Better Meals for Less Money
Copyright, 1917,
HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
With the steadily increasing cost of all staple foods the need of intelligent buying, cooking, and serving is greater than ever before: more money must be spent for food, or more consideration must be given to selecting and using it. For those who would continue to serve their households well, and whose allowance for food has not kept pace with prices, there is only one alternative, and that is, to use more of the cheaper foods, and to prepare and combine them so skilfully that economy shall not be a hardship. Good meals depend not so much upon expensive material as upon care and good judgment in the use of ordinary material. The time-worn boarding-house jokes about prunes and hash mean simply that these foods, in themselves excellent, are poorly prepared and too frequently served.
It is the plan of this book to include a variety of (1) recipes which require only a small amount of meat; (2) recipes for vegetable dishes which can take the place of meat; (3) recipes for the economical use of cereals, dairy products, and other common inexpensive foods; (4) recipes for breads, cakes, and desserts requiring only a small amount of butter and eggs; and (5) recipes for a few relishes, condiments, and other accessories which lend variety and interest. The General Suggestions for Economy (Chapter I) are not all new, but are liable, through disuse, to be forgotten by the present generation. Spasmodic economy counts for little in the long run; only systematic and continued watchfulness is really worth while.
Economy, however, ought not to necessitate the total elimination of one's favorite cuts of steak, nor all of the little luxuries, because by the skilful planning of the majority of the meals the occasional use of these luxuries can be made possible.
This book is not intended as a complete guide to cookery; it presupposes an elementary knowledge of the care and preparation of food.
The study of Tables D and E in the Appendix is especially recommended as an aid to the better understanding of food values.
Marietta McPherson Greenough
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MARY GREEN
PREFACE
CONTENTS
GENERAL SUGGESTIONS FOR ECONOMY
EGGS
CANDIES
SPECIAL NOTICE
COMMON WAYS OF COOKING FOOD
APPETIZERS AND RELISHES
BEVERAGES
SOUPS WITHOUT MEAT
SOUPS AND STEWS WITH MEAT OR FISH
CHOWDERS
WARMED-OVER FISH
SALT AND SMOKED FISH
WARMED-OVER MEATS
SAUCES AND STUFFINGS FOR FISH AND MEATS
EGGS
CHEESE AND NUTS
CEREALS, MACARONI, AND RICE
SALADS AND SALAD DRESSINGS
YEAST BREADS, MUFFINS, AND ROLLS
WITHOUT BAKING POWDER OR YEAST
SHORTCAKES AND ROULETTES
SANDWICHES AND TOASTS
GRIDDLE CAKES, WAFFLES, AND SIRUPS
ICINGS AND FILLINGS
HOT DESSERTS
COLD DESSERTS
FROZEN DESSERTS
SAUCES FOR DESSERTS
PASTRIES
CANDIES
APPENDIX
BAKING
BOILING
BROILING
FRYING
WHAT MEN SHOULD WEIGH
WHAT WOMEN SHOULD WEIGH
FOOTNOTES: