Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 257 pages of information about Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery.

Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 257 pages of information about Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery.

A good French salad is also always decorated with one or more hard-boiled eggs, cut into quarters, longways.  These are placed on the top of the lettuce.

SALAD, ENGLISH, LETTUCE.—­The ordinary English salad is made either with French or English lettuces, and is generally dressed as follows:—­One or two tablespoonfuls of cream or milk, a teaspoonful of made mustard, two tablespoonfuls of vinegar, pepper, and salt.  There are many people still living in remote parts of the country who prefer this style of dressing.

SALAD, ENGLISH, MIXED.—­The old-fashioned English mixed salad generally consisted of English lettuce cut up into strips crossways, to which was added mustard and cress, boiled beetroot, chopped celery, spring onions, radishes, and watercress.  It is by no means a bad mixture when dressed with oil, and, of course, it can be dressed it a l’Anglaise.  It makes an excellent accompaniment to a huge hunk of cheese, a crusty loaf, a good appetite, and a better digestion.

SALAD, MAYONNAISE.—­This is generally considered the king of salads, and it can be made an exceedingly pretty-looking dish, Take two or more French lettuces, clean and dry them as directed above, and take the small heart of one lettuce about the size of a small walnut, uncut from the stalk, so that you can stand it upright in the middle of the salad, raised above the surface.  Arrange all the softer parts of the leaves on the top of the salad so as to make as much as possible a smooth surface.  Make some Mayonnaise sauce, thick enough to be spread like butter, and mask this little mound and all the surface of the middle of the salad round it with a thin layer of the sauce, so that it looks like the top of a mould of solid custard.  Ornament the edge of the salad with hard-boiled eggs cut in quarters, and place between the quarters slices of pickled gherkins and stoned olives.  Take a small teaspoonful of French capers, dry them on a cloth, and sprinkle a few of them about an inch apart on the white surface.  Next chop up, very finely, about half a teaspoonful of parsley, and see that this doesn’t stick together in lumps.  Place this on the end of a knife and flip the knife so that the little green specks of parsley fall on the white surface.  Next take about half a saltspoonful of finely crumbled bread, and shake these in a saucer with one or two drops of cochineal.  This will colour them a bright red, and they will have all the appearance of lobster-coral.  Place these red bread-crumbs on the end of a knife and let them fall over the white surface like the parsley.  The little red and green specks on the white background make the dish look exceedingly pretty.  Before mixing the salad all together add a tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar or lemon-juice.

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Cassell's Vegetarian Cookery from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.