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Apple Sauce.—Peel say a
dozen apples; cut them into quarters; and be very careful in
removing all the core, as many a child is choked through
carelessness in this respect. Stew the apples in a little
water till they become a pulp, placing with them half a
dozen cloves and half a dozen strips of the yellow part only
of the outside of the rind of a fresh lemon of
the size and thickness of the thumb-nail; sweeten with brown
sugar, that known as Porto Rico being the most economical.
Add a small piece of butter before serving.
Arrowroot
Sauce.—Thicken half a pint of water with about a
dessertspoonful of arrowroot and sweeten it with white
sugar. The sauce can be flavoured by rubbing a few lumps of
sugar on the outside of a lemon, or with a few drops of
essence of vanilla, or with the addition of a little sherry
or spirit, the best spirit being rum. This sauce can, of
course, be coloured pink with cochineal.
Artichoke
Sauce.—Proceed exactly as if you were making
artichoke
soup, only make the purée thicker by using less liquid.
A simple artichoke sauce can be made by boiling down a few
Jerusalem artichokes to a pulp, rubbing them through a wire
sieve, and flavouring with pepper and salt.
Asparagus
Sauce.—Boil a bundle of asparagus and rub all the
green, tender part through a wire sieve, till it is a thick
pulp, flavour with a little pepper and salt, add a small
piece of butter, and a little spinach extract (vegetable
colouring sold in bottles) in order to give it a good
colour.
Bread Sauce.—Take some
dry crumb of bread, and rub through a wire sieve. The
simplest plan is to turn the wire sieve upside down on a
large sheet of paper. The bread must be stale, and stale
pieces can be put by for this purpose. Next take, say, a
pint of milk, and let it boil; then throw in the
bread-crumbs and let them boil in the milk.
This is the secret of good bread sauce. Add a dozen
peppercorns, and place a whole onion in the saucepan
containing the bread and milk, and place the saucepan beside
the fire in order to allow the bread-crumbs to swell. It
will be found that though at starting the bread sauce was
quite thin and milky, yet after a time it becomes thick.
Take out the onion, add a little piece of butter, stir it
up, and serve. A little cream is a great improvement, but is
not absolutely necessary. This sauce, though very simple,
requires care: Many persons will probably recollect having
met with bread sauce which in appearance resembled a
poultice too much to be agreeable either to the palate or
the eye.
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