaving the
crust intact, but not too thin. Wet inside and outside with hot milk,
and when they are fairly soaked, dip in beaten eggs and fry them in lard
or oil. When beginning to brown, fill them with meat that has been
previously chopped and cooked. This chopped meat ought to be made with
breast of chicken, chicken giblets, liver etc., brown stock and some
flour to hold it together.</p>
<h4>39</h4>
<h4>STEWED VEAL</h4>
<h4>(Stracotto di vitella)</h4>
<p>The stock from this dish may very well be used to season macaroni or
boiled rice. Care<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></SPAN></span> must be taken, however, not to draw away all the
juice of the meat in order to have a sauce too rich at the expense of
the principal dish.</p>
<p>Place in a saucepan one pound of veal or more, bone included, a piece of
butter or some olive oil (or the two together) half a medium sized
onion, one small carrot, two celery stalks cut in small pieces. Season
with salt and pepper. Put it on a low fire, turn the meat over often and
when browned add a pinch of flour and some tomato paste, bringing it to
full cooking with water poured little by little. The flour is used to
keep the sauce together and give it color, but care must be taken not to
burn it, because in that case the sauce would have an unpleasant taste
and a black, instead of a reddish color. The addition of dried
mushrooms, previously softened in the water and slightly boiled in the
sauce will add greatly to its taste.</p>
<p>As has been said the sauce can well be used to season spaghetti or
risotto. The stewed veal can be served with some vegetable.</p>
<h4>40</h4>
<h4>CHICKEN BONED AND STUFFED</h4>
<h4>(Pollo dissossato ripieno)</h4>
<p>To remove the bones from a chicken the following instructions will be
found useful.</p>
<p>Wash and singe the fowl: take off the head<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></SPAN></span> and legs, and remove the
tendons. When a fowl is to be boned it is not drawn. The work of boning
is not difficult, but it requires practice. The skin must not be broken.
Use a small pointed knife cut the skin down the full length of the back;
then, beginning at the neck, carefully scrape the meat away from the
bone, keeping the knife close to the bone. When the joints of the wings
and legs are met, break them back and proceed to free the meat from the
carcass. When one side is free, turn the fowl and do the same on the
other side. The skin is drawn tightly over the breast-bone, and care
must be used to detach it without piercing the skin. When the meat is
free from the carcass, remove the bones from the legs and wings, turning
the meat down or inside out, as the bones are exposed, and using care
not to break the skin at the joints. The end bones of the wing cannot be
removed, and the whole end joint may be cut off or left as it is.</p>
<p>Now that the fowl is boned make the following stuffing, regulating the
quantity on the size of the chicken. Chop half a pound or more, of lean
veal, and grind it afterwards, so that it may make a paste. Add a large
piece of bread crumb soaked in broth, a tablespoon of grated cheese,
three yolks of egg, salt, pepper and, if desired, just a taste of
nutmeg. Finally mix also one or two slices of ham and tongue, cut in
small pieces. Stuff the boned chicken with this filling, sew up<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></SPAN></span> the
opening, wrap it tightly in a cloth and put to cook in water on a low
fire. When taken from the water, remove the wrapping and brown it, first
with butter, then in a sauce made in the following way: Break all the
bones that have been extracted from the chicken, the head and neck
included, and put them on the fire with dried meat cut in little pieces,
butter, onion, celery and carrot, seasoned with salt and pepper. Make
the sauce with the water in which the chicken has been boiled, which has
naturally become a good chicken broth.</p>
<p>Before sending to the table, remove the thread with which the chicken
has been sewed.</p>
<h4>41</h4>
<h4>CHICKEN WITH TOMATOES</h4>
<h4>(Pollo alla contadina)</h4>
<p>Take a young chicken and make some little holes in the skin in which you
will put some sprigs of rosemary and a clove of garlic cut into five or
six pieces. Put it on the fire with chopped lard and season with salt
and pepper inside and outside. When it is well browned on all parts add
tomatoes cut in pieces, taking care to remove previously all the seeds.
Moisten with broth or water. Brown some potatoes in oil, fat or butter,
previously cutting them into sections. When browned dip in the sauce of
the chicken and serve the whole together.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></SPAN></span></p>
<h4>42</h4>
<h4>CHICKEN WITH SHERRY</h4>
<h4>(Pollo al marsala)</h4>
<p>Cut the chicken in big pieces and put it in the saucepan with one medium
sized onion chopped fine and a piece of butter. Season with salt and
pepper and, when it is well browned, add some broth and complete the
cooking. Remove the excessive fat from the sauce by sifting through a
sieve or otherwise, and put the chicken back on the fire with a glass of
Sherry or Marsala wine, removing it from the fire as soon as the sauce
begins to boil.</p>
<h4>43</h4>
<h4>CHICKEN WITH SAUSAGES</h4>
<h4>(Pollo colle salsicce)</h4>
<p>Chop fine half an onion and put it in a saucepan with a piece of butter
and four or five slices of ham, half an inch wide. Over these
ingredients place a whole chicken, season with pepper and a little salt
and place on the fire. Brown it on all sides and, when the onion is all
melted, add water or broth and three or four sausages freshly made. Let
it cook on a low fire, seeing that the sauce remains liquid and does not
dry up.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></SPAN></span></p>
<h4>44</h4>
<h4>CHICKEN WITH EGG SAUCE</h4>
<h4>(Pollo in salsa d'uova)</h4>
<p>Break into pieces a young chicken and put it in the saucepan with a
piece of butter. Season with salt and pepper. When it is half browned
sprinkle with a pinch of flour to give it color, then complete the
cooking with broth. Remove it from the same and put it on a plate. Beat
the yolk of one egg with the piece of half a lemon and pour it on the
sauce of the chicken, allowing it to simmer for some minutes. Then pour
on the chicken and serve hot.</p>
<h4>45</h4>
<h4>CHICKEN BREASTS SAUTÉS</h4>
<h4>(Petti di pollo alla sauté)</h4>
<p>Cut the breast of a fowl in very thin slices, give them the best
possible shape and make a whole piece from the little pieces that will
remain, cleaning well the breast-bone, crushing and mixing these. Season
with salt and pepper and dip the slices in beaten eggs, leaving them for
a few hours. Sprinkle with bread crumbs ground fine and sauté in butter.
Serve with lemon.</p>
<p>If you want this dish more elaborate prepare a sauce in the following
way: Put some good olive oil in a frying pan, just enough to cover the
bottom, and cover the oil with a layer of dry<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></SPAN></span> mushrooms. Sprinkle over
a small quantity of grated cheese and some bread crumbs. Repeat the same
operation three or four times, according to the quantity, and finally
season with olive oil, salt and pepper and small pieces of butter. Put
the pan over the fire and when it has begun to boil pour a small cup of
brown stock or broth and a little lemon juice. Remove the same from the
fire and pour it on the chicken breast that have been browned as
described above.</p>
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