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Mushroom
Fritters.—Make some mushroom
forcemeat; let it get quite cold on a dish about a
quarter of an inch thick. Cut out some small rounds, about
the size of a penny-piece. They fry better if slightly oval.
Have ready some thick batter (See BATTER). Have also ready in a
saucepan some boiling oil, which should be heated to about
350°. Place a frying-basket in the saucepan, flour the
rounds of mushroom forcemeat so as to make them perfectly
dry on the outside. Dip these pieces into the batter and
throw them into the boiling oil. The great heat of the oil
will set the batter before the mushroom forcemeat has time
to melt. Directly the batter is a nice light-brown colour,
lift them out of the boiling oil with the frying-basket, and
throw them on to a cloth to drain. Break off the outside
pieces of batter, and serve the fritters on a neatly folded
napkin on a dish surrounded by fried parsley.
The beauty of these fritters is that when
they are eaten the inside is moist, owing, of course, to the
heat having melted the forcemeat.
Tomato
Fritters.—Make some mushroom
forcemeat and spread it out as thin as possible.
Take some ripe tomatoes, cut them in slices, dip the slice
in vinegar, drain it and pepper it, and then wrap this thin
slice of tomato in a layer of mushroom forcemeat. Bring the
edges together, flour it, dip it into batter
(see BATTER),
and throw it into boiling oil as in making mushroom fritters
(see MUSHROOM
FRITTERS).
Imitation Game
Fritters.—Make some mushroom forcemeat as directed
under the heading “Mushroom
Forcemeat,” with the addition of, when you fry the
mushrooms, chop up and fry with them two heads of garlic,
and add a saltspoonful of aromatic flavouring herbs. (These,
are sold in bottles by all grocers under the name of
“Herbaceous Mixture.”) Then proceed exactly as if you were
making mushroom fritters (see MUSHROOM
FRITTERS).
Hominy
Fritters.—These are made from remains of cold
boiled hominy, cut in thin slices, which must be dipped in
batter and fried in boiling oil.
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