Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 43, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 November 1891 — THE KITCHEN. [ARTICLE]

THE KITCHEN.

Culluiiry. It should be remembered that quick boiling hardens meat and too much water renders it tasteless. To boil a leg of mutton an approved plan is to put it into water that is boiling fast and let it boil about five minutes, the object being to harden the outside and prevent the escape of juices; then add enough cold water to reduce the temperature and when on the point of boiling again skim it carefully, then draw it to one side of the stove and let it simmer until done. A nice dessert dish of chocolate is made by creaming together two ounces of butter with two ounces of sugar, the yolks of three eggs and three ounces of grated chocolate, adding last the well-beaten whitesofthe eggs. Bake in a buttered mold. Chicken Custard. —Mince finely the white meat of a chicken; place in the bottom of a small pie dish and season with pepper and salt; moisten with a little stock.' Let the pie dish be half full of meat. Make a custard of a quarter of a pint of milk, two eggs, well heated, yokes and whites whipped separately; beat up with the custard two ounces of grated cheese. Pour the custard over the meat and bake in the oven. Lemon Cake. —Cream together two cupfuls of sugar with two-thirds of a cupful of butter, add the beaten yolks of three eggs, then the beaten whites, two-thirds of a cupful of milk, three cupfuls aad one-half of flour, and at the last the juice of one leihon. A little more than half a teaspoOnful of soda should be sifted with flour before that is mixed in, or it may be beaten in just before stirring in the lemon juice. Tea Iced. —Make the tea as usual, add equal parts of cream and new milk (half a pint each to a quart of tea), sweeten to taste and freeze. Coffee Iced.—Add one pint of cream and half a pint of new to a quart of very strong coffee, and sweeten to tasta. Freeze till fairly thick.

Bnlx* In ttie Cradle or the Deep Bonn** nice, doesn’t It* But O, how fast and fcrioui are the rocking* in rough weather I The (•"«*•'tal warfare begotten in ycur vitals by the * ■■ uituotiop beggars description. Who*.. ■ r caper under these circumstance* v I -tetter's Stomach Bitters. Nothing c. wide to it lor remedying seasickness or tuj kit tir.d nausea from which many delicate land travelers suffer. Dyspepsia, cramps, constipation and biliousness also are invariably and promptly remedied by the Bitter*. Exposure in rough weather is often productive of hurtful consequences, which may, however, be averted by the timely use o( the Bitters, which diffuses an agreeable warmth through the system, and promotes an active circulation of the blood in the extremities when benumbed and chtliod. Malaria, kidney trouble, rheumatism and debility arb remedied by the Bittera.