Page:Art of Cookery 1774 edition.djvu/225

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
made Plain and Easy.
187

much the best done this way, though most people stew the oysters first in a sauce-pan, with a blade of mace, thickened with a piece of butter, and fill the shells, and then cover them with crumbs and brown them with a hot iron: but the bread has not the fine taste of the former.

To stew muscles.

WASH them very clean from the sand in two or three waters. put them into a stew-pan, cover them close, and let them stew till all the shells are opened; then take them out one by one, pick them out of the shells, and look under the tongue to see if there be a crab; if there is, you must throw away the muscle; some will only pick out the crab, and eat the muscle. When you have picked them all clean, put them into a sauce pan; to a quart of muscles put half a pint of the liquor strained through a sieve, put in a blade or two of mace, a piece of butter as big as a large walnut rolled in flour; let them stew, toast some bread brown, and lay them round the dish, cut three-corner ways; pour in the muscles, and send them to table hot.

Another way to stew muscles.

CLEAN and stew your muscles as in the foregoing receipt, only to a quart of muscles put in a pint of liquor and a quarter of a pound of butter rolled in a very little flour. When they are enough, have some crumbs of bread ready, and cover the bottom of your dish thick, grate half a nutmeg over them, and pour the muscles and sauce all over thee crumbs, and send them to table.

A third way to dress muscles.

STEW them as above, and lay them in your dish; strew your crumbs of bread thick all over them, then set them before a good fire, turning the dish round and round, that they may be brown all alike. Keep basting them with butter, that the crumbs may be crisp, and it will make a pretty side-dish. You may do cockles the same way.

To stew colops.

BOIL them very well in salt and water, take them out and stew them in a little of the liquor, a little white wine, a little vinegar, two or three blades of mace, two or three cloves, apiece