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In the case of preserved goods, tinned
fruits are even more valuable than tinned vegetables. Ripe
apricots and peaches picked fresh from the tree are expensive
luxuries that in this country can only be indulged in by the
rich, whereas, thanks to the art of preserving, we are enabled
to enjoy them all the year round. We will run briefly through a
few of the chief vegetables and fruits, and give a few hints
how to best use them. First of all—
Asparagus,
Tinned.—Place the tin in the saucepan with
sufficient cold water to cover it. Bring the water to a boil
and let it boil for five minutes; take out the tin and cut
it open round the edge, as near to the edge as possible,
otherwise you will be apt to break the asparagus in turning
it out. Drain off the liquor and serve the asparagus on
freshly made hot toast. There is much less waste as a rule
in tinned asparagus than in that freshly cut. As a rule, you
can eat nearly the whole of it.
Peas, Tinned.—Put the
tin before it is opened into cold water, bring the water to
a boil, and let it boil five minutes, or longer if the tin
is a large one. Cut open the tin at the top, pour out the
liquor, and serve the peas with a few sprigs of fresh mint,
if it can be obtained, that have been boiled for two or
three minutes. Supposing the tin to contain a pint of peas,
add while the peas are thoroughly hot a brimming
saltspoonful of finely powdered sugar, and half a
saltspoonful of salt. If the peas are to be eaten by
themselves, as is generally the case with vegetarians, add a
good-sized piece of butter.
French Beans,
Tinned.—These can be treated in exactly similar
manner to green peas, only, instead of adding mint, add a
little chopped blanched parsley; the same quantity of sugar
and salt should be added as in the case of peas. After the
butter has melted, it is a great improvement, when the beans
are eaten as a course by themselves, with bread, if the
juice of half a lemon is added.
Flageolets,
Tinned.—For this delicious vegetable, in England,
we are dependent upon tinned goods, as we cannot recall an
instance in which they can be bought freshly gathered. Warm
up the beans in the tin by placing the tin in cold water,
bringing the water to a boil, and letting it boil for five
minutes. Drain off the liquor, add a saltspoonful of sugar,
half a one of salt, and a lump of butter. Instead of butter,
you can add to each pint two tablespoonfuls of pure olive
oil. Many persons consider it a great improvement to rub the
vegetable-dish with a bead of garlic. In this case the beans
should be tossed about in the dish for a minute or two.
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