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Vegetable
Marrow.—Vegetable marrows must be first peeled, cut
open, the pips removed, and then thrown into boiling water;
small ones should be cut into quarters and large ones into
pieces about as big as the palm of the hand. They take from
fifteen to twenty minutes to boil before they are tender.
They should be served directly they are cooked and placed on
dry toast. Butter
sauce or white
sauce can be served with them, but is best sent to
table separate in a boat, as many persons prefer them
plain.
Vegetable Marrows,
Stuffed.—Young vegetable marrows are very nice
stuffed. They should be first peeled very slightly and then
cut, long-ways, into three zigzag slices; the pips should be
removed and the interior filled with either mushroom
forcemeat (see MUSHROOM
FORCEMEAT) or sage-and-onion stuffing made with rather
an extra quantity of bread-crumbs. The vegetable marrow
should be tied up with two separate loops of tape about a
quarter of the way from each end, and these two rings of
tape tied together with two or three separate pieces of tape
to prevent them slipping off at the ends. The forcemeat or
stuffing should be made hot before it is placed in the
marrow. The vegetable marrow should now be thrown into
boiling water and boiled till it is tender, about twenty
minutes to half an hour. Take off the tape carefully, and be
careful to place the marrow so that one half rests on the
other half, or else it will slip.
N.B.—If you place the stuffing inside cold,
the vegetable marrow will break before the inside gets hot
through.
Turnips, Boiled.—When
turnips are young they are best boiled whole. Peel them
first very thinly, and throw them into cold water till they
are ready for the saucepan. Throw them into boiling water
slightly salted. They will probably take about twenty
minutes to boil. They can be served quite plain or with any
kind of white
sauce, butter
sauce, sauce Allemande,
or Dutch
sauce. In vegetarian cookery they are perhaps best
served with some other kind of vegetable.
Turnips, Mashed.—Old
turnips are best mashed, as they are stringy. Boil them till
they get fairly tender; they will take from half an hour to
two hours, according to age; then rub them through a wire
sieve and warm up the pulp with a little milk, or still
better, cream and a little butter; add pepper and salt.
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