The Myrtle Reed Cook Book. Reed Myrtle
through a sieve and let cool. Any flavoring recommended before may be used.
XXXIII. Snow.– Peel white-fleshed, firm apples, grate quickly on a coarse grater, and serve in roughly piled heaps on small plates immediately. Use sugar or not.
XXXIV. Southern, Fried.– Core and cut in thick slices, but do not peel. Dip in egg and crumbs and fry in ham or bacon fat and serve with those meats.
XXXV. Stewed.– Pare, core, and halve large cooking-apples. Put into an earthen dish, cover with water, sprinkle with sugar, cover tightly, and cook slowly. If flat in taste, sprinkle with lemon-juice, cinnamon, or nutmeg.
XXXVI. Stewed with Dates.– Add washed and stoned dates to stewed apples when partially cooked, and finish cooking. Dried apricots, fresh or dried cherries, rhubarb, figs, plums, dried peaches, pears, or quinces, may be used in the same way.
XXXVII. Stewed with Rice.– Boil rice as usual in boiling water, adding a little salt. When partly done, add pared, cored, and quartered quick-cooking apples. Finish cooking. Serve very cold with cream and sugar. Flavorings noted above may be added at discretion.
I. Wipe with a dry cloth and serve with fruit-knives. A green leaf on each plate is a dainty fruit doily.
II. Canned.– Drain, rinse in cold water, arrange on plates, and let stand several hours before serving. Sugar or not, as desired. Save the syrup to flavor syrup for pancakes, or to use for puddings, fritters, etc.
III. Dried.– Soak over night, cook very slowly in the water in which they were soaked, adding very little sugar. Serve with cereal, or separately.
IV. Sauce.– Cook as above, and rub the fruit through a sieve. The canned, drained, and freshened fruit may be used in the same way.
I. Serve in the skins with fruit-knives, one to each person.
II. Skin and scrape and serve immediately. People who cannot ordinarily eat bananas usually find them harmless when the tough, stringy pulp is scraped off.
III. Baked.– Bake without peeling, basting with hot water and melted butter occasionally. Let cool in the skins.
IV. Baked.– Skin, scrape, and bake, basting with lemon-juice and melted butter. Sprinkle with sugar if desired.
V. Au naturel.– Slice into saucers, sprinkle with lemon-juice and sugar.
VI. With Sugar and Cream.– Slice, sprinkle with powdered sugar, pour cream over, and serve at once.
VII. With Oranges.– Slice, add an equal quantity of sliced oranges, and sprinkle with sugar.
VIII. With Cereal.– Slice fresh bananas into a saucer, sprinkle with sugar, cover with boiled rice or with any preferred cereal.
IX. Equally good with sliced peaches.
Serve with powdered sugar, with or without cream. A tablespoonful of cracked ice in a saucer of berries is appreciated on a hot morning.
See Green Gages.
I. Serve very cold, with the stems on. A dainty way is to lay the cherries upon a bed of cracked ice, and serve with powdered sugar in individual dishes.
II. Pit the cherries, saving the juice, and serve in saucers with sugar and plenty of cracked ice.
III. Iced.– Beat the white of an egg to a foam. Dip each cherry into it, then roll in powdered sugar, and set on a platter in the refrigerator. Must be prepared overnight.
IV. Crusts.– Butter rounds of stale bread, spread with pitted cherries and their juice, sprinkle with sugar, and bake. Serve very cold.
Serve in cracked ice with plenty of sugar. These are also served iced, and on crusts. See Cherries III and IV.
May be served from the basket. This, of course, applies only to the more expensive varieties, which are clean. The ordinary dried fig of commerce must be washed many times, and is usually sweet enough without adding more sugar.
II. Steamed.– Set a plate of figs in a steamer over boiling water until plump and soft, then set away to cool.
III. Stewed.– Clean, soak, and cook slowly till tender in a little water. Skim out, drain, sweeten the syrup slightly, reduce one half, pour over the figs, and cool. A bit of vanilla or wine may be added to the syrup.
IV. With Cereal.– Cover a saucer of steamed or stewed figs with any preferred cereal. Serve with cream if desired.
V. In Rice-Cups.– See Apples XXIX.
VI. In Crumbs.– See Apples XXVIII.
These berries must be stewed in order to be acceptable. The fruit, after stewing, may be rubbed through a sieve fine enough to keep back the seeds, or it may be baked on crusts. See Cherries IV.
This luscious fruit is at its best when served fresh from the vines, with the bloom still on. Never wash a bunch of grapes if it can be avoided. Serve with grape scissors to cut the bunches apart. People who fear appendicitis may have the grapes squeezed from the skins and the seeds afterwards removed. They are very nice this way, with sugar and pounded ice.
A good grapefruit will have dark spots, a skin which seems thin, will be firm to the touch, and heavy for its size. To serve, cut crosswise, and remove the white, bitter pulp which is in the core, and separate the sections. Fill the core with sugar and serve cold. A little rum or kirsch may be added just before serving, but, as George Ade said, “A good girl needs no help,” and it is equally true of a good grapefruit. If anybody knows why it is called grapefruit, please write to the author of this book in care of the publishers.
Serve as they come, with the bloom on, or peel, pit, and serve with cracked ice and powdered sugar.
Look the fruit over carefully. Nothing pleases a fly so much as to die and be mistaken for a huckleberry. Serve with cracked ice, with sugar or cream, or both.
Keep on ice till the last moment. Cut crosswise, take out the seeds with a spoon, and put a cube of ice in each half. Green leaves on the plate are a dainty touch.
Serve with fruit-knives, or in halves with spoons – either the orange-spoon which comes for that purpose, or a very heavy teaspoon. Another way is to remove the peel, except a strip an inch wide at the equator, cut at a division line and straighten out the peel, taking care not to break off the sections. Or, the fruit may be peeled, sliced, and served on plates with sugar.
Wipe with a dry cloth and serve with fruit-knives. Or, if you think much of your breakfast napkins, peel and cut just before serving, as they discolor quickly. Serve with cracked ice, or with cream. Hard peaches may be baked, as apples are, and served cold with cream. Stewed peaches may be served on crusts.
Serve as they come, with fruit-knives. Hard pears may be baked or stewed according to directions previously given.
Peel, cut out the eyes, and shred from the core with a silver fork. Sprinkle with sugar and keep on ice some hours before serving. Pineapple is the only fruit known to have a distinct digestive value, and it works most readily on starches. It combines pleasantly with bananas.
These are soaked, and boiled in the water in in which they are soaked, with the addition of a very little sugar. Dried apricots, blackberries, cherries, nectarines, and prunes are