Fourth Week. Friday.
Graham Soup.
3 onions; 3 carrots; 3 turnips; ½ cabbage; 6 stalks of celery; ½ can of tomatoes; 3 tablespoonfuls of butter rolled in flour; ½ cup of milk (cream is better); pepper and salt; 3 quarts of water; a little sugar; sweet herbs.
Chop the vegetables, and put all over the fire in the water, excepting the cabbage and tomatoes. Parboil the cabbage, and add at the end of half an hour’s boil. Half an hour later, put in the tomatoes and chopped herbs. Boil sharply twenty minutes; add sugar, pepper, and salt. Rub the soup through a colander. Return to the fire; stir in the floured butter; simmer five minutes, turn into the tureen, and stir in the hot milk or cream.
Fricassee of Salmon.
1 can fresh salmon; 2 beaten eggs; 1 cup of drawn butter; 1 teaspoonful anchovy sauce; 2 hard-boiled eggs, chopped fine; cayenne and salt to taste; capers, or minced green pickles.
Stew the fish—broken into rather coarse bits—in the can-liquor ten minutes. If there is not enough liquor, cook in a little water. Add the drawn butter, and, when these are well mixed, the beaten eggs. Stir five minutes; put in the chopped eggs and pickles. Heat one minute, and pour into a deep dish.
Chicken Dumplings.
Meat from your cold fowls, minced fine; ½ cup of gravy; yolks of 3 raw eggs; 1 tablespoonful of flour; pepper and salt; batter made of 1 egg; ½ cup of milk, and a little flour; cracker-crumbs.
Put chopped meat and seasoning, with a little of the liquor in which the chickens were boiled, into a saucepan, and heat to a gentle boil. Stir in the flour wet in a little cold water, and a minute later the beaten yolks. Stir to thickening; pour out, and let it get cold and stiff. Flour your hands, and make the paste into flattened balls. Roll in cracker-dust, dip in the batter, again in the cracker, and fry in hot lard. Drain, and serve hot.