Cut the leaves from the stems, and cook twenty minutes in boiling, salted water. Drain and chop very fine upon a board or chopping-tray. Return to the fire with a good spoonful of butter, a teaspoonful of sugar; salt and pepper to taste. Heat, stirring constantly and beat in the yolks of two hard-boiled eggs, rubbed to a fine powder. When well mixed, turn the spinach into a deep dish and garnish with a chain of sliced whites laid on top.
An Ambushed Trifle.
- A round, stale sponge-cake.
- 1 pint of milk.
- 1 teaspoonful of corn-starch.
- 1 cup of sweet jelly or jam.
- 3 eggs.
- Vanilla flavoring.
- 2 tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar.
- A little salt.
Cut the top carefully from the cake in one piece. Scoop out the inside of the loaf, leaving side-walls and bottom an inch thick. Coat these with the jelly. Heat the milk; beat eggs and sugar, with the cake-crumbs, and pour on the hot milk. Stir over the fire until thick, and add the corn-starch wet up with cold milk. Cook one minute and turn out. When cold, flavor and fill the cake with it. Coat the inside of the lid with jelly, and fit into its place; brush the whole cake with white of egg, sift powdered sugar over it, and set in a cool, dry place until wanted.
Third Week. Saturday.
Clam Soup.
Strain the liquor from the clams, add one-third as much water, bring to a slow boil, skim and strain. Then put in the clams, chopped, with pepper and salt. Stew half an hour, and stir in two great spoonfuls of butter rolled in cracker-dust, one teaspoonful essence of celery (Colgate’s), and the juice of a lemon. Simmer ten minutes, have ready in your tureen a cup of scalding milk, slightly salted. Pour upon this the soup, stirring up well.
Beefsteak.
Cook according to receipt given on Thursday of Second Week in this month. If you use the “Vertical Broiler,” manufactured by the Dover Stamping Company, 88 North Street, Boston, you will save every drop of gravy, and be spared the trouble of watching and turning the steak.—See Familiar Talk, “Touching Saucepans.”