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MODERN COOKERY,
FOR PRIVATE FAMILIES,
REDUCED TO A SYSTEM OF EASY PRACTICE,
IN A SERIES OF
CAREFULLY TESTED RECEIPTS,
IN WHICH THE PRINCIPLES OF
BARON LIEBIG AND OTHER EMINENT WRITERS
HAVE BEEN AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE APPLIED AND EXPLAINED.
BY ELIZA ACTON.
"It is the want of a scientific basis which has given rise to so many absurd
and hurtful methods of preparing food."—DR. GREGORY.
NEWLY REVISED AND MUCH ENLARGED EDITION.
COPIOUSLY ILLUSTRATED.
LONDON:
LONGMANS, GREEN, READER, AND DYER.
1868.
Dedicated
to the
YOUNG HOUSEKEEPERS
OF ENGLAND
PREFACE
It cannot be denied that an improved system of practical domestic cookery, and a better knowledge of its first principles, are still much needed in this country; where, from
ignorance, or from mismanagement in their preparation, the
daily waste of excellent provisions almost exceeds belief. This waste is in itself a very serious evil where so large a portion of the community often procure — as they do in England—with painful difficulty, and with the heaviest labour,
even sufficient bread to sustain existence; but the amount of positive disease which is caused amongst us by improper
food, or by food rendered unwholesome by a bad mode of cooking it, seems a greater evil still. The influence of diet
upon health is indeed a subject of far deeper importance than
it would usually appear to be considered, if we may judge
by the profound indifference with which it is commonly treated. It has occupied, it is true, the earnest attention of
many eminent men of science, several of whom have recently investigated it with the most patient and laborious research,
the results of which they have made known to the world in
their writings, accompanied, in some instances, by information
of the highest value as to the most profitable and nutritious modes of preparing various kinds of viands. In arranging
the present enlarged edition of this volume for publication, I have gladly taken advantage of such of their instructions
(those of Baron Liebig especially) as have seemed to me
adapted to its character, and likely to increase its real utility.
These, I feel assured, if carefully followed out, will much
assist our progress in culinary art, and diminish the unnecessary
degree of expenditure which has hitherto attended its operations; for it may safely be averred that good cookery is
the best and truest economy, turning to full account every wholesome article of food, and converting into palatable
meals, what the ignorant either render uneatable, or throw
away in disdain. It is a popular error to imagine that what
is called good cookery is adapted only to the establishments
of the wealthy, and that it is beyond the reach of those who
are not affluent. On the contrary, it matters comparatively little whether some few dishes, amidst an abundant variety,
be prepared in their perfection or not; but it is of the utmost consequence that the food which is served at the more simply supplied tables of the middle classes should all be well and
skilfully prepared, particularly as it is from these classes that the men principally emanate to whose indefatigable industry,
high intelligence, and active genius, we are mainly indebted
for our advancement in science, in art, in literature, and in
general civilisation.
When both the mind and body are exhausted by the toils of the day, heavy or unsuitable food, so far from recruiting their enfeebled powers, prostrates their energies more completely, and acts in every way injuriously upon the system; and it is no exaggeration to add, that many a valuable life has been
shortened by disregard of this fact, or by the impossibility of obtaining such diet as nature imperatively required. It may
be urged, that I speak of rare and extreme cases; but indeed
it is not so; and the impression produced on me by the
discomfort and the suffering which have fallen under my own
observation, has rendered me extremely anxious to aid in discovering an efficient remedy for them. With this object always in view, I have zealously endeavoured to ascertain, and to place clearly before my readers, the most rational and healthful methods of preparing those simple and essential kinds of nourishment which form the staple of our common daily fare; and have occupied myself but little with the
elegant superfluities or luxurious novelties with which I might
perhaps more attractively, though not more usefully, have
filled my pages. Should some persons feel disappointed at the plan I have pursued, and regret the omissions which they
may discover, I would remind them, that the fashionable
dishes of the day may at all times be procured from an able
confectioner; and that part of the space which I might have allotted to them is, I hope and believe, better occupied by
the subjects, homely as they are, to which I have devoted it—
that is to say, to ample directions for dressing vegetables,
and for making what cannot be purchased in this country—
unadulterated bread of the most undeniably wholesome
quality; and those refreshing and finely-flavoured varieties
of preserved fruit which are so conducive to health when
judiciously taken, and for which in illness there is often such a vain and feverish craving when no household stores of them
can be commanded.*
Merely to please the eye by such fanciful and elaborate decorations as distinguish many modern dinners, or to flatter the palate by the production of new and enticing dainties,
ought not to be the principal aim, at least, of any work on
cookery. "Eat,—to live" should be the motto, by the spirit of which all writers upon it should be guided.
I must here obtrude a few words of personal interest to myself. At the risk of appearing extremely egotistic, I have appended "Author's Receipt" and "Author's Original Receipt" to many of the contents of the following pages; but I have done it solely in self-defence, in consequence of the unscrupulous manner in which large portions of my volume have been aproppriated by contemporary authors, without the slightest acknowledgement of the source from which they have been derived.
I have allowed this unfairness, and much beside, to pass entirely unnoticed until now; but I am suffering at present
too severe a penalty for the over-exertion entailed on me by the plan which I adopted for the work, longer to see with perfect composure strangers coolly taking the credit and the profits
of my toil. The subjoined passage from the preface of my
first edition will explain in what this toil—so completely at
variance with all the previous habits of my life, and, therefore,
so injurious in its effects—consisted; and prevent the necessity of recapitulating here, in another form, what I have already stated in it. "Amongst the large number of works on cookery which we have carefully perused, we have never
yet met with one which appeared to us either quite intended for, or entirely suited to the need of the totally inexperienced !
none, in fact, which contained the first rudiments of the art,
with directions so practical, clear, and simple, as to be at once understood, and easily followed, by those who had no previous
knowledge of the subject. This deficiency, we have endeavoured in the present volume to supply, by such thoroughly explicit and minute instructions as may, we trust, be readily comprehended and carried out by any class of learners; our receipts, moreover, with a few trifling exceptions which are scrupulously specified, are confined to such as may be perfectly depended on, from having been proved beneath our own roof and under our own personal inspection. We have trusted nothing to others; but having desired sincerely to render the work one of general usefulness, we have spared neither cost nor labour to make it so, as the very plan on which it has been written must of itself we think, evidently prove. It
contains some novel features, calculated, we hope, not only to
facilitate the labours of the kitchen, but to be of service
likewise to those by whom they are directed. The principal
of these is the summary appended to the receipts, of the different ingredients which they contain, with the exact proportion of each, and the precise time required to dress the whole. This shows at a glance what articles have to be prepared beforehand, and the hour at which they must be ready; while it affords great facility as well, for an estimate of the expense attending them. The additional space occupied by this closeness of detail has necessarily prevented the admission of so great a variety of receipts as the book might otherwise have comprised; but a limited number, thus completely explained, may perhaps be more acceptable to the reader than a larger mass of materials vaguely given.
"Our directions for boning poultry, game, &c., are also, we venture to say, entirely new, no author that is known to us having hitherto afforded the slightest information on the subjct; but while we have done our utmost to simplify and to render intelligible this, and several other processes not generally well understood by ordinary cooks, our first and best attention has been bestowed on those articles of food of which the consumption is the most general, and which are therefore of the greatest consequence; and on what are usually termed plain English dishes. With these we have intermingled many others which we know to be excellent of their
kind, and which now so far belong to our national cookery, as to be met with commonly at all refined modern tables."
Since this extract was written, a rather formidable array of works on the same subject has issued from the press, part of them from the pens of celebrated professional gastronomers; others are constantly appearing; yet we make, nevertheless, but slight perceptible progress in this branch of our domestic economy. Still, in our cottages, as well as in homes of a better order, goes on the "waste" of which I have already spoken.
It is not, in fact, cookery-books that we need half so much as cooks really trained to a knowledge of their duties, and suited, by their acquirements, to families of different grades. At present, those who thoroughly understand their business are so few in number, that they can always command wages which place their services beyond the reach of persons of moderate fortune. Why should not all classes participate in the benefit to be derived from nourishment calculated to sustain healthfully the powers of life? And why should the
English, as a people, remain more ignorant than their continental neighbours of so simple a matter as that of preparing it for themselves? Without adopting blindly foreign modes in anything merely because they are foreign, surely we should be wise to learn from other nations, who excel us in aught good or useful, all that we can which may tend to remedy our own defects; and the great frugality, combined with almost universal culinary skill, or culinary knowledge, at the least—which prevails amongst many of them—is well worthy of our imitation. Suggestions of this nature are not, however, sufficient for our purpose. Something definite, practical and easy of application, must open the way to our general improvement. Efforts in the right direction are already
being made, I am told, by the establishment of well-conducted schools for the early and efficient training of our female domestic servants. These will materially assist our progress; and if experienced cooks will put aside the jealous spirit of exclusiveness by which they are too often actuated, and will impart freely the knowledge they have acquired, they also may be infinitely helpful to us, and have a claim upon our gratitude which ought to afford them purer satisfaction than the sole possession of any secrets—genuine or imaginary— connected with their craft.
The limits of a slight preface do not permit me to pursue this or any other topic at much length, and I must in consequence leave my deficiencies to be supplied by some of the
thoughtful, and, in every way, more competent writers, who, happily for us, abound at the present day; and make here my
adieu to the reader.
ELIZA ACTON
London, May, 1855
VOCABULARY OF TERMS
PRINCIPALLY FRENCH, USED IN MODERN COOKERY.
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Aspic—fine transparent savoury jelly, in which cold game, poultry, fish, &c., are moulded; and which serves also to decorate or garnish them.
Assiette Volante—a dish which is handed round the table with out ever being placed upon it. Small fondus in paper cases are often served thus; and various other preparations, which require to be eaten very hot.
Blanquette—a kind of fricassee.
Boudin—a somewhat expensive dish, formed of the French forcemeat called quenelles, composed either of game, poultry, butcherʼs meat or fish, moulded frequently into the form of a rouleau, and gently poached until it is firm; then sometimes broiled or fried, but as frequently served plain.
Bouilli—boiled beef or other meat, beef being more generally understood by the term.
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Bouillie—a sort of hasty pudding.
Bouillon—broth.
Casserole—a stewpan; and the name also given to a rice-crust, when moulded in the form of a pie, then baked and filled with a mince or purée of game, or with a blanquette of white meat.
Court Bouillon—a preparation of vegetables and wine, in which (in expensive cookery) fish is boiled.
Consommé—very strong rich stock or gravy.
Croustade—a case or crust formed of bread, in which minces, purées of game, and other preparations are served.
Crouton—a sippet of bread.
Entrée—a first-course side or corner dish.*
Entremets—a second-course side or corner dish.
Eapagnole, or Spanish sauce—a brown gravy of high savour.
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Farce—forcemeat.
Fondu—s cheese soufflé.
Gâteau—a cake, also s pudding, as Gâteau de Riz ; sometimes also a kind of tart, as Gâteau de Pithiviers.
Hors d'œuvres—small dishes of anchovies, sardines, and other relishes of the kind, served in the first course.
Macaronici—a small kind of maccaroni.
Maigre—made without meat.
Matelote—a rich and expensive stew of fish with wine, generally of carp, eels or trout.
Meringue—a cake, or iceing, made of sugars and whites of egg beaten to snow.
Meringué—covered or iced with a meringue-mixture.
Nouilles—a paste made of yolks of egg and flour, then cut small like vermicelli.
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Purée—meat, or vegetables, reduced to a smooth pulp, and then mixed with sufficient liquid to form a thick sauce or soup.
Quenelles—French forcemeat, for which see page 168.
Rissoles—small fried pastry, either sweet or savoury.
Sparghetti—Naples vermicelli.
Stock—the unthickened broth or gravy which forms the basis of soups and sauces.
Tammy—a strainer of fine thin woollen canvas.
Timbale—a sort of pie made in a mould.
Tourte—a delicate kind of tart baked generally in a shallow tin pan, or without any: see page 574.
Vol-au-vent—for this, see page 357.
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Below you will find links to each and every chapter of Eliza Acton's Modern Cookery for Private Families that are presented in their entirety (with images) on this site.
Table of Contents
Trussing and Carving
1. Soups
2. Fish
3. Shell-fish
4. Gravies
5. Sauces
6. Cold Sauces, Salads
7. Store Sauces
8. Forcemeats
9. Boiling, Roasting, &c.
10. Beef.
11. Veal.
12. Mutton and Lamb.
13. Pork.
14. Poultry.
15. Game.
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16. Curries, Potted Meats
17. Vegetables.
18. Pastry.
19. Soufflés, Omlets, &c.
20. Boiled Puddings
21. Baked Puddings
22. Eggs and Milk
23. Sweet Dishes, or Entremets
24. Preserves
25. Pickles
26. Cakes
27. Confectionary
28. Dessert Dishes
29. Syrups, Liqueurs, &c.
30. Coffee, Chocolate, &c.
31. Bread.
32. Foreign and Jewish Cookery.
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Additions to the American Edition
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