|
Eggs and
Cucumber.—Peel and slice up two or three little
cucumbers of the size generally sold on a barrow at a penny
each. Put these with two or three ounces of butter in a
stew-pan, and three small onions about the size of the top
of the thumb, chopped very fine; fry these and add a
dessertspoonful of vinegar. When the cucumber is tender, and
a little time has been allowed for the vinegar to evaporate,
add six hard-boiled
eggs, cut into slices; make these very hot and serve.
Pepper and salt must be added.
Eggs with
Cheese.—Take a quarter of a pound of grated cheese
(the cheese should be dry and white), melt this cheese
gently in a stew-pan over the fire, with a little bit of
butter about as big as the thumb, in order to assist the
cheese in melting. Mix with it a brimming teaspoonful of
chopped parsley, two or three tiny spring onions, chopped
very fine, and about a quarter of a small grated nutmeg.
When the cheese is melted, add six beaten-up eggs, and stir
the whole together till they are set. Fried or toasted bread
should be served round the edge of the dish.
Little Eggs for
Garnishing.—This is a nice dish when you require a
lot of white of eggs for other purposes, such as iceing a
wedding-cake, or making light vanilla or almond
biscuits.
Take six hard-boiled yolks, powder them,
flavour with a little pepper and salt, and mix in three raw
yolks; mix this well together, and roll them into shapes like
very small sausages, pointed at each end like a foreign cigar.
Flour these on the outside, and throw them into boiling water.
These can be used for garnishing purposes for the vast majority
of vegetarian dishes. They can be flavoured if wished with
grated nutmeg, chopped parsley, and a few savoury herbs.
Omelets.—It is a strange
fact, but not the less true, that to get a well-made omelet
in a private house in this country is the exception and not
the rule. A few general remarks on making omelets will, we
hope, not be out of place in writing a book on an
exceptional style of cookery, in which omelets should play a
most important part.
First of all, we require an omelet-pan, and
for this purpose the cheaper the frying-pan the better. The
best omelet-pan of all is a copper one, tinned inside. Copper
conveys heat quicker than almost any other metal; consequently,
if we use an ordinary frying-pan, the thinner it is the quicker
will heat be conveyed.
|