Page:New Peterson magazine 1859 Vol. XXXVI.pdf/488

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RECREATIONS.—-RECEIPTS.

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Artichokes.-—If your artichokes are young, leave about an inch of the stalks, and put them in strong salt and water for an hour or two; then put them in a pan of cold water; set them on the fire, but do not cover them; when you dish them up, pour over them rich melted butter.

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ART RECREATIONS.

t A Vanessa: Boos roa Lama's—A complete guide and 5 help to t Pencil Drawing, Antique Painting, 3 Oil Painting, Oriental Painting, C'htcsc—Sltwcd.—Cut a plateful of cheese; pour on it as Crayon Drawing and Paint Wax Flowers, from the crude ing, wax, to the beautiful and glass of red wine, and stew it before the fire; toast a nice 3 Paper Flowers, perfect flower, fruit, &c., piece of bread, pour over it two or three spoonfuls of hot red § Moss Work, Sign Painting,

Shell Work, wine; put it in the middle of a dish, lay the cheese over it, l’apier Macho, 2 Cone Work, Painting on Ground Glass, and serve it up. Magic Lantern, 2'8 Feather Flowers, l’otichomanio, Imitation of Pearl, reverses. Leather Work, Embroidery, Sealing Wax Painting, Ptm'ith Pudding—Cover the bottom of a dish with a; llair Work, Panorama Painting, layer of grated bread; then add a layer of apples, sliccd's Theorem Painting, Taxidermy, or the Art of Pre Coloring Photographs, fine; sprinkle plentifully over it some sugar, with some serving Birds, Water Coloring, spices, cinnamon, and nutmeg, and small lumps of but Gilding and Bronzing, The Aquarigm, &e., Grecian Painting, ter; then add a layer of grated bread; another of apples, With valuable receipts for preparing the materials. &c. spices, sugar, &c., and so on until the dish is full. Bake It will inform the inquirer in every branch of fancy work, it, and serve it with sauce, or butter and sugar mixed to as perfectly as they can be taught by the most experienced gether. Plum Puddirig—Bul-aL—Take one loaf of baker‘s bread, teachers, whose charges .for all the styles taught in this broken up, (except the crust,)and pour over it three pints of work, receipts, &c., would amount to perhaps some hundreds warm milk, and let it stand for an hour. While warm put of dollars. The publishers have spared no expense in making this in a piece of butter as large as an egg, half a pound of raisins, six eggs, and half a pound of currants, adding citron, nut valuable to the teacher and pupil, by procuring valuable in meg, brandy, and anything else you please. Bake it three formation from the best teachers and artists in Europe and in this country. hours, and eat it with wine sauce. Price $1.50, l2mo, cloth. Splendidly illustrated. Sent by Potato Pudding—Boil one quart of potatoes quite soft, and then rub them smooth through a hair sieve. Ilave mail, post-paid, and for sale by all booksellers. J. B. TILTON .i: (30., Publishers, ready half a pound of melted butter, and six eggs, beat 161 Washington Street, Boston. light; mix the butter with halfa pound of sugar; stir in the eggs, adding halfn. pound of currents; put the mixture into a thick cloth and boil it half an hour. To be eaten with 'flIuJl’ ’m/Il ‘ "' If, [If III/II I // J 'mVJJIJ‘I III/’1 N/iI J Il/J'-I”/WIlI/NI /INWJJIWMNI MW

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wine sauce.

RECEIPTS FOR THE TABLE. Indian Pudding—Take one pint of milk, and one-quarter ofa pound of Indian meal, and boil it smooth; then add one quarter and half a quarter of a pound of butter, and half a pound of sugar. When cool, beat in the yolks of six eggs; beat the whites of the eggs to a froth, and add them last. Put in spice to your liking. Bake the mixture on shallow plates. Lemon Pudding.—Bcat together three-quarters of a pound of sugar, onehalf a poifnd of butter, five eggs. (beaten to a froth.) two large spoonfuls of grated bread. the juice of one large lemon. and half the rind, grated. Bake in plates, with paste below. '

To make English Stem—English stew is the name given to the following excellent preparation of cold meat—Cut the meat in slices; pepper, salt, and flower them, and lay them in a dish. Take a few pickles of any kind, or a small quam tity of pickled cabbage, and sprinkle over the meat. Then take a tea-cup half full of water; add to it a small quantity of the vinegar belonging to the pickles, a small quantity of catchup, if approved of. and any gravy that may be set by for use. Stir all together, and pour it over the meat. Set the meat before the fire with a tin behind it, or put it in a Dutch oven, or in the even of the kitchen range, as may be most convenient, for about half an hour before dinner-time. This is a cheap and simple way of dressing cold meat which is well deserving of attention. To Dress Spanish 0nions.—Take off two skins, but be par PARLOR GAMES. Tm: HANMUrrs.—-Let two persons, 1 and 2. have their ticular in not cutting the stalk or the root of the onion too much away, if you. do, when done it will drop to pieces. hands tied together with strings, so that the strings cross, Take four large onions, put them in a stewpan sufliciently large, so that they may not touch each other; put in a small piece of lean York ham, and a quarter of a pound of salt but ter; cover them close; put them on a slow stove or oven, keeping them turned carefully until all sides are properly done—they will take about two hours; then take them up and glaze them, thicken the gravy, and season with pepper and salt. Orange Marmalade—One pound of oranges, half a pound of lemons, three quarts of water. Boil slowly for two hours. Cut all, taking out the seeds. To each pound of fruit take two pounds of leaf sugar and one pint of the water in which the fruit was boiled. While cutting the fruit into thin as represented in the engraving. The object is, to free slices, pour the water upon the sugar, and then boil all to themselves from each other without untying the knot. It gether for half an hour. is executed in the following manner: Bride or Pound (hire—One pound of flour, three-quarters Let ‘2 gather up the string that joins his hands, pass the of a pound of butter, three-quarters of a pound of lump loop under the string that binds either of 1’s wrists, slip it Q sugar, one pound and a half of currants, five eggs. a quarter ever 1's hand, and both will be free By a reversal of the 3 of a pound of lemon pool, two names of sweet almonds, a same process, the string may be replaced. 5 teaspeonful of yeast, and a glass of brandy. WNMNM