Jugged Soup.

Early in the day put on the cracked bones from which you have cut the cold mutton, with refuse bits of skin, crisped meat, etc., into a soup-pot with three quarts of water, and boil at the back of the range down to two quarts. Strain; let the liquid cool to throw up the fat, and remove this. Have ready in a stone jar, with a top, six parboiled potatoes, sliced, laid upon slices of streaked pork, cut very thin; upon this a sliced onion; next, three sliced tomatoes; then a sliced turnip; on this a cupful of green peas; three more tomatoes; then a quarter-cup of raw rice; cover this with a grated carrot, and this with another layer of sliced pork. Sprinkle a little salt and pepper, and a few dots of butter upon each layer of vegetables, and put upon the pork some chopped sweet herbs. Pour the cooled broth over all; put on the jar lid, with a paste of flour and water around the edge to exclude the air and keep in the steam, and set in a pan of boiling water in the oven. Leave it there as long as possible—four hours at the least. Pour into the tureen without further preparation.