Soak the bread in the milk; put over the fire in a farina-kettle, and stir to a boil. When thick and smooth, stir in the butter, the sugar, and the cocoa. Take from the fire, pour out; beat two minutes and whip in the beaten yolks, then the whites, which should have been beaten stiff. Put into a buttered mould, set in a pan of hot water and bake forty-five minutes in a moderate oven. Turn out and eat with powdered sugar.
First Week. Friday.
Milk Soup.
1 quart of milk and the same of water; 2 onions; 2 turnips; 2 stalks of celery; 1 teaspoonful of sugar—a pinch of soda in the milk; 2 tablespoonfuls of corn-starch wet up in cold water; pepper and salt; dice of fried bread; two tablespoonfuls of butter.
Boil chopped onions, turnips and celery in the water until soft enough to be pulped through the colander. Do this, season, add the water in which they were cooked, the milk, and when the soup boils, the corn-starch. At last, stir in the butter a little at a time, to prevent oiling. Simmer five minutes, and pour upon the fried bread in the tureen.
Ragoût of Duck.
Clean and wash a duck; put into the dripping-pan, with a large cupful of boiling water, and roast, basting often, half an hour. Meanwhile, boil the giblets in a pint of water. Take up the duck and joint as for fricassee. Put into a saucepan with the gravy from the dripping-pan and the water in which the giblets were boiled; add an onion stuck with cloves; a little salt and pepper. Cover and stew gently an hour and a half. Take up the duck and keep hot upon a chafing-dish. Strain the gravy; stir in a tablespoonful of butter rubbed in one of browned flour, the juice of a lemon, and a glass of wine. Boil up and pour over the duck.
Canned Green Peas.
Turn the peas into a saucepan; cover with boiling water, and cook twenty-five minutes. Drain well; add pepper, salt and butter, and dish.