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Mushroom
Forcemeat.—The mushrooms after being cleaned should
be chopped up and fried in a little butter; lemon-juice
should be added before they are chopped in order to preserve
their colour. One or two hard-boiled
yolks of eggs can be added to the mixture, and the
whole rubbed through a wire sieve while hot. When the
mixture is hot it should be moist, but, of course, when it
gets cold, owing to the butter it will be hard. This
mushroom forcemeat can be used for a variety of
purposes.
Mushroom Pie.—Wash,
dry, and peel some mushrooms, and cut them into slices with
an equal quantity of cut-up potatoes. Bake these in a pie,
having first moistened the potatoes and mushrooms in a
little butter. Add pepper and salt and a small pinch of
thyme. Cover them with a little water and put some paste
over the dish in the ordinary way. It is a great
improvement, after the pie is baked, to pour in some essence
of mushrooms made from stewing the stalks and peelings in a
little water. A single onion should be put in with them.
Mushroom Pie,
Cold.—Prepare the mushrooms, potatoes, and essence
of mushroom as directed above, adding a little chopped
parsley. Bake all these in the dish before you cover with
paste, add also an extra seasoning of pepper. When the
mushrooms and potatoes are perfectly tender, strain off all
the juice or gravy, and thicken it with corn-flour; put this
back in the pie-dish and mix all well together, and pile it
up in the middle of the dish so that the centre is raised
above the edge. Let this get quite cold, then cover it with
puff-paste, and as soon as the pastry is done take it out of
the oven and let the pie get cold. This can now be cut in
slices.
Mushroom
Pudding.—Make a mixture of mushrooms, potatoes,
&c., exactly similar to that for making a pie. Place
this in a basin with only sufficient water to moisten the
ingredients, cover the basin with bread-crumbs soaked in
milk, and steam the basin in the ordinary way.
Tomatoes, Grilled.—
What is necessary is a clear fire and a gridiron in which
the bars are not too far apart. The disputed point is,
should the tomatoes be grilled whole or cut in half? This
may be considered a matter of taste, but personally we
prefer them grilled whole. Moisten the tomato in a little
oil or oiled butter, and grill them carefully, as they are
apt to break. Grilled tomatoes are very nice with plain
boiled macaroni,
or can be served up on boiled
rice.
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