Pancakes.
2 cups of prepared flour; 6 eggs; 1 saltspoonful of salt; milk to make a thin batter.
Beat the eggs light; add salt, two cups of milk, then, the whites and flour alternately with milk, until the batter is of the right consistency. Run a teaspoonful of lard over the bottom of a hot frying-pan, pour in a large ladleful of batter, and fry quickly. Roll the pancake up like a sheet of paper; lay upon a hot dish; put in more lard, and fry another pancake. Keep hot over boiling water, sending half a dozen to the table at a time. Eat with sauce.
Fourth Week. Thursday.
Mutton and Rice Soup.
Take all the fat from the liquor in which your mutton was boiled; put it over the fire with a cup of raw rice, and cook slowly until the latter is boiled to pieces. Strain through the soup-sieve, add seasoning to taste, and some finely minced parsley. Heat to boiling, and pour into the tureen. Add a cup of hot milk, in which have been beaten two raw eggs—the milk having cooked for a minute to thicken them.
Chickens à la Viennoise.
Clean, wash, and wipe a pair of chickens. Parboil the giblets; chop them fine, with a very little onion, the pounded yolks of two hard-boiled eggs, and seasoning to your taste. Add a handful of crumbs, and stuff the chickens with this force-meat. Boil in plenty of hot water, slightly salt, three-quarters of an hour, having sewed up each in coarse netting. Put them into a broad saucepan, in which have been melted two tablespoonfuls of nice dripping, and the same of butter. The fowls should have been wiped dry, and the fat be hot when you put them in. Turn twice while you brown them over a quick fire. When russet-colored all over, dish, and pour over them a few spoonfuls of butter, heated with a tablespoonful of tomato catsup. Save the liquor in which the fowls were boiled.