CHAPTER 26. MISCELLANEOUS.

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TREATMENT OF BURNS.

Since it often happens that you burn yourself while cooking and baking, I shall give some methods of treating the wounds.

There are various kinds of burns:

1. When the surface is burned and a burning pain sets in, make cold water applications or compresses of raw grated potatoes or lime water.

2. When the burn causes swelling and blisters, put on cotton batting dipped in olive oil or the following mixture: equal parts of lime water and linseed oil and a little thymol. Shake it well before using.

3. When the heat has destroyed the lower skin and the epidermis rises in large blisters filled with a dark, bloody fluid. When the patient has fever and nervous symptoms.

4. When the skin is completely destroyed and black, and the patient has fever.

As a remedy for the last two cases use a mixture of carbolic acid and water and apply it with cotton batting. For healing use white vaseline, 20 grams; provence oil, 10 grams; glycerine, 50 grams; mix well and spread on the wounds.

MEAT CARVING.

In order to carve meat properly it is necessary to know something about the anatomy of meat, muscles, tendons and the skeleton.

The simplest carving is on meat without bones, as beef steak and roast meat. Hold the meat with a large fork and cut across the grain or fiber in not too thin slices. The knife must be held a little on the slant.

Fricandeau of veal or fillet both have all the fibers running in the same direction, so find out how they run and cut against the grain or across the fiber.

For roast beef without bones the same must be observed. Mark carefully that the vertebrae in the roast are chopped in two. Cut thin slices from the whole width of the roast, fat and all, and pour a little of the drippings over to make them juicy.

Leg of veal, mutton or game is carved on one side, first beginning at the chump end of loin. Perpendicular and rather thick slices are carved.

The English way is to cut horizontal and very thin slices.

Venison is carved in slanting slices to keep the larded pieces together.

In carving ham you begin at the middle and cut around the bone.

To carve a saddle of lamb or veal or other meat requires some skill. Hold the meat with the fork and make deep cuts along the backbone, then place the knife in from below and shove it forward. In this way you carve the meat from the ribs. Make slanting slices.

It is advisable to carve poultry in the kitchen.

CARVING OF POULTRY IN THE KITCHEN.

When poultry is the main course you cut larger pieces than if it were served in ragout, or with vegetables or as a side dish.

Small birds, like quail or larks are served whole on toast and are not carved.

Partridges, hazelhens, spring chickens and pigeons are cut in half when they are the main course. With a poultry shears they are cut lengthwise and the two halves placed together again and covered with a hot gravy. When they are a side dish, they are quartered and the backbones cut out. When they are fried, the breast is carved into 3 parts.

Turkeys, ducks, geese, chickens, pheasants and woodcocks when fried are carved in the same way. The drumsticks or legs are cut around the hip joint and then the joint separated. The wings with some breast meat are cut off. The meat on the breast is carved from either side of the breastbone and cut into desirable pieces. When serving, place them together again to make the breast appear whole. The legs are also cut into two or three pieces and replaced before serving.

TIME REQUIRED FOR BROILING, OR FOR FRYING IN A PAN WITH BUTTER, FAT OR BOTH, SMALL CUTS OF MEAT.

Time
minutes.
Turn
times.
1 loin beef steak, ½ lb. 6 4
1 chopped beef steak, ¼ lb. 6 5
1 round steak, ¼ inch slices 2 2
1 round steak, 1 inch slices 7 6
1 veal steak from leg, 1 lb. in ¾ inch slices 12 6
1 Vienna schnitzel, ¼ lb., breaded 6 2
1 breaded veal cutlet, ¼ lb. 6 2
1 lamb chop, ? lb. 2 2
1 breaded pork chop, ¼ lb. 8 4
1 cutlet from leg of venison, ? lb. 4 4
1 breaded oyster 1 1
1 meat ball, ? lb., 1 inch thick 6 4

TIME REQUIRED FOR MEATS ON THE STOVE OR IN THE OVEN.

Pounds. Hours.
Beef rib roast 4
Roast beef, rolled 4
Pot roast 5
Sour roast (Sauerbraten) 5 2½–3
Leg of veal 5 2
Filled breast of veal 4 1½–2
Saddle of veal 4 1
Leg of lamb
Saddle of lamb 4 1
Young chicken 2 ½
Young chicken 3–4 ¾
Older chicken 4
Young turkey 10 2
Older turkey 10 3
Young capon
Older capon 2
Ham 10 4
Roast pork 5 3
Pork tenderloin 1 ?
1 squab filled .. 1
1 duck 5 2
1 fat goose filled 10 2¼–2½
1 young goose 8

ROASTING.

Roasting means the rapid confining of the meat’s juices by coagulating the albumen in the surface tissues, the slow changing of the outer layers into a brown palatable crust, dissolving of the natural fats of the meat, changing the albumen gradually to a semi-fluid form and loosening and breaking up the fibers by steam generated in the mass of the meat. Roasting may be done on a stove in a pan, or over the open fire on a spit, or in an oven.

ROASTING IN THE PAN—FRYING.

Heat a clean pan, put in the fat of the meat or butter and heat it; the fat must be steaming and the butter have a light brown color before the meat is put into the pan. Fat and butter mixed may also be used.

Beef steak, veal, mutton or pork chops, liver, pork or veal steak, etc., are cut into uniformly thick slices; the time for frying is estimated according to the average weight of the pieces. Do not salt too soon as this will draw out the juice. Breading must be done immediately before frying, otherwise the juices of the meat will be drawn out and the breading will not hold.

Do not leave meat on boards, as the juices will be absorbed by the wood; it is better to put meat on china. The pieces of meat, the largest first are placed in the hot fat with a cake turner, not with a fork, and take note of the time when beginning. Never put so much meat into the pan at one time as to cool the fat and stop its sizzling. After every three pieces stop long enough to give the fat a chance to heat up.

When several pieces, of meat are in the pan, they must be turned in the order in which they were put in, baste frequently with the fat or butter in the pan and turn often.

When done, the meat must be well browned but not hard on the outside, and be reddish and tender inside. Stabbing the meat with a fork is not advisable for two reasons. In the first place the juice will run out and the meat will be dry, and then the meat will begin to stew in the juice and the temperature of the fat will be reduced, the meat will not turn brown; breaded meat loses the breading or this will be soft. Washed meat must be well dried with a clean cloth before breading. When fried meat is pale and colorless, it has been either fried in too low a temperature or was stabbed with a fork or was not well dried before frying.

BROILING.

Flat pieces of meat only are suitable for broiling, the fire must be a fairly hot one, all coals aglowing. The broiler is greased with a bit of bacon or suet and heated over the fire. Lay on the pounded slices of meat and as soon as the same begins to blister, turn with a cake turner. The meat must be rich and not too lean. The meat is seasoned after broiling and hot butter may be poured over it before serving.

ROASTING IN THE OVEN.

In Germany roasts made in the oven are preferred on account of the desired gravies.

Roast beef, fillet of beef, mutton, game and small birds require comparatively little time for roasting, but a uniformly hot oven.

Veal, lamb, turkey and goose roasts require a longer time but only a moderate heat. For roasting use only meats from full-grown, but not old, animals. The cellular walls of the muscle tissues must be still tender and filled with juice. In older animals the tissues become harder and less juicy and such meat is better suited for stewing than for roasting. Meats for roasting should be 2 to 3 days old and ought to be slightly pounded.

FLOUR.

Good nutritive flour has a yellowish tinge on account of the nutritive gluten contained therein; flour must not be gray, for this color denotes impurities. The whiter the flour the larger is the proportion of starch and smaller the proportion of albuminous substances. To test flour, put some of it on a bluish white sheet of paper, where color, finish and grain can be distinguished.

The finest brands of flour have less albumen than others, because this is distributed near the outer shell, which is removed. Good flour possesses a certain degree of cohesiveness which can be observed when pressing some of it in the hand; poor flour acts like dust.

Flour made of grain not thoroughly seasoned is not well adapted for gravies and baking. Adulterations and mixtures of good and poor flour are easily detected in cooking and baking as the gravies are thinner and cakes are liable to fall.

To keep large quantities of flour, the same must be placed high in a covered wooden box in an airy place, so that the moisture of the floor and air which is deleterious, may not affect it. Flour must turned and sifted often.

YEAST.

Compressed yeast is the best to use; it must be fresh and to obtain the best results in baking, the same must have an odor of fine brandy or fruit and not smell cheesy or sour. Yeast must have a yellowish white color, must be moist and break up in lumps, not like dust. To retain activity, yeast must not be subjected to heat or great cold.

To obtain the best results in baking, the yeast needs careful attention, drafts must be avoided and the baking room must be warm.

NOTICE.

Wherever the use of wine in recipes is prescribed and cannot be obtained, take Ginger Ale.

Weights and Measures Most Commonly Used in the Art of Cooking.

EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES.

COPYRIGHT 1922, BY C N. CASPAR CO . MILWAUKEE. WIS.

Note—The Metric System is used in all civilized countries except the United States and Great Britain and has also in the Art of Cooking great advantages compared with the out-of-date Weights and Measures used in the United States.

For practical purposes, consider one kilogram 2 Pounds U.S. and one liter = Quart U.S.

The following conversion tables present a practical selection of Weights and Measures most commonly used in Europe and the United States.

The sign * means approximately.

1 Kilogram (kg.) = 1000 Gram = *2 Pounds (United States)
½ Kilogram = 500 Gram = *1 Pound (United States)
1 German Pound = 500 Gram = *1 Pound (United States)
1 Liter (l.) = 1 Quart (qt.) = *8 Jelly glasses (medium)
½ Liter = 1 Pint (pt.)
1 Deciliter (dl.) = 1 Gill (gi.) = Vol. of 1¾ Diam. by 3 in. high.

THEREFORE:

1 Kilogram or Kilo = *2 Pounds (United States)
500 Gram = *1 Pound (United States)
250 Gram = *½ Pound (United States)
125 Gram = *¼ Pound (United States)

POPULAR MEASURES:

Rice, Farina, Barley, Starch, Sugar
2 Gram = *1 Thimble full
4 Gram = *1 Teaspoon struck
6 Gram = *1 Teaspoon heaped
25 Gram = *1 Tablespoon struck
30 Gram = *1 Tablespoon heaped
50 to 60 Gram butter = *1 Tablespoon well-rounded (Eidick = size of an egg)
¼ Pound {Metric or Unit. States} Flour = *2 Teacups (small cups)
¼ Pound {Metric or Unit. States} Raisins Almonds = *1½ Teacups
1 German Pound (Metric) = *1 Pound 1½ Ounces (United States)
1 German Pound = *1? U.S. Pounds
1 United States Pound = *? German Pounds = 16 Ounces

GRAM AND OUNCES COMPARED

United States Metric
1 Ounce 28 Grams
2 Ounces 57 Grams
3 Ounces 85 Grams
4 Ounces 113 Grams
5 Ounces 142 Grams
6 Ounces 170 Grams
7 Ounces 198 Grams
8 Ounces 227 Grams
9 Ounces 255 Grams
10 Ounces 283 Grams
11 Ounces 312 Grams
12 Ounces 340 Grams
13 Ounces 369 Grams
14 Ounces 397 Grams
15 Ounces 425 Grams
16 Ounces 454 Grams
Gram Ounces Dram
1 1/32 ½
2 1/16 1
3 3/32
4 1/8 2
5 5/32
6 3/16 3
7 7/32
8 1/4 4
9 9/32
10 5/16 5
Kilogram Pounds Ounces
1 2 3
2 4 7
3 6 10
4 8 13
5 11
10 22

WEIGHTS (old and new) USED PARTICULARLY IN SOUTHERN GERMANY (INCLUDING AUSTRIA)

1 Vienna Pound = 32 Loth
1 Vienna Pound = 56 Deka = 560 Gram
1 Vienna Loth = 17½ Gram
1 Vienna Loth = ? Ounce
1 Deka (Dekagram) = 10 Gram
1 Deka = *? Ounce

1 Kilogram (kg.) = 1000 Gram = 2 German Pounds (Metric) = 1¾ Vienna Pounds

1 Vienna Pound = 560 Gram = 1? German Pounds @ 500 Gram = *1¼ Pounds (United States)

1 German Pound (Metric) = 500 Gram = ? Vienna Pounds = *1? United States Pounds

1 Kilogram or Kilo = 100 Deka (Dekagram)
1 Liter (l.) = 10 Deciliter
1 Deciliter (dl.) = 10 Centiliter = ¼ Pint
1 Tablespoon struck = 1 Centiliter
1 Deka = *10 Gram = *3/8 Ounces = 6 Dram
1 Loth = *17½ Gram = *5/8 Ounces = 10 Dram
1 Gram = = *1/32 Ounce = ½ Dram

GRAM AND OUNCES COMPARED

OLD METRIC United States
Loth Deka & Gram Gram Lb. Ounces
1 1 17½ ?
2 3 5 35
3 5 52½ 1?
4 7 70
5 8 87½ 3?
6 10 5 105
7 12 122½ 4?
8 14 140 5
9 15 157½ 5?
10 17 5 175
11 19 191½ 6?
12 21 210
13 22 227½ 8?
14 24 5 245
15 26 262½ 9?
16 28 280 10
17 29 297½ 10?
18 31 5 315 11¼
19 33 332½ 11?
20 35 350 12½
21 36 367½ 13?
22 38 5 385 13¾
23 40 402½ 14?
24 42 420 15
25 43 437½ 15?
26 45 5 455 1 ¼
27 47 472½ 1 ?
28 49 490 1
29 50 507½ 1 2?
30 52 5 525 1
31 54 542½ 1 3?
32 56 560 1 4

GRAM AND OUNCES COMPARED

U.S.
Ounces
Metric
Gram
? 4
¼ 7
? 11
½ 14
? 18
¾ 22
? 25
1 28

DRY MEASURES

TEASPOON and TABLESPOON

1 Teaspoon Sugar—heaped = *1 Ounce
1 Tablespoon [Rice, Farina, Sugar, Flour, Starch] heaped = *1 Ounce
1 Tablespoon Butter well-rounded = *1¾ Ounces

CUP OR GLASS (medium)

1 Cup or Glass (medium) Sugar = *1 Pound
2½ Cup or Glass (medium) Sugar—pulverized = *1 Pound
3 Cup or Glass (medium) Farina = *1 Pound
3½ Cup or Glass (medium) Flour (wheat) = *1 Pound
2 Cup or Glass (medium) Butter = *1 Pound

PINT:

1 Pint Sugar = *1 Pound
1½ Pint Flour (wheat) = *1 Pound

UNITED STATES MEASURES

1 Gill (gil.) = ¼ Pint = cubic inches = 0.1376 Liter
1 Pint (pt.) = ½ Quart = 33? cubic inches = 0.5506 Liter
1 Quart (qt.) = 2 Pints = 67? cubic inches = 1.1012 Liter
1 Peck (pk.) = 8 Quarts = 537? cubic inches = 8.8100 Liter
1 Bushel (bu.) = 4 Pecks = 2150 7/16 cubic inches = 36.3477 Liter
1 Gallon (gal.) = .. = 268? cubic inches

NOTE:—Dry Measures are about ? larger than liquid measures.

1 Bushel = 4 Pk.;
1 Bushel, heaped = 5 Pk.;
4 Bushel, heaped = 5 Bu., struck

LIQUID MEASURES

UNITED STATES MEASURES

1 Gill (gi.) = ¼ Pint = 7 1/32 cu. in. = 0.1183 Liter
1 Pint (pt.) = ½ Quart = 4 Gills = 28? cu. in = 0.473 Liter
1 Quart (qt.) = 2 Pints = 8 Gills = 57¾ cu. in. = 0.946 Liter
1 Gallon (gal.) = 4 Quarts = 8 Pints = 231 cu. in. = 3.785 Liter

1 Liter = 10 Deciliter = 100 Centiliter = 1000 Milliliter

1 Liter = 0.908 Dry Quart = 1.0567 Liquid Quart

1 Dry Quart = 1? Liquid Quart

1 Liquid Quart = ? Dry Quart

OLD GERMAN WEIGHTS AND MEASURES (After 1834)

1 Zollpfund (German Pound) = 30 Loth = 500 Gram = *17½ Ounces = *1 Pound 1½ oz.

1 Loth = 10 Quentchen = 16.66 Gram = *½ Ounce

1 Quentchen = 1.66 Gram = *1/20 Ounce

1 Quentchen = 1 Thimblefull

Southern Germany, including Austria

1 Vienna Pound = 32 Loth = 560 Gram = *1¼ Pound (U.S.)

1 Loth (Vienna) = 17½ Gram = *? Ounce (U.S.)

1 Vienna Pound = 56 Deka

1 Deka (Dekagram) = 10 Gram

1 Neuloth = 4 Vienna Loth = 7 Deka = *2½ Ounces (U.S.)

1 Unze (German Ounce) = 1/16 German Pound (Metric) = *1/12 Troy Pound = *30 Gram = *1 Ounce (U.S.)

1 German Pound (Zollpfund) = ? Vienna Pound

1 Vienna Pound = 1? German Pound

1 Scheffel = 16 Metzen (Prussia, Saxony) = 6 Metzen (Bavaria) = 53 liter = *1½ Bushels (U.S.)

1 Metze = *3½ Liter = 3 Quarts (U.S.)

1 Mass = 1 Quart, Quartier = 15/16 Liter = 1 Quart (U.S.)

1 Schoppen= ½ Liter = *1 Pint (U.S.)

1 NÖssel = 1 TÖpfchen = ½ Kanne = ½ Liter = *1 Pint (U.S.)

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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