CURRY SAUCE
Two ounces of butter, 4 ozs. onion, 1 or 2 tomatoes, ¹⁄₂ a sweet apple, 2 teaspoonfuls sweet chutney, 1 dessertspoonful curry powder, 1 dessertspoonful flour, 1 teaspoonful tarragon vinegar (or lemon-juice), ³⁄₄ pint brown vegetable stock.
Method.—Slice the onion, tomatoes, and apple and fry in the butter until the onion begins to show signs of becoming a golden colour; then add the curry powder, and draw the pan to a cooler part of the stove, and let the contents simmer for twelve minutes. At the end of the time stir in the flour, taking care no lumps form, and when it is smoothly mixed with the butter, pour in the stock gradually, and stir until the sauce has boiled and thickened, then add the chutney and tarragon vinegar, and let it simmer for half an hour, when it should be passed through a gravy strainer into a basin (rubbing the ingredients through with the back of a small wooden spoon) to be re-heated when required.
DUTCH SAUCE
Half a pint of thick white sauce, 1 raw yolk of egg, 1¹⁄₂ teaspoonfuls lemon-juice, ¹⁄₂ oz. butter.
Method.—Make the white sauce hot, ascertain that it has sufficient seasoning, and when it reaches boiling point draw the pan to the side of the stove and stir in the yolk of egg beaten up with the lemon-juice and continue to stir for a few moments until the egg has thickened, but it must not boil or it will curdle and be spoilt. Then remove the pan from the stove and stir in the butter (which should be divided into little pieces) by degrees, and if the sauce is not to be used at once, keep it hot by placing the saucepan in a larger vessel of hot water. Dutch sauce is nice with almost any kind of vegetable (including potatoes), and also with macaroni.
TOMATO AND CELERY SAUCE
Half a pound of tomatoes, 3 or 4 nice white sticks of celery, 1 oz. butter, seasoning, carmine, ¹⁄₂ pint white sauce.
Method.—Slice the tomatoes and cut the celery into small pieces; melt the butter in a saucepan, put in the vegetables, season them with salt, pepper, a very little powdered mace, and let them simmer (not fry) for ten minutes. Then add the white sauce and leave the pan where the heat is moderate until the vegetables are quite tender, but the sauce must not be allowed to boil. When it is ready, add a few drops of carmine and a squeeze of lemon-juice, and pass it either through a perforated gravy strainer or a sieve, and re-heat it carefully, letting it only just reach boiling point.