Modern cookery for private families by Eliza Acton

CHAPTER XXI.

280 words  |  Chapter 24

BAKED PUDDINGS. Page Introductory Remarks 423 A baked Plum Pudding _en 424 Moule_, or Moulded The Printer’s Pudding 424 Almond Pudding 425 The Young Wife’s Pudding 425 (_Author’s receipt_) The Good Daughter’s Mincemeat 426 Pudding (_Author’s receipt_) Mrs. Howitt’s Pudding 426 (_Author’s receipt_) An excellent Lemon Pudding 426 Lemon Suet Pudding 427 Bakewell Pudding 427 Ratifia Pudding 427 The elegant Economist’s 428 Pudding Rich Bread and Butter Pudding 428 A common Bread and Butter 429 Pudding A good baked Bread Pudding 429 Another baked Bread Pudding 430 A good Semoulina or _Soujee_ 430 Pudding French Semoulina Pudding, or 430 _Gâteau de Semoule_ Saxe-Gotha Pudding, or 431 _Tourte_ Baden Baden Puddings 431 Sutherland, or Castle Puddings 432 _Madeleine_ Puddings (to be 432 served cold) A good French Rice Pudding, or 433 _Gâteau de Riz_ A common Rice Pudding 433 Quite cheap Rice Pudding 434 Richer Rice Pudding 434 Rich Pudding _Meringué_ 434 Good ground Rice Pudding 435 Common ground Rice Pudding 435 Green Gooseberry Pudding 435 Potato Pudding 436 A Richer Potato Pudding 436 A good Sponge-cake Pudding 436 Cake and Custard, and various 437 other inexpensive Puddings Baked Apple Pudding, or 437 Custard Dutch Custard, or Baked 438 Raspberry Pudding Gabrielle’s Pudding, or sweet 438 _Casserole_ of Rice Vermicelli Pudding, with 439 apples or without, and Puddings of _Soujee_ and Semola Rice _à la Vathek_, or Rice 440 Pudding _à la Vathek_ (_extremely good_) Good Yorkshire Pudding 440 Common Yorkshire Pudding 441 Normandy Pudding (_good_) 441 Common baked Raisin Pudding 441 A richer baked Raisin Pudding 442 The Poor Author’s Pudding 442 Pudding _à la Paysanne_ 442 (_cheap and good_) The Curate’s Pudding 442 A light baked Batter Pudding 443

Chapters

1. Chapter 1 2. CHAPTER I. 3. CHAPTER II. 4. Chapter VI.) 5. CHAPTER III. 6. CHAPTER IV. 7. CHAPTER V. 8. CHAPTER VI. 9. CHAPTER VII. 10. CHAPTER VIII. 11. CHAPTER IX. 12. CHAPTER X. 13. CHAPTER XI. 14. CHAPTER XII. 15. CHAPTER XIII. 16. CHAPTER XIV. 17. CHAPTER XV. 18. CHAPTER XVI. 19. CHAPTER XVII. 20. Chapter VI.) 21. CHAPTER XVIII. 22. CHAPTER XIX. 23. CHAPTER XX. 24. CHAPTER XXI. 25. CHAPTER XXII. 26. CHAPTER XXIII. 27. CHAPTER XXIV. 28. CHAPTER XXV. 29. CHAPTER XXVI. 30. CHAPTER XXVII. 31. CHAPTER XXVIII. 32. CHAPTER XXIX. 33. CHAPTER XXX. 34. CHAPTER XXXI. 35. CHAPTER XXXII. 36. CHAPTER I. 37. CHAPTER II. 38. Chapter V.) It appears to us that the skin should be stripped from any 39. Chapter VI.; though this is a mode of service less to be recommended, as 40. CHAPTER III. 41. Chapter V., or, with flour and butter, then seasoned with spice as 42. CHAPTER IV. 43. Chapter VII., or a little soy (when its flavour is admissible), or 44. CHAPTER V. 45. CHAPTER VI. 46. Chapter XVII.), laid lightly round it, is always an agreeable one to 47. Chapter III.), mince them quickly upon a dish with a large sharp knife, 48. CHAPTER VII. 49. CHAPTER VIII. 50. introduction of these last into pies unless they are especially ordered: 51. CHAPTER IX. 52. CHAPTER X. 53. 18. Cheek. 54. Chapter VIII., adding, at pleasure, a flavouring of minced onion or 55. CHAPTER XI. 56. 10. Breast, Brisket End. 57. Chapter I.), or as much good beef broth as may be required for the hash, 58. CHAPTER XII. 59. 7. Breast. 60. Chapter VI. may be substituted for the usual ingredients, the parsley 61. CHAPTER XIII. 62. 6. Leg. 63. CHAPTER XIV. 64. Chapter VIII., and the sausage-meat may then be placed on either side of 65. CHAPTER XV. 66. Chapter VIII., sew it up, truss and spit it firmly, baste it for ten 67. Chapter VIII.) rolled into small balls, and simmered for ten minutes in 68. Chapter XVII.), and beat them together until they are well blended; next 69. CHAPTER XVI. 70. CHAPTER XVII. 71. CHAPTER XVIII. 72. Chapter XV.): their livers also may be put into them. 73. CHAPTER XIX. 74. Chapter XVIII., but it must be boiled very dry, and left to become quite 75. CHAPTER XX. 76. CHAPTER XXI. 77. CHAPTER XXII. 78. CHAPTER XXIII. 79. Chapter XXIII., is exceedingly convenient for preparations of this kind; 80. CHAPTER XXIV. 81. 1. Let everything used for the purpose be delicately clean and _dry_; 82. 2. Never place a preserving-pan _flat upon the fire_, as this will 83. 3. After the sugar is added to them, stir the preserves gently at first, 84. 5. Fruit which is to be preserved in syrup must first be blanched or 85. 6. To preserve both the true flavour and the colour of fruit in jams and 86. 7. Never use tin, iron, or pewter spoons, or skimmers, for preserves, as 87. 8. When cheap jams or jellies are required, make them at once with 88. 9. Let fruit for preserving be gathered always in perfectly dry weather, 89. CHAPTER XXV. 90. CHAPTER XXVI. 91. 4. (Lemon-rinds, cinnamon, carraway-seeds, or ginger, or currants at 92. CHAPTER XXVII. 93. CHAPTER XXVIII. 94. CHAPTER XXIX. 95. CHAPTER XXX. 96. CHAPTER XXXI. 97. CHAPTER XXXII. 98. Chapter VIII., but increase the ingredients to three or four times the 99. PART II. Induction, 6_s._ 100. PART III. Organic Chemistry, price 31_s._ 6_d._ 101. PART III. 3_s._ 6_d._

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