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RECIPES.
CHAPTER XXXIX.
TO MAKE ARROWROOT.
1855. INGREDIENTS.--Two teaspoonfuls of
arrowroot, 3 tablespoonfuls of cold water, 1/2 pint of boiling water.
Mode.--Mix the arrowroot smoothly in a basin with
the cold water, then pour on it the boiling water, stirring all the time.
The water must be boiling at the time it is poured on the mixture, or it
will not thicken; if mixed with hot water only, it must be put into a clean
saucepan, and boiled until it thickens; but this is more trouble, and quite
unnecessary if the water is boiling at first. Put the arrowroot into a tumbler,
sweeten it with lump sugar, and flavour it with grated nutmeg or cinnamon, or a
piece of lemon-peel, or, when allowed, 3 tablespoonfuls of port or sherry. As
arrowroot is in itself flavourless and insipid, it is almost necessary to add
the wine to make it palatable. Arrowroot made with milk instead of water is far
nicer, but is not so easily digested. It should be mixed in the same manner,
with 3 tablespoonfuls of cold water, the boiling milk then poured on it, and
well stirred. When made in this manner, no wine should be added, but merely
sugar, and a little grated nutmeg or lemon-peel.
Time.--If obliged to be boiled, 2 minutes. Average
cost, 2d. per pint.
Sufficient to make 1/2 pint of arrowroot.
MISS NIGHTINGALE says, in her "Notes on Nursing," that arrowroot is a grand dependence of the nurse. As a vehicle for wine, and as a restorative quickly prepared, it is all very well, but it is nothing but starch and water; flour is both more nutritive and less liable to ferment, and is preferable wherever it can be used.
BARLEY GRUEL.
1856. INGREDIENTS.--2 oz. of Scotch or pearl
barley, 1/2 pint of port wine, the rind of 1 lemon, 1 quart and 1/2 pint of
water, sugar to taste.
Mode.--After well washing the barley, boil it in
1/2 pint of water for 1/4 hour; then pour this water away; put to the barley the
quart of fresh boiling water, and let it boil until the liquid is reduced to
half; then strain it off. Add the wine, sugar, and lemon-peel; simmer for 5
minutes, and put it away in a clean jug. It can be warmed from time to time, as
required.
Time.--To be boiled until reduced to half. Average
cost, 1s. 6d.
Sufficient with the wine to make 1-1/2 pint of
gruel.
TO MAKE BARLEY-WATER.
1857. INGREDIENTS.--2 oz. of pearl barley, 2
quarts of boiling water, 1 pint of cold water.
Mode.--Wash the barley in cold water; put it into
a saucepan with the above proportion of cold water, and when it has boiled for
about 1/4 hour, strain off the water, and add the 2 quarts of fresh boiling
water. Boil it until the liquid is reduced one half; strain it, and it will be
ready for use. It may be flavoured with lemon-peel, after being sweetened, or a
small piece may be simmered with the barley. When the invalid may take it, a
little lemon-juice gives this pleasant drink in illness a very nice flavour.
Time.--To boil until the liquid is reduced one
half.
Sufficient to make 1 quart of barley-water.
TO MAKE BEEF TEA.
1858. INGREDIENTS.--1 lb. of lean gravy-beef,
1 quart of water, 1 saltspoonful of salt.
Mode.--Have the meat cut without fat and bone,
and choose a nice fleshy piece. Cut it into small pieces about the size of dice,
and put it into a clean saucepan. Add the water cold to it; put it on the
fire, and bring it to the boiling-point; then skim well. Put in the salt when
the water boils, and simmer the beef tea gently from 1/2 to 3/4
hour, removing any more scum should it appear on the surface. Strain the tea
through a hair sieve, and set it by in a cool place. When wanted for use, remove
every particle of fat from the top; warm up as much as may be required, adding,
if necessary, a little more salt. This preparation is simple beef tea, and is to
be administered to those invalids to whom flavourings and seasonings are not
allowed. When the patient is very low, use double the quantity of meat to the
same proportion of water. Should the invalid be able to take the tea prepared in
a more palatable manner, it is easy to make it so by following the directions in
the next recipe, which is an admirable one for making savoury beef tea. Beef tea
is always better when made the day before it is wanted, and then warmed up. It
is a good plan to put the tea into a small cup or basin, and to place this basin
in a saucepan of boiling water. When the tea is warm, it is ready to serve.
Time.--1/4 to 3/4 hour. Average cost, 6d.
per pint.
Sufficient.--Allow 1 lb. of meat for a pint of
good beef tea.
MISS NIGHTINGALE says, one of the most common errors among nurses, with respect to sick diet, is the belief that beef tea is the most nutritive of all article. She says, "Just try and boil down a lb. of beef into beef tea; evaporate your beef tea, and see what is left of your beef: you will find that there is barely a teaspoonful of solid nourishment to 1/4 pint of water in beef tea. Nevertheless, there is a certain reparative quality in it,--we do not know what,--as there is in tea; but it maybe safely given in almost any inflammatory disease, and is as little to be depended upon with the healthy or convalescent, where much nourishment is required."
SAVOURY BEEF TEA.
(Soyer's Recipe.)
1859. INGREDIENTS.--1 lb. of solid beef, 1 oz.
of butter, 1 clove, 2 button onions or 1/2 a large one, 1 saltspoonful of salt,
1 quart of water.
Mode.--Cut the beef into very small dice; put it
into a stewpan with the butter, clove, onion, and salt; stir the meat round over
the fire for a few minutes, until it produces a thin gravy; then add the water,
and let it simmer gently from 1/2 to 3/4 hour, skimming off every particle of
fat. When done, strain it through a sieve, and put it by in a cool place until
required. The same, if wanted quite plain, is done by merely omitting the
vegetables, salt, and clove; the butter cannot be objectionable, as it is taken
out in skimming.
Time.--1/2 to 3/4 hour. Average cost, 8d.
per pint. Sufficient.--Allow 1 lb. of beef to make 1 pint of good beef
tea.
Note.--The meat loft from beef tea may be boiled
a little longer, and pounded, with spices, &c., for potting. It makes a very
nice breakfast dish.
DR. CHRISTISON says that "every one will be struck with the readiness with which certain classes of patients will often take diluted meat juice, or beef tea repeatedly, when they refuse all other kinds of food." This is particularly remarkable in case of gastric fever, in which, he says, little or nothing else besides beef tea, or diluted meat juice, has been taken for weeks, or even months; and yet a pint of beef tea contains scarcely 1/4 oz. of anything but water. The result is so striking, that he asks, "What is its mode of action? Not simple nutriment; 1/4 oz. of the most nutritive material cannot nearly replace the daily wear and tear of the tissue in any circumstances." Possibly, he says, it belongs to a new denomination of remedies.
BAKED BEEF TEA.
1860. INGREDIENTS.--1 lb. of fleshy beef,
1-1/2 pint of water, 1/4 saltspoonful of salt.
Mode.--Cut the beef into small square pieces,
after trimming off all the fat, and put it into a baking-jar, with the above
proportion of water and salt; cover the jar well, place it in a warm, but not
hot oven, and bake for 3 or 4 hours. When the oven is very fierce in the
daytime, it is a good plan to put the jar in at night, and let it remain till
the next morning, when the tea will be done. It should be strained, and put by
in a cool place until wanted. It may also be flavoured with an onion, a clove,
and a few sweet herbs, &c., when the stomach is sufficiently strong to take
those.
Time.--3 or 4 hours, or to be left in the oven
all night.
Average cost, 6d. per pint.
Sufficient.--Allow 1 lb. of meat for 1 pint of
good beef tea.
BAKED OR STEWED CALF'S FOOT.
1861. INGREDIENTS.--1 calf's foot, 1 pint of
milk, 1 pint of water, 1 blade of mace, the rind of 1/4 lemon, pepper and salt
to taste.
Mode.--Well clean the foot, and either stew or
bake it in the milk-and-water with the other ingredients from 3 to 4 hours. To
enhance the flavour, an onion and a small quantity of celery may be added, if
approved; 1/2 a teacupful of cream, stirred in just before serving, is also a
great improvement to this dish.
Time.--3 to 4 hours. Average cost, in full
season, 9d. each.
Sufficient for 1 person. Seasonable from
March to October.
CALF'S-FOOT BROTH.
1862. INGREDIENTS.--1 calf's foot, 3 pints of
water, 1 small lump of sugar, nutmeg to taste, the yolk of 1 egg, a piece of
butter the size of a nut.
Mode.--Stew the foot in the water, with the
lemon-peel, very gently, until the liquid is half wasted, removing any scum,
should it rise to the surface. Set it by in a basin until quite cold, then take
off every particle of fat. Warm up about 1/2 pint of the broth, adding the
butter, sugar, and a very small quantity of grated nutmeg; take it off the fire
for a minute or two, then add the beaten yolk of the egg; keep stirring over the
fire until the mixture thickens, but do not allow it to boil again after the egg
is added, or it will curdle, and the broth will be spoiled.
Time.--To be boiled until the liquid is reduced
one half.
Average cost, in full season, 9d. each.
Sufficient to make 1-1/4 pint of broth.
Seasonable from March to October.
CHICKEN BROTH.
1863. INGREDIENTS.--1/2 fowl, or the inferior
joints of a whole one; 1 quart of water, 1 blade of mace, 1/2 onion, a small
bunch of sweet herbs, salt to taste, 10 peppercorns.
Mode.--An old fowl not suitable for eating may be
converted into very good broth, or, if a young one be used, the inferior joints
may be put in the broth, and the best pieces reserved for dressing in some other
manner. Put the fowl into a saucepan, with all the ingredients, and simmer
gently for 1-1/2 hour, carefully skimming the broth well. When done, strain, and
put by in a cool place until wanted; then take all the fat off the top, warm up
as much as may be required, and serve. This broth is, of course, only for those
invalids whose stomachs are strong enough to digest it, with a flavouring of
herbs, &c. It may be made in the same manner as beef tea, with water and
salt only; but the preparation will be but tasteless and insipid. When the
invalid cannot digest this chicken broth with the flavouring, we would recommend
plain beef tea in preference to plain chicken tea, which it would be without the
addition of herbs, onions, &c.
Time.--1-1/2 hour.
Sufficient to make rather more than 1 pint of
broth.
NUTRITIOUS COFFEE.
1864. INGREDIENTS.--1/2 oz. of ground coffee,
1 pint of milk.
Mode.--Let the coffee be freshly ground; put it
into a saucepan, with the milk, which should be made nearly boiling before the
coffee is put in, and boil both together for 3 minutes; clear it by pouring some
of it into a cup, and then back again, and leave it on the hob for a few minutes
to settle thoroughly. This coffee may be made still more nutritious by the
addition of an egg well beaten, and put into the coffee-cup.
Time.--5 minutes to boil, 5 minutes to settle.
Sufficient to make 1 large breakfast-cupful of
coffee.
Our great nurse Miss Nightingale remarks, that "a great deal too much against tea is said by wise people, and a great deal too much of tea is given to the sick by foolish people. When you see the natural and almost universal craving in English sick for their 'tea,' you cannot but feel that Nature knows what she is about. But a little tea or coffee restores them quite as much as a great deal; and a great deal of tea, and especially of coffee, impairs the little power of digestion they have. Yet a nurse, because she sees how one or two cups of tea or coffee restore her patient, thinks that three or four cups will do twice as much. This is not the case at all; it is, however, certain that there is nothing yet discovered which is a substitute to the English patient for his cup of tea; he can take it when he can take nothing else, and he often can't take anything else, if he has it not. Coffee is a better restorative than tea, but a greater impairer of the digestion. In making coffee, it is absolutely necessary to buy it in the berry, and grind it at home; otherwise, you may reckon upon its containing a certain amount of chicory, at least. This is not a question of the taste, or of the wholesomeness of chicory; it is, that chicory has nothing at all of the properties for which you give coffee, and, therefore, you may as well not give it."
THE INVALID'S CUTLET.
1865. INGREDIENTS.--1 nice cutlet from a loin
or neck of mutton, 2 teacupfuls of water, 1 very small stick of celery, pepper
and salt to taste.
Mode.--Have the cutlet cut from a very nice loin
or neck of mutton; take off all the fat; put it into a stewpan, with the other
ingredients; stew very gently indeed for nearly 2 hours, and skim off
every particle of fat that may rise to the surface from time to time. The celery
should be cut into thin slices before it is added to the meat, and care must be
taken not to put in too much of this ingredient, or the dish will not be good.
If the water is allowed to boil fast, the cutlet will be hard.
Time.--2 hours' very gentle stewing. Average
cost, 6d.
Sufficient for 1 person. Seasonable at any
time.
EEL BROTH.
1866. INGREDIENTS.--1/2 lb. of eels, a small
bunch of sweet herbs, including parsley; 1/2 onion, 10 peppercorns, 3 pints of
water, 2 cloves, salt and pepper to taste.
Mode.--After having cleaned and skinned the eel,
cut it into small pieces, and put it into a stewpan, with the other ingredients;
simmer gently until the liquid is reduced nearly half, carefully removing the
scum as it rises. Strain it through a hair sieve; put it by in a cool place,
and, when wanted, take off all the fat from the top, warm up as much as is
required, and serve with sippets of toasted bread. This is a very nutritious
broth, and easy of digestion.
Time.--To be simmered until the liquor is reduced
to half.
Average cost, 6d.
Sufficient to make 1-1/2 pint of broth.
Seasonable from June to March.
EGG WINE.
1867. INGREDIENTS.--1 egg, 1 tablespoonful and
1/2 glass of cold water, 1 glass of sherry, sugar and grated nutmeg to taste.
Mode.--Beat the egg, mixing with it a
tablespoonful of cold water; make the wine-and-water hot, but not boiling; pour
it on the egg, stirring all the time. Add sufficient lump sugar to sweeten the
mixture, and a little grated nutmeg; put all into a very clean saucepan, set it
on a gentle fire, and stir the contents one way until they thicken, but do
not allow them to boil. Serve in a glass with sippets of toasted bread or
plain crisp biscuits. When the egg is not warmed, the mixture will be found
easier of digestion, but it is not so pleasant a drink.
Sufficient for 1 person.
TO MAKE GRUEL.
1868. INGREDIENTS.--1 tablespoonful of
Robinson's patent groats, 2 tablespoonfuls of cold water, 1 pint of boiling
water.
Mode.--Mix the prepared groats smoothly with the
cold water in a basin; pour over them the boiling water, stirring it all the
time. Put it into a very clean saucepan; boil the gruel for 10 minutes, keeping
it well stirred; sweeten to taste, and serve. It may be flavoured with a small
piece of lemon-peel, by boiling it in the gruel, or a little grated nutmeg may
be put in; but in these matters the taste of the patient should be consulted.
Pour the gruel in a tumbler and serve. When wine is allowed to the invalid, 2
tablespoonfuls of sherry or port make this preparation very nice. In cases of
colds, the same quantity of spirits is sometimes added instead of wine.
Time.--10 minutes.
Sufficient to make a pint of gruel.
INVALID'S JELLY.
1869. INGREDIENTS.--12 shanks of mutton, 3
quarts of water, a bunch of sweet herbs, pepper and salt to taste, 3 blades of
mace, 1 onion, 1 lb. of lean beef, a crust of bread toasted brown.
Mode.--Soak the shanks in plenty of water for
some hours, and scrub them well; put them, with the beef and other ingredients,
into a saucepan with the water, and let them simmer very gently for 5 hours.
Strain the broth, and, when cold, take off all the fat. It may be eaten either
warmed up or cold as a jelly.
Time.--5 hours. Average cost, 1s.
Sufficient to make from 1-1/2 to 2 pints of
jelly.
Seasonable at any time.
LEMONADE FOR INVALIDS.
1870. INGREDIENTS.--1/2 lemon, lump sugar to
taste, 1 pint of boiling water.
Mode.--Pare off the rind of the lemon thinly; cut
the lemon into 2 or 3 thick slices, and remove as much as possible of the white
outside pith, and all the pips. Put the slices of lemon, the peel, and lump
sugar into a jug; pour over the boiling water; cover it closely, and in 2 hours
it will be fit to drink. It should either be strained or poured off from the
sediment.
Time.--2 hours. Average cost, 2d.
Sufficient to make 1 pint of lemonade. Seasonable
at any time.
NOURISHING LEMONADE.
1871. INGREDIENTS.--1-1/2 pint of boiling
water, the juice of 4 lemons, the rinds of 2, 1/2 pint of sherry, 4 eggs, 6 oz.
of loaf sugar.
Mode.--Pare off the lemon-rind thinly, put it
into a jug with the sugar, and pour over the boiling water. Let it cool, then
strain it; add the wine, lemon-juice, and eggs, previously well beaten, and also
strained, and the beverage will be ready for use. If thought desirable, the
quantity of sherry and water could be lessened, and milk substituted for them.
To obtain the flavour of the lemon-rind properly, a few lumps of the sugar
should be rubbed over it, until some of the yellow is absorbed.
Time.--Altogether 1 hour to make it. Average
cost, 1s. 8d.
Sufficient to make 2-1/2 pints of lemonade. Seasonable
at any time.
TO MAKE MUTTON BROTH.
1872. INGREDIENTS.--1 lb. of the scrag end of
the neck of mutton, 1 onion, a bunch of sweet herbs, 4 turnip, 1/2 pints of
water, pepper and salt to taste.
Mode.--Put the mutton into a stewpan; pour over
the water cold and add the other ingredients. When it boils, skim it very
carefully, cover the pan closely, and let it simmer very gently for an hour;
strain it, let it cool, take off all the fat from the surface, and warm up as
much as may be required, adding, if the patient be allowed to take it, a
teaspoonful of minced parsley which has been previously scalded. Pearl barley or
rice are very nice additions to mutton broth, and should be boiled as long as
the other ingredients. When either of these is added, the broth must not be
strained, but merely thoroughly skimmed. Plain mutton broth without seasoning is
made by merely boiling the mutton, water, and salt together, straining it,
letting the broth cool, skimming all the fat off, and warming up as much as is
required. This preparation would be very tasteless and insipid, but likely to
agree with very delicate stomachs, whereas the least addition of other
ingredients would have the contrary effect.
Time.--1 hour. Average cost, 7d.
Sufficient to make from 1-1/2 to 2 pints of
broth.
Seasonable at any time.
Note.--Veal broth may be made in the same manner;
the knuckle of a leg or shoulder is the part usually used for this purpose. It
is very good with the addition of the inferior joints of a fowl, or a few
shank-bones.
MUTTON BROTH, QUICKLY MADE.
1873. INGREDIENTS.--1 or 2 chops from a neck
of mutton, 1 pint of water, a small bunch of sweet herbs, 1/4 of an onion,
pepper and salt to taste.
Mode.--Cut the meat into small pieces, put it
into a saucepan with the bones, but no skin or fat; add the other ingredients;
cover the saucepan, and bring the water quickly to boil. Take the lid off, and
continue the rapid boiling for 20 minutes, skimming it well during the process;
strain the broth into a basin; if there should be any fat left on the surface,
remove it by laying a piece of thin paper on the top: the greasy particles will
adhere to the paper, and so free the preparation from them. To an invalid
nothing is more disagreeable than broth served with a quantity of fat floating
on the top; to avoid this, it is always better to allow it to get thoroughly
cool, the fat can then be so easily removed.
Time.--20 minutes after the water boils. Average
cost, 5d.
Sufficient to make 1/2 pint of broth. Seasonable
at any time.
STEWED RABBITS IN MILK.
1874. INGREDIENTS.--2 very young rabbits, not
nearly half grown; 1-1/2 pint of milk, 1 blade of mace, 1 dessertspoonful of
flour, a little salt and cayenne.
Mode.--Mix the flour very smoothly with 4
tablespoonfuls of the milk, and when this is well mixed, add the remainder. Cut
up the rabbits into joints, put them into a stewpan, with the milk and other
ingredients, and simmer them very gently until quite tender. Stir the
contents from time to time, to keep the milk smooth and prevent it from burning.
1/2 hour will be sufficient for the cooking of this dish.
Time.--1/2 hour. Average cost, from 1s. to
1s. 6d. each.
Sufficient for 3 or 4 meals. Seasonable
from September to February.
RICE-MILK.
1875. INGREDIENTS.--3 tablespoonfuls of rice,
1 quart of milk, sugar to taste; when liked, a little grated nutmeg.
Mode.--Well wash the rice, put it into a saucepan
with the milk, and simmer gently until the rice is tender, stirring it from time
to time to prevent the milk from burning; sweeten it, add a little grated
nutmeg, and serve. This dish is also very suitable and wholesome for children;
it may be flavoured with a little lemon-peel, and a little finely-minced suet
may be boiled with it, which renders it more strengthening and more wholesome.
Tapioca, semolina, vermicelli, and macaroni, may all be dressed in the same
manner.
Time.--From 3/4 to 1 hour. Seasonable at
any time.
TO MAKE TOAST-AND-WATER.
1876. INGREDIENTS.--A slice of bread, 1 quart
of boiling water.
Mode.--Cut a slice from a stale loaf (a piece of
hard crust is better than anything else for the purpose), toast it of a nice
brown on every side, but do not allow it to burn or blacken. Put it into
a jug, pour the boiling water over it, cover it closely, and let it remain until
cold. When strained, it will be ready for use. Toast-and-water should always be
made a short time before it is required, to enable it to get cold: if drunk in a
tepid or lukewarm state, it is an exceedingly disagreeable beverage. If, as is
sometimes the case, this drink is wanted in a hurry, put the toasted bread into
a jug, and only just cover it with the boiling water; when this is cool, cold
water may be added in the proportion required,--the toast-and-water strained; it
will then be ready for use, and is more expeditiously prepared than by the above
method.
TOAST SANDWICHES.
1877. INGREDIENTS.--Thin cold toast, thin
slices of bread-and-butter, pepper and salt to taste.
Mode.--Place a very thin piece of cold toast
between 2 slices of thin bread-and-butter in the form of a sandwich, adding a
seasoning of pepper and salt. This sandwich may be varied by adding a little
pulled meat, or very fine slices of cold meat, to the toast, and in any of these
forms will be found very tempting to the appetite of an invalid.
1878. Besides the recipes contained in this chapter,
there are, in the previous chapters on cookery, many others suitable for
invalids, which it would be useless to repeat here. Recipes for fish simply
dressed, light soups, plain roast meat, well-dressed vegetables, poultry, simple
puddings, jelly, stewed fruits, &c. &c., all of which dishes may be
partaken of by invalids and convalescents, will be found in preceding chapters.