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Mushrooms,
Fried.—When mushrooms are very small they are more
easily fried than grilled. They should be washed, dried and
peeled, placed in a frying-pan, with a little butter, pepper
and salt, and cooked till tender. They are very nice served
on toast, and the butter in which they are cooked can be
poured on the toast first, and the mushrooms arranged on the
top afterwards. A squeeze of lemon-juice is an
improvement.
Mushrooms au
gratin.—This is a very delicious dish, and is often
served as an entrée at first-class dinners. They are made
from what are known as cup mushrooms. It is best to pick
mushrooms, as far as possible, the same size, the cup being
about two inches in diameter. Peel the mushrooms very
carefully, without breaking them, cut out the stalks close
down with a spoon, scoop out the inside of the cup, so as to
make it hollow. Now peel the stalks and chop them up with
all the scooped part of the mushroom, with, supposing we are
making ten cups, a piece of onion as big as the top of the
thumb down to the first joint. To this add a brimming
teaspoonful of chopped parsley, or even a little more, a
saltspoonful of dried thyme, or half this quantity of fresh
thyme. Fry all this in a frying-pan, in a little butter. The
aroma is delicious. Then add sufficient dried bread-crumbs
that have been rubbed through a wire sieve to make the whole
into a moist paste, fill each of the cups with this mixture
so that the top is as convex as the cup of the mushroom,
having first seasoned the mixture with a little pepper,
salt, and lemon-juice. Shake some fine bread-raspings over
the top so as to make them of a nice golden-brown colour,
pour a little drop of oil into a baking-tin, place the
mushrooms in it, and bake them gently in an oven till the
cup part of the mushroom becomes soft and tender, but take
care they do not cook till they break. Now take them out
carefully with an egg-slice, and place them on a dish—a
silver dish is best for the purpose-and place some nice,
crisp, fried parsley round the edge.
Mushrooms à la
Bordelaise.—This, as the name implies, is a French
recipe. It consists of ordinary grilled
mushrooms, served in a sauce composed of oil or oiled
butter, chopped up with parsley and garlic, thickened with
the yolks of eggs.
Mushrooms à la
Provençale.—This is an Italian recipe. You must
first wash, peel, and dry the mushrooms, and then soak them
for some time in what is called a marinade, which
is another word for pickle, of oil mixed with chopped
garlic, pepper, and salt. They are then stewed in oil with
plenty of chopped parsley over rather a brisk fire. Squeeze,
a little lemon-juice over them and serve them in a dish
surrounded with a little fried or toasted bread.
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