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To use the Stove in the open air, it will be
I necessary to liave about ten feet of peqaen-
I dicular pipe, to ensure a proper drauglit.
Economy in the use of fuel is not to be
•neglected by the housekeeper. Cinders
. should be carefully sifted. The grate (if the
. ordinary one alone be possessed) sliould be
.-screwed in as soon as tlie fire for cooking is
no longer required. The fire at the back of
the open range may then be made of small
coals, wetted and left to cake. Cinders
may be used for ironing stoves, and for
heating ovens.
The Cottager’s Stove will be found an
economical assistant to the common open
range in small kitchens.
Ordin.ary Jelly Moulds.
Plain Directions for Eoasting, &c.
How to Roast.—Roasting meat, though
cone of the commonest modes of dressing it,
^ is by no means an easy task. Roast meat is
: too often sent to table nearly raw, or dried up
: till there is scarcely any gravy in it. Now
fgoorf roasting consists in dressing the joint
thcr jughly, and yet retaining its juices in it.
The cook should prepare her fire some
little time before she puts the meat down.
The grate should be let out sufficiently wide
; to take in the whole size of the joint, with a
: margin to spare on each side, and the fire
should be so good as not to require making
up during the time the joint is roasting ; it
=should be sufficiently large to be of an equal
! strength all the time the meat is dressing,
aided by a large coal put on the top of it
(occasionally. A great deal of the success in
: roasting will depend on the heat and good-
• ness of the fire. Begin roasting by placing
: the meat at some distance from the fire
(about eighteen inches), and baste it from
the first. When it is half done, move it
.gradually nearer to the fire for it to be well
browned. If the meat were to be put close
to the fire at first, it would dry up, and the
outside would be dressed before the heat had
penetrated the mass ; the juices being thus
■shut in, the joint would be under-dressed.
Some persons prefer meat roasted very
slowly. That method is expensive, because
it requires a large fire to be kept up for a
length of time ; and also, unless done by a
cook who understands her business well,
and who makes afire fit for it, the meat is apt
to get sodden. We need scarcely say that
the meat screen should be plaeccl behind it
from the first of its being put down.
Cover the fat of veal or lamb with apiece
of paper tied on with twine.
Baste the meat very frecjuently, for the
Jelly Bag, used for
Straining Jelly.
more it is basted the
better it will eat.
When it is nearly
done, the paper
over the fat maybe
removed, and the joint lightly dredged with
flour, in order to give it a savoury brown
appearanee called frothing. Sprinkle a very
little salt on it also ; but not till it is just
ready to dish up, as salt draws out the
gravy.
The usual time allowed for roasting is a
quarter of an hour or twenty minutes for
each pound of meat. But this rule does
not always answer. Meat fresh killed takes
longer to roast than when it has been kept
long ; and in warm weather it takes less
time than in eold. Brown meats require
less time than white meats do. In frosty
weather, it is better to lay the joint before
the fire to thaw before it is put on the spit,
as, if frozen, it will be impossible to calculate
the time required for dressing it, and in fact
it will never be dressed through. The eook
should always be eareful that the spit, and
also the hook used in the bottle-jaek, be
wiped before they are used. She should
also be eareful how she hangs the meat, so
as to avoid disfiguring it by running the spit
through the prime parts.
Cradle spits are much the best for large
kitehens ; for small families, the bottle-jack
in a tinned screen docs very well, or, belter
still, the improved spring-jack and roaster.
Let the butcher chop the joints of ncckf
and loins of mutton and Iamb before they
arc dressed, or they cannot be well sepa-
rated by the carver when they are sent Co
table.
When the roast meat has been Jaken up),
the fat which has dripped from it into the
pan should be poured intp ti basin pre-