Warne's model cookery and housekeeping book : containing complete instructions in household management / compiled and edited by Mary Jewry.
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106 (canvas 120)
The image contains the following text:
io6 Curing Bacon, Hams, &c.
any of the salad mixtures you prefer poured j
under, not over them. Garnish with boiled
beetroot, cucumbers, and hard-boiled eggs
cut into slices, and some vegetable flowers.
.Slices of cold poultry, or fl.akcd fish, may
be added to a summer salad, and are ex-
tremely good.
Lobster Salad,
One hen lobster; lettuces ; endive ;
mustard and cress ; radishes | beetroot;
cucumber ; some hard-boiled eggs.
Pour the salad mixture into the bowl,,
w'ash and dry the lettuces and endive, and
cut them fine ; add them to the dressing
with the pickings from the body of tic
lobster, and part of the meat from the
shell cut into small pieces. Rub the
yolks of two or three hard-boiled eggs
through a sieve, and afterwards the coral of
the lobster, then place the salad very lightly
in the bowl, and garnish it with the coral,
yolks of the hard-boiled eggs, sliced beet-
root, cucumber, radishes, and the pieces of
lobster. Place as a border hard-boiled eggs
cut across, with the delicate leaves of the
celery and endive between them.
CURING BACON, HAMS, &C.-POTTING, COLLARING,
&c.
The important art of pickling or salting
meat calls for the housekeeper’s best atten-
tion. There are many modes of doing it,
both in England and America. In England,
North and South make bacon in a different
manner. In Hampshire, Wiltshire, and Berk-
shire, they singe the hog. In Yorkshire, Lin-
colnshire, &'c., they scald the hog. Great care
must be taken in preparing the meat for salt-
ing. It must be carefully examined to see that
it is fresh and good, then wiped, sprinkled
with salt, and afterwards left to drain a few
hours before it is rubbed with the salt. The
meat will thus be thoroughly cleansed from
the blood ; which wilt prevent it from turn-
ing and tasting strong. It should then be
placed in the pickling pan and turned every
morning, r.lso it should be rubbed with the
pickle. The cover of the pickling-pan
should fit very closely and have a weight on
it to keep it down. If a large quantity of
salt meat is frequently required, the pickle
may be boiled up, skimmed well, and when
cold poured over any meat that has been
sprinkled and well drained as above
directed.
To Cure Bacon.
Time, three weeks.
472. One pound of saltpetre ; one pound
of bay salt; one gallon of coarse salt; one
pound of salprunella ; one pound of moist
sugar.
Pound the salprunella and bay salt very
fine, mix the coarse salt and the sugar w'cll
together, and rub it into your bacon, hams,
and cheeks, putting all in the same brine.
Turn and rub the bacon for a week every
day : afterwards every other day. Let it
temain in the brine three weeks, and then
Send it to be smoked or dried. Large sides
V)f bacon take a month to dry, small ones
llirec wecKs.
To Cure Hams.
473. For two large hams one pound ol
common salt; three ounces of bay salt;
tw'o ounces of saltpetre; one pound of
coarse brown sugar; one quart of stale
strong beer or ale.
Boil all the above ingredients in the
quart of beer or ale, and when cold pour it
on the hams and turn them every d.ay for a
fortnight ; then smoke them well.
To Pot Beef.
Time, three hours and a half.
474. Two pounds and a half of lean
beef ; five ounces of butter ; pepper ; salt ;
mace.
Take a piece of lean beef and free it from
the skin and gristle, put it intoacoveied
stone jar with three dessertspoonfuls*of hot
water, and stand it in a deep stewpan of
boiling water to boil slowly for nearly four
hours, taking care that the water does not
reach to the top of the jar. When done,
take it out, mince it fine, and pound it in a
mortar with a seasoning of pepper, salt,
and pounded mace. When smooth and
like a thick paste, mix in some clarified
butter and a very little of the gravy from
the jar, press it into pots, pour butter over
the tops, and tie down for use.
To Pickle Pork.
475. One-third of saltiJctre ; two-thirds
of white salt.
Some people prefer pork pickled with
salt alone (legs especially), others in the
following manner:—Put a layer of salt at
the bottom of a tub ; then mix the salt and
saltpetre beaten ; cut the pork in pieces,
rub it well with the salt, and lay it close in
the tub, with a layer of salt between everj
layer of pork till the tub is full. Have a
cover, just large enough to fit the inside of
I the tub, put it on, and lay a great weight