Take fat from your soup-stock. Pour out two quarts into the soup-kettle; heat slowly and skim carefully. Meanwhile, take out the beef’s tongue from the jar; skin, and cut up the best parts of it into small dice. There should be a large cupful of these. Drop into the soup, add a tablespoonful of catsup, and nearly a teaspoonful of French mustard. When the soup begins to boil again, pour it out.

Return the refuse parts of the tongue to the stock-jar.

Roast Haunch of Venison.

Wash well in lukewarm water; then, rub all over with butter. Cover on all sides with a stiff paste of flour and water, and put down to roast, pouring a little water into the baking-pan. Now and then, wet the paste to keep it from cracking. Roast from three to four hours. Half an hour before taking it up, remove the paste, and test with a skewer to see if it is done. Set down again to roast, and baste every five minutes, with claret and melted butter. At the last, dredge with flour, baste with butter, and brown. For gravy, add to the liquid in the dripping-pan a thickening of browned flour, a teaspoonful of currant jelly, a glass of claret, pepper and salt to taste. Boil up, and serve in a boat.

Sweet Potatoes.

Boil in hot water until a fork will enter the largest easily; peel; lay in a dripping-pan, and set in a good oven a few minutes to dry out.

Moulded Potatoes.

Mash boiled potatoes with milk, butter, and salt—not too soft; press hard into a greased mould, and turn out upon a hot dish.

Stewed Celery.

Scrape and cut into equal lengths the best stalks of a bunch of celery. Cook tender in boiling water, a little salt; drain, pepper and salt, and when dished pour on a cupful of drawn butter in which has been stirred the juice of half a lemon.