Oyster Cocktails Cream of Almond Soup en Tasse—Bread Sticks Celery Ripe Olives Brace of Ducks—Stuffing Olive Sauce Glazed Sweet Potatoes—"Thorn" Apples Hawaiian Salad Plum Pudding—Brandy Sauce Chocolate Cake Bon Bons—Nuts and Raisins—Fruits CafÉ Noir—Water Biscuit—Cheese OYSTER COCKTAILS 1 tablespoon fresh grated horseradish. 1 tablespoon vinegar. 2 tablespoons lemon juice. 1 tablespoon Worcestershire Sauce. 3 tablespoons tomato catsup. 1 teaspoon salt. Few drops Tobasco Sauce. Process: Mix ingredients in the order given. Chill thoroughly and pour over oyster cocktails. Place six small oysters in each cocktail glass, add sauce and serve very cold. This sauce is sufficient for six cocktails. Oyster Cocktails may be served very attractively in tomato cups. CREAM OF ALMOND SOUP 2 quarts chicken or white stock. 1½ tablespoons butter. ¾ cup blanched almonds. 2 tablespoons cornstarch. 1 cup hot cream. Salt, pepper. Few grains nutmeg. Process: Cook the butter and flour together in a sauce-pan; add gradually hot stock until of the consistency to pour; then add remaining ROAST BRACE OF DUCKS Dress and clean a brace (two) young domestic or wild ducks. Truss same as goose. If domestic ducks are used they may be stuffed. In the wild ducks place in each a head of celery; this is thought to improve their flavor. Domestic ducks should always be cooked "well done" and twice as long as wild ducks. Place the ducks on rack in dripping pan, sprinkle with salt and pepper, cover breast and legs with very thin slices of fat salt pork. Place in a hot oven and roast one and one-quarter hours, basting every five minutes (with fat in pan) for the first half hour, afterwards every ten minutes. Domestic ducks require a hotter oven than wild ducks or fowl. When tender, remove string and skewers. Place on hot serving platter, surround with Thorn Apples and serve with Olive sauce. STUFFING 2 cups cracker crumbs. 1 cup English walnut meats broken in small bits. 1 cup thick cream. ½ cup butter. 1 onion finely chopped. 1 teaspoon finely chopped parsley. ½ teaspoon celery salt. ¼ teaspoon salt. 1/8 teaspoon black pepper. Process: Crush crackers with the hands, not too fine. Add nut meats, butter melted, cream, onion and parsley; mix well with a fork; add seasonings. If stuffing appears too dry add more cream (a cup of chopped apple or celery may be added). This is sufficient stuffing for one duck. OLIVE SAUCE 4 tablespoons butter. 1 slice onion. 5½ tablespoons flour. 2 cups Brown Stock. ½ teaspoon salt. ¼ teaspoon pepper. 1 dozen olives. Process: Melt butter in sauce-pan, add onion and cook until GLAZED SWEET POTATOES Wash and pare six medium-sized sweet potatoes. Parboil ten minutes in boiling salted water; drain and cut lengthwise in halves. Arrange them in a well-buttered granite dripping pan. Make a syrup by boiling one cup sugar with one-half cup water and two tablespoons butter three or four minutes. Dip each piece of potato into syrup and arrange in dripping pan. Bake until potatoes are tender (about forty minutes) basting two or three times with remaining syrup. Oven should not be too hot as these potatoes will scorch easily. "THORN" APPLES Prepare a syrup by boiling two cups sugar and one and three-fourths cups water ten minutes. Wash, wipe, core and pare the desired number of apples (about eight for this quantity of syrup). Drop apples into syrup when pared, to prevent discoloration. Cook until tender, skimming syrup when necessary. Use a deep sauce-pan for this purpose, as apples cook better when covered with syrup. Better cook four apples at a time. Drain from syrup and fill the cavities with quince jelly and stick apples thickly with blanched and shredded almonds slightly toasted. Cut the almonds lengthwise in three pieces, then divide, making six "thorns." It is best to toast them in the oven until they are a golden brown. HAWAIIAN SALAD Arrange slices of canned Hawaiian pineapple, drained from the liquor in the can, in nests of crisp lettuce heart leaves. Pile on these Malaga grapes peeled, cut in halves lengthwise and seeds removed, mixed with an equal quantity of English walnut meats broken in pieces. Sprinkle thickly with candied cherries, cut in fine shreds or chopped. Moisten with French Dressing No. 2. FRENCH DRESSING NO. 2 ¼ teaspoon salt. ¼ teaspoon paprika. Few grains cayenne. 6 tablespoons olive oil. 2 tablespoons lemon juice or 1 tablespoon Tarragon vinegar and 1 of lemon juice. Process: Put dry ingredients in bowl, add oil, mix well, then add lemon juice slowly while stirring constantly. Chill thoroughly and use on Fruit Salad. PLUM PUDDING ½ lb. stale bread crumbs. 1 cup scalded milk. 1/3 cup soft brown sugar. 5 eggs. 1 cup raisins seeded and shredded. ¾ cup English currants. ½ cup English walnut meats chopped. 2/3 cup figs chopped fine. ½ cup citron cut in thin shreds. 2/3 cup Cottolene. ¼ cup brandy. ½ grated nutmeg. 1 teaspoon cinnamon. ½ teaspoon mace. ½ teaspoon cloves. 1½ teaspoons salt. Process: Add crumbs to milk and let soak one or more hours. Add sugar, yolks of eggs beaten very light, fruits mixed with nut meats and citron. Cream Cottolene and add to first mixture, then brandy and spices sifted together. Fold in whites of eggs beaten stiff; mix thoroughly and turn into a well-greased tube mold and steam five to six hours. Remove from mold to hot serving platter. Garnish with sprays of holly, pour around brandy, light with a taper and send to table en flambeau (in a flame). Serve with Brandy Sauce. BRANDY SAUCE ½ cup butter. 1 cup confectioners' sugar. Whites 2 eggs beaten stiff. 1/8 teaspoon salt. 2/3 cup heavy cream whipped stiff. 2 tablespoons brandy. 1 tablespoon Jamaica rum. Grating nutmeg. Process: Cream butter, add sugar gradually, stirring constantly. Place over hot water, add eggs and beat with a Gem whip until evenly blended, cool slightly and add brandy, rum and salt. Fold in cream and sprinkle with nutmeg. December
Fifth Sunday |