this with
oysters which have been cut in small pieces. Serve in halves of
lemons, from which the pulp has been carefully removed.
Place on ice a short time before serving. Crisp crackers should be
served at the same time this is served.
SALMON LOAF
One can of salmon, from which all bones have been removed, 1 cup of
cracker crumbs, 1/2 cup of milk, 1 tablespoonful of butter, which had
been melted; 2 eggs beaten, salt and pepper to season. Mix all
together, bake in a buttered pudding dish one-half hour or until
browned on top. Serve hot.
CREAMED SALMON
A half cup of canned salmon, a left-over from lunch the preceding day,
may be added to double the quantity of cream dressing, and when heated
through and served on crisply-toasted slices of stale bread, make a
tasty addition to any meal.
Of course, it is not necessary to tell even unexperienced housewives
never under any circumstances allow food to stand in tins in which it
was canned; do not ever stand food away in tin; use small agateware
dishes, in which food, such as small quantities of left-overs, etc,
may be reheated. Never use for cooking agate stew-pans, from the
inside of which small parties have been chipped, as food cooked in
such a vessel might become mixed with small particles of glazing, and
such food when eaten would injure the stomach.
OYSTER CANAPES
1 cup cream.
4 tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs.
1 tablespoonful of butter.
3 dozen stewing oysters.
Season with paprika, tiny pinch of nutmeg and salt. Boil the cream,
add bread crumbs and butter. Chop oysters fine, add seasoning. Serve
hot in pattie cups or on toast. Serve small pickles or olives. Good
dish for chafing dish.
MEAT
Every young housewife should be taught that simmering is more
effective than violent boiling, which converts water into useless
steam. Even a tough, undesirable piece of "chuck" or "pot roast" may
be made more tender and palatable by long-continued simmering than it
would be if put in rapidly boiling water and kept boiling at that
rate. Meat may be made more tender also by being marinated; that is,
allowing the meat to stand for some time in a mixture of olive oil and
vinegar before cooking it. In stewing most meats a good plan is to put
a large tablespoonful of finely-minced beef suet in the stew-pan; when
fried out, add a little butter, and when sizzling hot add the meat,
turn and sear on both sides to retain the juice in the meat, then add
a lit
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