American Cookery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 51 pages of information about American Cookery.

American Cookery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 51 pages of information about American Cookery.

Parsnips, are a valuable root, cultivated best in rich old grounds, and doubly deep plowed, late sown, they grow thrifty, and are not so prongy; they may be kept any where and any how, so that they do not grow with heat, or are nipped with frost; if frosted, let them thaw in earth; they are richer flavored when plowed out of the ground in April, having stood out during the winter, tho’ they will not last long after, and commonly more sticky and hard in the centre.

Carrots, are managed as it respects plowing and rich ground, similarly to Parsnips.  The yellow are better than the orange or red; middling fiz’d, that is, a foot long and two inches thick at the top end, are better than over grown ones; they are cultivated best with onions, sowed very thin, and mixed with other seeds, while young or six weeks after sown, especially if with onions on true onion ground.  They are good with veal cookery, rich in soups, excellent with hash, in May and June.

Garlicks, tho’ used by the French, are better adapted to the uses of medicine than cookery.

Asparagus—­The mode of cultivation belongs to gardening; your business is only to cut and dress, the largest is best, the growth of a day sufficient, six inches long, and cut just above the ground; many cut below the surface, under an idea of getting tender shoots, and preserving the bed; but it enfeebles the root:  dig round it and it will be wet with the juices—­but if cut above ground, and just as the dew is going off, the sun will either reduce the juice, or send it back to nourish the root—­its an excellent vegetable.

Parsley, of the three kinds, the thickest and branchiest is the best, is sown among onions, or in a bed by itself, may be dryed for winter use; tho’ a method which I have experienced, is much better—­In September I dig my roots, procure an old thin stave dry cask, bore holes an inch diameter in every stave, 6 inches asunder round the cask, and up to the top—­take first a half bushel of rich garden mold and put into the cask, then run the roots through the staves, leaving the branches outside, press the earth tight about the root within, and thus continue on thro’ the respective stories, till the cask is full; it being filled, run an iron bar thro’ the center of the dirt in the cask and fill with water, let stand on the south and east side of a building till frosty night, then remove it, (by slinging a rope round the cask) into the cellar; where, during the winter, I clip with my scissars the fresh parsley, which my neighbors or myself have occasion for; and in the spring transplant the roots in the bed in the garden, or in any unused corner—­or let stand upon the wharf, or the wash shed.  Its an useful mode of cultivation, and a pleasurably tasted herb, and much used in garnishing viands.

Raddish, Salmon coloured is the best, purple next best—­white—­turnip—­each are produced from southern seeds, annually.  They grow thriftiest sown among onions.  The turnip Raddish will last well through the winter.

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American Cookery from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.