| BREAKFAST | LUNCHEON | ||||
| Fresh grapes | Carciofini | ||||
| Broiled smoked Alaska black cod | Eggs Argenteuil | ||||
| Baked potatoes | Chicken hash à l'Italienne | ||||
| Rolls | Cranberry water ice | ||||
| Coffee | Assorted cakes | ||||
| Coffee | |||||
| DINNER | |||||
| Merry widow cocktail | |||||
| Chicken soup à la Française | |||||
| Celery | |||||
| Scallops à la poulette | |||||
| Roast leg of mutton | |||||
| Stewed tomatoes | |||||
| Peas in cream | |||||
| Duchesse potatoes | |||||
| Chicory salad | |||||
| French pastry | |||||
| Demi tasse | |||||
Broiled smoked Alaska black cod. Get a kippered Alaska black cod, roll in oil and broil. Serve with maître d'hôtel butter, and garnish with lemons cut in half, and parsley in branches. This fish is excellent prepared in the same manner as finnan haddie or smoked salmon, or served raw as a hors d'oeuvre.
Eggs Argenteuil. Scoop out the centers from four English muffins, toast them, and place a poached egg in each, cover with sauce Hollandaise, and lay two slices of truffle heated in butter on top of each.
Chicken hash, Italienne. Put two ounces of butter in a sauté pan with one chopped onion, or six chopped shallots. Fry, and then add one-half spoonful of flour and cook until brown. Then add one glass of sherry wine, and one cup of broth or stock, one whole boiled fowl cut in small dices, and one pound of dried mushrooms that have been previously soaked in cold water for one hour. Season with salt and pepper, and boil all together for thirty minutes. Serve toast Melba separate.
Chicken soup à la Française. Put a fat soup hen in a casserole with three quarts of water, a little salt, one onion, one carrot, and a bouquet garni. When coming to a boil skim well, cover, and simmer slowly until the hen is cooked. Then remove the hen and cut the meat in half inch squares. Strain the broth, bring to a boil, and add two cupfuls of boiled rice and the chicken meat. Season well with salt and pepper, and add some chopped chervil.
Merry widow cocktail. Use wide glasses. Put in the bottom the tails of six écrevisses, or crawfish. Lay six asparagus tips on top, season with salt and pepper, and cover with plenty of mayonnaise. Set in the ice box as near the ice as possible, to chill thoroughly.
Scallops à la poulette. Parboil the scallops from two to three minutes in their own juice, but not longer, as they will become tough and rubbery. Drain, and keep the juice. Heat two spoonfuls of flour and two spoonfuls of butter, and add the juice and a little stock, making a thin sauce. Season with salt and pepper, add the yolk of one egg and two spoonfuls of cream, but do not boil. Mix in the scallops, and serve. Oysters and clams may be prepared in the same manner.
Cranberry water ice. Cook the berries in a very small quantity of water in a granite or porcelain lined kettle, as otherwise the berries will become discolored. Then strain the cooked berries through a hair-sieve, making a thin purée. To every quart of berries add the juice of two lemons. For each quart of berries dissolve a pint of sugar in a cup of water, and add to the purée. Taste to see if sweet enough. Freeze in the same manner as other water ices. Serve as an ice, for dessert, or between courses; although the latter manner of serving ices is going out of vogue.