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Presbyterian Ladies' Aid

"Recipes Tried and True"



SCRAPPLE. MRS. EDWARD E. POWERS.
Two pounds pork, two pounds liver, two pounds beef, a small heart;
boil all until thoroughly cooked; take up and chop while warm; put
back into broth (altogether you will have two and one-half or three
gallons); then make quite thick with corn meal. Cook one-half hour.
Put in pans to mold. Season meat while cooking with salt, pepper, and
sage.

SPICED MEAT. MRS. IRA UHLER.
Take five pounds of beef from the shoulder and cover with cold water;
boil until very tender; chop fine and season with salt and pepper.
Slice four or five hard boiled eggs. Alternate layers of meat and
eggs, having a layer of meat on the top. Put an ounce of gelatine and
a few cloves into the liquor in which the meat has been boiled; boil
this down to one pint; strain it over the meat, which must be pressed
down with a plate. Set in a cool place. Slice cold for serving.

BATTER PUDDING WITH BEEF ROAST. MRS. C. H. NORRIS.
Put roast in oven, and cook within an hour of being done; then place a
couple of sticks across the pan and rest your roast upon them. Make a
batter according to the following rule, and pour it right into the
gravy in which the roast has been resting, cook an hour and serve:
Four eggs, tablespoon of sugar, one quart of milk, six tablespoons of
flour, and a piece of butter the size of a walnut.

BONED SHOULDER OF MUTTON.
Have the bone carefully removed from a rather lean shoulder of mutton,
and fill the orifice thus left with a good forcemeat.


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