|
N.B.—French mustard is sold ready-made in
jars, and is flavoured with tarragon, capers, ravigotte,
&c.
Onion Sauce.—Take half a
dozen large onions, peel them and boil them in a little
salted water till they are tender. Then take them out and
chop them up fine, and put them in a stew-pan with a little
milk. Thicken the sauce with a little butter and flour, or
white
roux, and season with pepper and salt. A very nice mild
onion sauce is made by using Spanish onions.
Onion Sauce,
Brown.—Slice up half a dozen good-sized onions; put
them in a frying-pan and fry them in a little butter till
they begin to get brown, but be careful not to burn them,
and should there be a few black pieces in the frying-pan,
remove them; now chop up the onions, not too finely, and put
them in a saucepan with a very little stock or
water, let them simmer till they are tender, and then
thicken the sauce with a little brown
roux, and flavour with pepper and salt.
Orange Cream Sauce for
Puddings.—Take a large ripe orange and rub a dozen
lumps of sugar on the outside of the rind and dissolve these
in a small quantity of butter
sauce, and add the juice of the orange, strained. Now
add a little cream, or half a pint of milk that has been
boiled separately, in which case the sauce will want
thickening with a little white
roux. Rubbing the sugar on the outside of the rind of
the orange gives a very strong orange flavour indeed—far
more than the juice of almost any number of oranges would
produce, so care must be taken not to overdo it. This is
what French cooks call zest of orange.
Parsley Sauce.—Blanch
and chop up sufficient parsley to make a brimming
tablespoonful when chopped. Add this to half a pint of
butter
sauce, with a little pepper, salt, and lemon juice. It
is very important to blanch the parsley, i.e.,
throw it into a little boiling water before chopping.
Pine-apple
Sauce.—Take a pine-apple, peel it, cut it up into
little pieces on a dish, taking care not to lose any of the
juice, place it in a saucepan with a very little water, just
sufficient to cover the pine-apple; let it simmer gently
until it is tender, and then add sufficient white sugar to
make the liquid almost a syrup; a teaspoonful of corn-flour,
made smooth in a little cold water, can be added; but the
sauce should be of the consistency of syrup, and the
corn-flour does away with the difficulty of making it too
sickly. The juice of half a lemon may be added, and is,
perhaps, an improvement.
|