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INVALID COOKERY.
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
A FEW RULES TO BE OBSERVED IN COOKING FOR INVALIDS.
1841. LET all the kitchen utensils used in the
preparation of invalids' cookery be delicately and 'scrupulously clean;' if this
is not the case, a disagreeable flavour may be imparted to the preparation,
which flavour may disgust, and prevent the patient from partaking of the
refreshment when brought to him or her.
1842. For invalids, never make a large quantity of one
thing, as they seldom require much at a time; and it is desirable that variety
be provided for them.
1843. Always have something in readiness; a little beef
tea, nicely made and nicely skimmed, a few spoonfuls of jelly, &c. &c.,
that it may be administered as soon almost as the invalid wishes for it. If
obliged to wait a long time, the patient loses the desire to eat, and often
turns against the food when brought to him or her.
1844. In sending dishes or preparations up to invalids,
let everything look as tempting as possible. Have a clean tray-cloth laid
smoothly over the tray; let the spoons, tumblers, cups and saucers, &c., be
very clean and bright. Gruel served in a tumbler is more appetizing than when
served in a basin or cup and saucer.
1845. As milk is an important article of food for the
sick, in warm weather let it be kept on ice, to prevent its turning sour. Many
other delicacies may also be preserved good in the same manner for some little
time.
1846. If the patient be allowed to eat vegetables, never
send them up undercooked, or half raw; and let a small quantity only be
temptingly arranged on a dish. This rule will apply to every preparation, as an
invalid is much more likely to enjoy his food if small delicate pieces are
served to him.
1847. Never leave food about a sick room; if the patient
cannot eat it when brought to him, take it away, and bring it to him in an hour
or two's time. Miss Nightingale says, "To leave the patient's untasted food
by his side, from meal to meal, in hopes that he will eat it in the interval, is
simply to prevent him from taking any food at all." She says, "I have
known patients literally incapacitated from taking one article of food after
another by this piece of ignorance. Let the food come at the right time, and be
taken away, eaten or uneaten, at the right time, but never let a patient have
'something always standing' by him, if you don't wish to disgust him of
everything."
1848. Never serve beef tea or broth with the _smallest
particle_ of fat or grease on the surface. It is better, after making either of
these, to allow them to get perfectly cold, when _all the fat_ may be easily
removed; then warm up as much as may be required. Two or three pieces of clean
whity-brown paper laid on the broth will absorb any greasy particles that may be
floating at the top, as the grease will cling to the paper.
1849. Roast mutton, chickens, rabbits, calves' feet or
head, game, fish (simply dressed), and simple puddings, are all light food, and
easily digested. Of course, these things are only partaken of, supposing the
patient is recovering.
1850. A mutton chop, nicely cut, trimmed, and broiled to
a turn, is a dish to be recommended for invalids; but it must not be served _with all the
fat_ at the end, nor must it be too thickly cut. Let it be cooked
over a fire free from smoke, and sent up with the gravy in it, between two very
hot plates. Nothing is more disagreeable to an invalid than _smoked_ food.
1851. In making toast-and-water, never blacken the
bread, but toast it only a nice brown. Never leave toast-and-water to make until
the moment it is required, as it cannot then be properly prepared,--at least,
the patient will be obliged to drink it warm, which is anything but agreeable.
1852. In boiling eggs for invalids, let the white be
just set; if boiled hard, they will be likely to disagree with the patient.
1853. In Miss Nightingale's admirable "Notes on
Nursing," a book that no mother or nurse should be without, she
says,--"You cannot be too careful as to quality in sick diet. A nurse
should never put before a patient milk that is sour, meat or soup that is
turned, an egg that is bad, or vegetables underdone." Yet often, she says,
she has seen these things brought in to the sick, in a state perfectly
perceptible to every nose or eye except the nurse's. It is here that the clever
nurse appears,--she will not bring in the peccant article; but, not to
disappoint the patient, she will whip up something else in a few minutes.
Remember, that sick cookery should half do the work of your poor patient's weak
digestion.
1854. She goes on to caution nurses, by
saying,--"Take care not to spill into your patient's saucer; in other
words, take care that the outside bottom rim of his cup shall be quite dry and
clean. If, every time he lifts his cup to his lips, he has to carry the saucer
with it, or else to drop the liquid upon and to soil his sheet, or bedgown, or
pillow, or, if he is sitting up, his dress, you have no idea what a difference
this minute want of care on your part makes to his comfort, and even to his
willingness for food."