Warne's model cookery and housekeeping book : containing complete instructions in household management / compiled and edited by Mary Jewry.
18/177

9 (canvas 19)
The image contains the following text:
diem in a basin of water, and see if they lie
on their side, down in it. If the egg turns
upon its end it is bad ; if it lies obliquely, it
is only not quite fresh, but may do for pud-
dings, &c.
M. Soycr tells us that the "safest way is
to hold them up to the light, forming afocus
with your hand ; should the shell be coi'ered
with small dark spots they are very doubt-
ful.” . . . " If, however, in looking at them
you see no transparency in the shells, you
may be sure they are rotten and only fit to
be thrown away. The most precise way is
to look at them by the light of a candle ; if
quite fresh there are no spots upon the shells,
and they have a brilliant light yellow tint.”
Eggs to be preserved for use should be
quite fresh from the nest.
To Choose Vegetables.
Take care that they are fresh looking and
crisp.
Potatoes.— We think the best are the
walnut-leaf kidney for summer and the re-
gents for winter use. But tastes differ so
much with regard to potatoes that we can
only advise buying them of the best and
most respectable dealers.
To Choose Apples.
In choosing apples, be guided by the
weight; the heaviest are the best, and those
should always be selected which, on being
pressed by the thumb, yield to it with a
slight crackling noise. Prefer large apples
to small, for waste is saved in peeling and
coring them. '
Apples should be kept on dry straw in a
dty place, and pears hung up by the stalk.
The Store-Koom.
Every lady should have a small closet for
her stores if she has not a regular store-
room. Groceries should always be bought
in quantities, if possible ; thus the turn of
the scale and the weight of paper, &c.,
is saved. At certain seasons of the year
some articles may be bought cheaper than
at others. Advantage should be taken of
any fall in the market.
A book should be kept in the store-room
to enter the date when each store is bought,
and at what price.
The store-room should be very dry, and
furnished with drawers, shelves, and nails
with a few little nets suspended from them
for hanging lemons in. It should contain
also earthenware jars for sugars, and tins
for keeping tea, coffee, and biscuits. The
large or small tins in which biscuits are sold
should be retained for the.se uses. Jams,
pickles, and preserves should be kept in the
coolest part of the room or closet. Coffee
should not be bought in large quantities, be-
cause it soon loses its flavour; unless, indeed,
it is roasted at home, which is a very economi-
cal plan foiTarge families. It can be bought
very cheaply unroasted ; if purchased by the
twenty-eight pounds it can be had at one
shilling per pound ; and there is a roaster
(peculiar to Ireland) which is turned over
the fire like a mop, that any one can use
with ease, to prepare it whenever required.
Loaf sugar should be very white, close,
heavy, and glittering; it is economy to buy
the best, as the more refined the sugar is,
the less the quantity required for sweetening.
Moist or brown sugar should have a
crystalline, sparkling look, and should not
be too powdery or sandlike.
Tallow candles should be bought in large
quantities if possible, and purchased in the
winter, as they keep best when made in cold
weather. They should be kept several
months in a cool place before they are used.
Soap should be bought by the hundred
weight for cheapness, and kept long before
it is used. It should be cut in pieces fit for
use, and then put in a drawer to dry and
harden slowly, without being exposed to the
air ; for if it were to dry quickly it would be
likely to break when used. Mottled soap is
the most economical; the best yellow soap
melts much more rapidly in water. Soft
soap for washing linen is a saving of half
the quantity; therefore it is economical,
though dearer in price than hard soap.
Soda, by softening the water, saves soap.
Starch should be left in a warm, dry place.
Sugar, sweetmeats, and salt must all be kept
very dry.
Rice, tapioca, sago, &c., should be kept
close oovered, or they will get insects in
them ; it is better not to have large supplies
of these articles.
Buy lemons in June or July when they are
freshly imported, and hang them in separate
nets, for if they touch they will spoil.
Onions, shallots, and garlic should be
hung in ropes from a ceiling in an out-house
[not in the store-room) ; and parsley, basil,
savory, knotted marjoram, and thyme should
be dried and hung up in paper bags, each
bag containing only one description of herb.
They should be dried in the wind and not
in the sun, and when ordered in a receipt
sliould be cautiously used, as a prepon-
derance of one flavour in any seasoning
spoils it.
When oranges or lemons are squeezed for
juice, chop down the peel, put it in small
pots and tic it down for use.
Vegetables will keep best on a stoix: floor,
out of the air.