Directions for Cookery, in its Various Branches

by Eliza Leslie

TENTH EDITION, WITH IMPROVEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY RECEIPTS.

1840.


GENERAL CONTENTS.

[PREFACE]
[INTRODUCTORY HINTS]
[Soups; including those of Fish]
[Fish; various ways of dressing]
[Shell Fish; Oysters, Lobsters, Crabs, Etc.]
[Beef; including pickling and smoking it]
[Veal]
[Mutton and Lamb]
[Pork; including Bacon, Sausages, Etc.]
[Venison; Hares, Rabbits, Etc.]
[Poultry and Game]
[Gravy and Sauces]
[Store Fish Sauces; Catchups, Etc.]
[Flavoured Vinegars;]
[Mustards & Pepper]
[Vegetables; including Indian Corn, Tomatas, Mushrooms, Etc.]
[Eggs; usual ways of dressing, including Omelets]
[Pickling]
[Sweetmeats; including Preserves and Jellies]
[Pastry and Puddings; also Pancakes, Dumplings, Custards, Etc.,]
[Syllabubs; also Ice Creams and Blanc-mange]
[Cakes; including various sweet Cakes and Gingerbread]
[Warm Cakes for Breakfast and Tea; also, Bread, Yeast, Butter, Cheese, Tea, Coffee, Etc.]
[Domestic Liquors; including home-made Beer, Wines, Shrub, Cordials, Etc.]
[Preparations for the Sick]
[Perfumery]
[Miscellaneous Receipts]
[Additional Receipts]
[Animals used as Butchers’ Meat]
[Index]

PREFACE

The success of her little book entitled “Seventy-five Receipts in Cakes, Pastry, and Sweetmeats.” has encouraged the author to attempt a larger and more miscellaneous work on the subject of cookery, comprising as far as practicable whatever is most useful in its various departments; and particularly adapted to the domestic economy of her own country. Designing it as a manual of American housewifery, she has avoided the insertion of any dishes whose ingredients cannot be procured on our side of the Atlantic, and which require for their preparation utensils that are rarely found except in Europe. Also, she has omitted every thing which may not, by the generality of tastes, be considered good of its kind, and well worth the trouble and cost of preparing.

The author has spared no pains in collecting and arranging, perhaps the greatest number of practical and original receipts that have ever appeared in a similar work; flattering herself that she has rendered them so explicit as to be easily understood, and followed, even by inexperienced cooks. The directions are given as minutely as if each receipt was “to stand alone by itself,” all references to others being avoided; except in some few instances to the one immediately preceding; it being a just cause of complaint that in some of the late cookery books, the reader, before finishing the article, is desired to search out pages and numbers in remote parts of the volume.