Thanksgiving Menu Recipe
In the first place, talk over with her and decide about the number to be
entertained, and then settle on the menu. Get her to express her
opinions, and if they are good let her see that you approve them by
following her suggestions. If they are not good point out wherein they
are at fault, and after deciding what dishes are to be served, show her
how to write out the bill of fare in proper form. This should then be
hung up in the kitchen for reference, as otherwise it would be an easy
matter to overlook something or make a mistake. If, for instance, a
simple dinner of the usual good things is desired, it should be written
out in this way--and the child herself can do the writing:
DINNER
Consomme
Roast Turkey, with Dressing
Cranberry Sauce Pickles Celery
Mashed Potatoes Creamed Onions
Mince Pie Cream Cheese
Coffee Nuts Raisins
MARKETING
The day before let the child help in the marketing. As she has already
been shown how to make consomme, she can now be allowed to do it by
herself, and set it away to be heated up when needed. When you go to buy
the turkey, vegetables and fruits, show her the right kind to select.
Explain that the celery should be crisp and white, not wilted and
discolored; the cranberries hard and red, not soft and brown in spots;
the oranges solid and heavy, not pithy and light.
Have her consult the list made before starting out, to be sure she gets
everything needed before beginning her cooking.
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DRESSING THE TURKEY
Returning home, as soon as the turkey is delivered show her how to dress
it. This is always an interesting process, and while few mothers like to
see their girls really do this work, they ought to explain it fully.
After taking out the pinfeathers and singeing, the skin should be
carefully washed with warm water, soap and a small clean cloth, for so
much dust adheres to the flesh of poultry that in no other way can it be
removed. As fowls are usually drawn at the market, now take out the
giblets, tear away the lights, rinse thoroughly the inside and then
sprinkle with salt.
MOIST STUFFING
The little cook herself can be allowed to make the stuffing. To each
loaf of stale bread, broken in small pieces, add salt and pepper to
taste, two tablespoonfuls of butter, half-teaspoonful of ground sage and
boiling water enough to slightly moisten.
DRY STUFFING
For dry dressing, crumble the bread, omit the water, but use four
tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Pack in the turkey very loosely. Some
people like this seasoned with thyme, while others prefer onion.
OYSTER STUFFING
Or if oyster dressing is preferred, omit sage and add instead one pint
of oysters, using the liquor to dampen the bread. Pack lightly in the
turkey, sew up the opening with white thread and set away in a cool
place.
CRANBERRY SAUCE
Taking the cranberries next, the child can sort them over, wash and put
in a granite kettle, allowing half a cupful of water and two cupfuls of
sugar to each quart of berries. Place over a slow fire, and after
boiling fifteen or twenty minutes, stirring only enough to keep from
burning, remove and set away until cool enough to pour in a glass dish.
Berries cooked this way will keep their shape, be transparent and a
bright, pretty red.
MINCE MEAT
The mince-meat takes some time to prepare, and is much better if made a
week or two beforehand and allowed to stand in a tightly covered jar.
Our small cook can help get ready the raisins, currants, citron, orange
peel, and apples while the beef is boiling, and then will be delighted
to do the chopping. To half a pound of lean beef, cooked until well done
and chopped fine, add half a pound of chopped suet and one pound of
chopped tart apples, prepared separately. To this put half a pound of
currants, cleaned and dried, half a pound of seeded raisins, half a
pound of citron, cut in small pieces, two cupfuls of light-brown sugar,
an even teaspoonful salt, half a teaspoonful each of ground cloves and
allspice, one teaspoonful cinnamon, one-fourth teaspoonful grated
nutmeg, one tablespoonful of finely broken dried orange peel, juice of
one lemon, one pint of boiled cider. Boil slowly for an hour, add, if
desired, one-half cupful of brandy, and then pack away in a crock in a
cool place. This recipe, with full directions for mixing, should then be
written out in the small cook-book, for although it may not be needed
again for a long time, it will be ready for reference at any moment,
ready for use without any doubt or trouble--and "the kind that mother
used to make." Mince-meat is so fascinating, too, on account of all the
good things that go into it, that scarcely anyone that ever made it
right once can fail thereafter.
Every girl should know how to make good pie crust, and as it is
principally a matter of having the ingredients chilled from the ice-box,
almost anyone can be successful by taking a little care.
PLAIN PASTRY
Sift one and one-half cupfuls of flour with one-half teaspoonful salt.
Chop through this until like meal a half-cupful of chilled lard. Add
just enough ice-water to make a stiff dough, and turn out with as
little handling as possible on a floured bread-board. Sprinkle on flour
enough to keep from sticking to rolling-pin, and dividing into sections,
roll to fit the size of the pie-pan. (Perforated tins are preferable.)
Add filling, put on thinly-rolled top crust, with a few openings in
center to emit steam, and bake about half an hour, after pressing the
edges thoroughly together to keep in all juice. If desired shorter,
three-quarters of a cupful of lard can be used, but the dough must be
kept thoroughly chilled, and it is best made in a cold room.
SETTING THE TABLE
Then, on Thursday morning begin the dinner in plenty of time, so there
will be no hurry or confusion at the last moment. The table can be set
early, the little maid being shown the silver required. At the right of
each plate put the knife, soup spoon and necessary teaspoons; at the
left the forks, three if a salad is served. The glass for water is
placed to the right of the center, in line with the knife, and the
napkin either directly in the center on the service-plate or to the left
of the forks. If no flowers are available for table decorations, pile
the fruit up attractively for a centerpiece, using the small dishes of
nuts and raisins at each end to balance.
The vegetables next should be prepared. Trim off the long green ends of
the celery and the discolored outside stalks, (which will make a nice
cream of celery soup next day), and then instead of separating the
remaining stalks, cut through the whole bunches into quarter sections or
smaller. In this way each person gets part of the inside tender heart,
and the celery is more attractive.
When dinner is all ready, if there is no maid to help, the easiest way
is to have the soup served and placed on the table just before calling
out the guests. Then, when ready for the next course, our little cook
can remove the soup plates, taking from the right side of each person,
and bring on the dinner. When that is over, she must remove all the
dishes before each one, clear the table of everything but the water
glasses and the decorations, brush the cloth with a folded napkin and a
plate to catch the crumbs, and lastly bring in the dessert. Every family
has its own way as regards details, but a mother can very quickly get a
child into the habit of being neat, careful and quiet about handling
dishes. And she must always remember to proffer food on a tray, at the
left.
Christmas Dinner
Our little cook, after her experience at Thanksgiving, will probably be
most eager to take part in the preparations for the Christmas dinner.
Consult her now, as before; tell her all your ideas, get her
suggestions, and then make all plans at least a week beforehand.
Holidays should be holidays for the hostess as well as the guest, and
can be made so by the choice of a dinner that is good and at the same
time easily prepared. The suggested menu following will be found
attractive enough for any party, and at the same time it is neither
expensive nor very difficult to get ready.
Let the little girl again make out the bill of fare and hang up in the
kitchen for reference, make out her list for market and grocery, and
help in the selection of the goose, the vegetables and the fruits. Thus
she will learn the best kinds to buy and what they cost, and
incidentally mother and daughter can have a regular little lark out of
the expedition and become better chums than in almost any other way.
CHRISTMAS MENU
MENU FOR CHRISTMAS DINNER
Raw Oysters, Horseradish
Roast Goose Apple Sauce Celery
Mashed Potatoes Lima Beans
Tomato Jelly Salad
Plum Pudding
Fruit Nuts Raisins
Coffee
The first dish to make, strange to say, is the last one on the list, and
the plum pudding is better if made several weeks before it is needed,
and then simply steamed up again for a couple of hours just before
serving. A fine old recipe that had been in a friend's family for years,
was once given me, but as it filled six molds I reduced it to the
following proportions, which is ample for a mold large enough for eight
people:
PLUM PUDDING
One-half cupful butter, three-quarters cupful sugar, one-quarter pound
suet, two and one-half cupfuls flour, one-half pound seeded raisins,
one-half pound currants, one ounce citron, three eggs yolks and whites
(beaten separately), one-half cupful milk, one-quarter cupful almonds
(blanched and chopped fine), one-quarter cupful brandy (or boiled cider
if preferred), one-half teaspoonful cloves, one-quarter teaspoonful
nutmeg, one teaspoonful cinnamon.
After getting all her ingredients out on the table and ready, the little
cook should cream her butter and sugar, beat in yolks, add milk, and
then stir in the flour alternately with the stiff whites. Then put in
the brandy and spice, and last of all the fruit and nuts, dredged with a
little flour. This should be well stirred, and then packed in a
thoroughly greased covered mold and steamed for four hours.
HARD SAUCE
Two kinds of sauce are nice for this pudding, served together. A hard
sauce is made by creaming one-half cupful of butter in one cupful of
fine sugar, adding half teaspoonful of brandy or vanilla and one
teaspoonful cream and stirring until light and creamy. It can be set in
a bowl of hot water at first to help make the butter cream, but after
being beaten light should be set in the cold to harden. A teaspoonful
of this hard sauce is served on each portion of the pudding.
HOT SAUCE
The following hot sauce is poured around: one-quarter cupful butter, one
cupful sugar, one teaspoonful flour. Mix flour and sugar, add butter and
one cupful cold water, and stir until it boils and thickens. Flavor with
nutmeg.
The day before Christmas repeat the lesson in dressing a fowl, and let
her make the stuffing from the recipe used before, only this time she
should omit the sage or oysters and season with a small onion chopped
fine.
APPLE SAUCE
For the accompanying apple sauce, let her peel and quarter half a dozen
tart apples, put on to cook in a cup of cold water, and when tender
press through a colander, sweeten to taste, and then put in a pretty
glass dish and grate nutmeg over the top. This should then be covered
and set away until ready to be carried to the table.
OYSTERS ON THE HALF SHELL
As we intended to have as little work as possible about this particular
dinner, I have suggested raw oysters for the first course instead of a
soup. Serve on the half-shell if you can get them that way, putting a
little chopped ice on each plate to hold the shells in place, giving
four or five oysters to each person, and putting one empty shell in the
center to hold the horseradish or slice of lemon. If the oysters are
opened at the market all you have to do is to see that they are kept on
ice until served.
TOMATO JELLY SALAD
For the tomato jelly salad, first boil together until very tender one
quart can of tomatoes, one small sliced onion, six cloves, one-half
cupful chopped celery. Strain through a jelly bag, season with salt and
pepper, and add gelatin which has been dissolving in a few spoonfuls of
cold water. As different brands vary, however, study the directions on
the box in order to get the right amount to stiffen one quart of jelly.
If the gelatin does not thoroughly melt with the warm tomato juice, set
over the fire for a few moments, and then pour into small molds (wine
glasses or after-dinner coffee cups will serve nicely), and set away to
harden over night. Next morning fix the required number of salad dishes
with lettuce leaves or tender cabbage cut in strings, and turn out
carefully the molded tomato jelly. Over the top of each drop a large
spoonful of thick boiled dressing.
CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS
A pretty idea for a Christmas table is to carry out as fully as possible
a color scheme of red and green. The centerpiece, of course, should be
of holly, and a novel one it will be if large beautiful pieces are put
in the upper part of a double boiler and set out to freeze. I did this
once by accident, and when I went for my holly there it was--imbedded in
a solid block of ice. The shape of the oat-meal kettle, like a
flowerpot, allowed the ice to turn out easily, and it could then be set
on a plate and trimmed around the bottom with the holly leaves. A couple
of bolts of red baby ribbon will be enough for streamers from the
chandelier to each plate, at which should be a pretty piece of the
holly--or better still, if you can get them, three or four red
carnations for each lady, and one for the buttonhole of each gentleman.
COLOR SCHEME
To carry out this color plan, the oysters should be served with catsup
and garnished with parsley, the tomato jelly be turned out on lettuce,
the plum pudding (ablaze with a spoonful of alcohol) decorated with
holly, and the candy--red and white peppermint wafers--tied with green
baby ribbon.
If the details of preparing the dinner have been followed out as I have
suggested, and everything possible done the day before, on Christmas
morning there will be little to do: the goose to put into the oven and
roast, the potatoes to mash and the beans to dress, the plum pudding to
heat up, the sauce to prepare, with the gravy and the coffee to make at
the last moment. Our small cook of course has the celery cleaned
preparatory to cutting up, and the nuts all cracked, and she can tie up
the candy and assist with the decorations. Having helped set the table
for the Thanksgiving party, she will feel perfectly competent to
undertake the arrangement now, alone, and you, Mother, can say, "You
have gotten along with everything so nicely, and remembered so well, I
will let you put on the dishes and silver all by yourself." Then when
she reports that all is ready, look over the work yourself and see that
it is all right. Possibly she will have misplaced some pieces, forgotten
others, but if you point out the errors and have her remedy the mistakes
herself, she will likely remember next time and make her table a
well-appointed one.
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