BOUQUET DE GIBIER, OR SPORTING NOSEGAY. CADEAU FOR CHRISTMAS.

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This very seasonable novelty originated with M. Soyer, “the Gastronomic Regenerator,” of the Reform Club; and, like everything which emanates from his inventive brain, is distinguished by its taste and utility. This is, indeed, a picturesque mode of keeping game, so as to make them ornamental until they become useful—at table. The lovers of “still life” pictures cannot but admire this “Bouquet;” and it is not unworthy of our painters’ attention. The several articles of game, &c., are secured between branches of laurel and other evergreens, set off with dried and coloured flowers, “everlastings,” &c. The handsome specimen we have engraved bears the following, arranged in the order here denoted:

TWO GOLDEN PLOVERS.
LEVERET.
WILD DUCK. PHEASANT.
WILD RABBIT.
GROUSE. WIDGEON.
FRENCH PARTRIDGE. ENGLISH PARTRIDGE.
WOODCOCK. TEAL.
TWO SNIPES.
TWO LARKS.

The brilliancy of the plovers and of the pheasant, and the brightness of the wild-duck, backed by the sombre green, and the whole variegated and relieved by multicoloured flowers, is really very effective.

Not many days since, M. Soyer presented one of his “Bouquets de Gibier” to Viscount Melbourne, at Brocket Hall; when his lordship admired the novelty exceedingly, as did also the noble party on a visit at Brocket.

Another “Bouquet” has been presented by M. Soyer to a lady of high fashion and beauty, if we may judge from the triplet which accompanied the offering:

Madam,
Flora having forsaken her flowers,
I quickly embraced the sport of swift Diana,
To dedicate and present this bouquet to Venus.

Count d’Orsay, the arbiter elegantiarum of our day, on the “Bouquet” being submitted to him, admired the artistical design, and suggested that Landseer would appreciate its novelty, adding, “What a beautiful trophy it would make for a sideboard or a dining-room!”

The “Bouquet,” we augur, will be popular in the approaching Christmas season; and though there is a musty old proverb about “looking at a gift-horse,” the above novelty will surely throw the old-fashioned baskets into the shade, by presenting much that is agreeable to the eye, with the proximate association of another sense of enjoyment.


Bouquet de Gibier.

OLIVE-BRANCH BETWEEN FRANCE AND ENGLAND.

A present extraordinary to the King and Queen of the French was forwarded from London to Paris on the 21st of December by the well-known Gastronomic Regenerator, M. Soyer, of the Reform Club, and was presented to their Majesties on the 24th, in the morning, at the Palace of the Tuileries. Their Majesties were so delighted with the novelty and elegance of the composition, that after a long examination the King ordered it to be carried to the apartments of her Majesty the Queen of the Belgians, who was exceedingly pleased with it, and afterwards the whole of the royal family was summoned to see this bouquet; the sight was so new and unexpected that it met with their unanimous approbation. His Majesty then observed that such a welcome and graceful present from a foreign country had never before penetrated through France to the palace of its kings. Immediately after, by the orders of his Majesty, the sporting nosegay was carried by two gentlemen porters to the council of ministers then sitting at the Tuileries, and was admired by every one. It is reported that his Majesty intends to have a similar bouquet carved in wood for ornamenting the grand sideboard of the magnificent banqueting hall of the palace. To give an idea of the composition of this splendid innovation, the following description perhaps will be interesting to the public. The length of it was about ten feet, and wide in proportion. The frame was richly covered with Christmas holly, laurels, mistletoe, and evergreen, with a great variety of winter flowers. There were twenty-two heads of game, consisting of larks, snipes, woodcocks, black peweets, teal, French and English partridges, grouse, widgeons, wild ducks, black cocks, pheasants, a leveret, a hare, and golden plovers; the interstices were lightly filled with wheat and oats, the whole ornamented with tri-coloured ribands and small flags at the top—and to give a still more pleasing effect, fancy birds of beautiful plumage, so abundant in England, were spread in every part of this magnificent nosegay.

The following letter from his Majesty the King of the French, accompanied with a beautiful pin forming a bouquet of diamonds and pearls, was sent by his Majesty’s orders to the French Ambassador, and forwarded to Monsieur Soyer at the Reform Club.

Cabinet du Roi, ChÂteau des Tuileries; 1847.

Monsieur,

Le Roi a reÇu votre ouvrage sur l’art culinaire, et le groupe de gibier dont vous lui avez fait hommage.

Je suis chargÉ, Monsieur, de vous transmettre les remercimens de sa MajestÉ pour cette double attention, et d’y joindre comme tÉmoignage de sa satisfaction, le bijou que je m’empresse de vous remettre.

Recevez je vous prie, Monsieur, mes plus parfaites salutations.

Le SecrÉtaire du Cabinet,
CAMILLE FAIN.

Monsieur Alexis Soyer.

NUMBER OF STEWPANS AND OTHER KITCHEN UTENSILS
REQUIRED IN THE KITCHENS OF WHICH I HAVE GIVEN PLANS, COMMENCING WITH THE COMPLETE BATTERIE DE CUISINE OF THE REFORM CLUB.

Utensils. Reform
Club
Kitchen.
Kitchen
of the
Wealthy.
Kitchen
at
Home.
Kitchen
of the
Bachelor.
Cottage
Kitchen.
Stewpans, the sizes fluctuating from six gallons to half a pint 89 36 12 6, 1 holding a gall. 4
Stock-pots, varying from twelve gallons to two 8 4 1 6 black saucepans
Turbot kettles, one full size, and another two sizes smaller 2 2 1 small
Long Fish-kettles, two large and two middling-sized ones 4 2 1 rather larger 1 rather wide. 1
Braising-pans, two large and two middling-sized 4 2 1 ..
Preserving-pans (copper), one large round bottome and one large flat bottomed 2 2 1 .. 1 flat
Egg bowls, one large and one middling-sized 2 2 1 1 bottomed
Baba and sponge-cake moulds 2 3 1
Large round copper pie-dishes for servants 4 2
Thick flat braising-pans with hermetic covers 6 6 2 1
SautÉpans, twenty deep, with thick bottoms, and ten others 30 12 6 2 2
Bain-marie-pans, varying from two gallons to a pint 36 18 6 2
Pie-moulds for raised pies 6 4 2 1
Jelly and charlotte moulds 24 12 4 1
Small bordure for aspic jellies 6 4 1 2
Freezing-pots, with accessories 4 2 1 1
Baking-sheets of various sizes 12 12 2 2
Gridirons 6 2 1 1
Salamanders 2 1 1 small 1 do. 1
Spoon drainers 4 2 1 1
Spits of various sizes, including two with cradles 12 6 2 2
Dripping-pans 2 1 1 1
Steam copper cases for puddings and potatoes 4 2
Round copper fruit bowls with handles 4 1 1
Sugar-pans 6 2 1 1
Soup ladles (small and cheap utensils) 18 12 4 2 1
Copper kitchen spoons, six of which are colander spoons 36 18 8 6 2
Wire baskets for frying 6 2 2 1 1
Wire sieves 6 2 1 1
Hair sieves 8 2 1 1 1
Omelette-pans 6 2 1 1 1
Small Jelly and driole moulds 36 18 12 12
Tartelette-pans 36 12 12 3
Tammies 6 4 2 2
Jelly bags 4 2 1 1
Wooden spoons 24 12 8 6 4
Paste brushes 10 4 2 2 1
Scissors 2prs. 1 1 1 1
Kitchen knives 12 6 2 2 1
Boxes of cutters for vegetables and pastry 4 4 2 2
Trivets, four common, and two for gas stoves 6 2 2 2
Meat saws, four large and two small 6 3 2, 1 small 2 2
Cutlet bats 4 2 1 1 1
Meat choppers, large 2 1 1 1
Steak-tongs, two large and two small pairs 4prs. 2 1 large 1 1
Meat-hooks 24 12 6 6 4
Rolling-pins 2 1 1 1 1
Kitchen basins 36 24 12 8 6
Small pie-dishes for fruit and meat 24 12 6 4 6
Kitchen table-cloths 24 12 8 4 2
Rubbers 8 8 4 4 2
Fish napkins 24 12 6 2 2
Pudding-cloths 18 12 4 2 2
Round towels 12 6 4 2 2

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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