BREAKFAST LUNCHEON
Fresh strawberries with cream Canapé Romanoff
Boiled eggs Eggs, Voltaire
Dry toast Tripe à la mode de Caën
Coffee Baked potatoes
Coffee éclairs Demi tasse
DINNER
Cream of chicken, Reine Hortense
Ripe olives
Terrapin Baltimore
Roast saddle of mutton Château potatoes
Braised sweetbreads, Marie Louise
Lettuce salad
Pears in syrupSUPPER
Lady fingers CoffeeVenetian egg in chafing dish

Venetian egg in chafing dish. Mince an onion and cook in sauté pan in two ounces of butter, then add half a can of firm tomatoes and cook for twenty minutes. Add a pound of eastern cheese, broken into small bits; season with salt, paprika, a little Worcestershire sauce, and half a teaspoonful of mustard. Stir continuously. Last, add three lightly beaten eggs, and stir until thick. It should be of the same consistency as a Welsh rabbit. Serve either with, or on, toast or toasted crackers.

Eggs, Voltaire. In the bottom of a buttered cocotte or egg dish place a spoonful of chicken hash, on top break a raw egg, and season. Cover with cream sauce and grated cheese. Bake until the tops are brown.

Cream of chicken, Reine Hortense. Make a cream of chicken soup in the usual way. Take a cup of peeled almonds to each quart of the soup, pound into a pulp in a mortar, pulverizing thoroughly; mix with milk, strain, and add to the soup.

Canapé Romanoff. Mix a boxful of smoked Norwegian sardines with three ounces of hot butter, mash fine, and force through a sieve. Stir in four spoonfuls of cream, and spread over toast cut in fancy shapes. Garnish with ripe and green olives. Serve as a fancy sandwich at tea or bridge parties, or as an appetiser for dinner.

Braised sweetbreads, Marie Louise. Soak the sweetbreads in cold water for no less than three hours, changing the water two or three times. This draws all the blood from the sweetbreads. Then put into a large pot, with plenty of cold water, and bring to the boiling point; then drench with cold water to cool. In a saucepan put a sliced carrot, a sliced onion, a bay leaf, a clove, parsley in branches, a piece of salt pork rind, butter the size of half an egg, and one cup of stock or broth of any kind. Place the sweetbreads on top, and place in oven and cook for half an hour, basting frequently. The sweetbreads should turn an even yellow. Trim some artichoke bottoms, cut in half, and place the sweetbreads on top. Mix the juice from the baked sweetbreads with a cup of cream sauce and a sherry glassful of dry sherry. Pour this over the top, sprinkle with chopped parsley, and return to oven for two minutes.

Pears in syrup. Make a syrup with a cup of sugar, and water enough to cover. Add the juice or rind of a lemon, a few cloves, and a stick of cinnamon. Quarter the pears, remove the cores, and cook in the syrup for eight or ten minutes, or until tender. Old hard pears may require a half an hour or more before they are sufficiently cooked. A little claret or white wine may be added, if desired.

APRIL 2

BREAKFAST LUNCHEON
Preserved figs with cream Terrine de foie gras à la gelée
Ham and eggs Eggs, Texas clover
Rolls Broiled squab with fresh mushrooms
Coffee French fried potatoes
Romaine salad
Brie cheese and crackers
Coffee
DINNER
Blue Point oysters on half shell
Clear green turtle soup, au Madère
Queen olives
Crab poulette
Roast chicken
Fresh asparagus, Hollandaise
Rissolée potatoes
Sliced tomatoes, French dressing
Omelette Robespierre
Coffee