Since your soup and ragoût have taken more time and labor than you like to give to Monday’s dinner, make up for the loss by serving the dessert given above, sure that nobody will murmur.
Iced Coffee.
Make more coffee than usual at breakfast-time, and stronger. Add one-third as much hot milk as you have coffee, and set away. When cold, put upon ice. Serve at dessert, with cracked ice in each tumbler.
Second Week. Tuesday.
Cabbage Soup.
2 lbs. of lean beef, chopped, and the same of mutton-bones, well cracked; 1 small, firm white cabbage; 1 onion; bunch of sweet herbs; 1 cup of milk, heated, with a pinch of soda; 1 tablespoonful of butter, rubbed in one of flour; pepper and salt; 3 quarts of water.
Cook beef, onion, and bones in the water four hours, boiling slowly. Boil the cabbage in two waters; let it get cold, and shred only the white parts into rather coarse dice. Cool the soup, and take off the fat. Put over the fire with pepper and salt and the chopped herbs. Having boiled it one minute, skim, and put in the cabbage. Heat the milk in a separate vessel; stir in the floured butter; boil until it thickens, and pour into the tureen. When the cabbage-soup reaches the boil, pour it upon the milk, and stir up well.
Mock Pigeons.
Take the bone from two nice fillets of veal; flatten them with the broad side of a hatchet, and spread with a good force-meat of crumbs and chopped ham, seasoned well. Roll the meat up on this; bind into oblong rolls with soft string; lay in a dripping-pan, and pour over them two cups of your boiling soup before the cabbage goes in—or any other hot broth will do as well. Turn a pan over them and bake nearly two hours, basting well with the gravy. When done, lay upon a hot dish, while you thicken the gravy with browned flour, and season well with pepper, salt, and tomato catsup. Boil one minute, and pour part over the pigeons, the rest into a boat. Clip the strings carefully, and do not pull them hard in removing them, lest you spoil the shape of the meat.