XIII.
GOOD COOKING.
THERE are but a few things on which health and happiness depend more
than on the manner in which food is cooked. You may make houses
enchantingly beautiful, hang them with pictures, have them clean and
airy and convenient; but if the stomach is fed with sour bread and burnt
meats, it will raise such rebellions that the eyes will see no beauty
anywhere. The abundance of splendid material we have in America is in
great contrast with the style of cooking most prevalent in our country.
How often, in journeys, do we sit down to tables loaded with material,
originally of the very best kind, which has been so spoiled in the
treatment that there is really nothing to eat! Green biscuits with acrid
spots of alkali; sour yeast-bread; meat slowly simmered in fat till it
seemed like grease itself, and slowly congealing in cold grease; and
above all, that unpardonable enormity, strong butter! How one longs to
show people what might have been done with the raw material out of which
all these monstrosities were concocted!
There is no country where an ample, well-furnished table is more
easily spread, and for that reason, perhaps, none where the bounties of
Providence are more generally neglected. Considering that our resources
are greater than those of any other civilized people, our results are
comparatively poorer.
It is said that a list of the summer vegetables which are exhibited
on New-York hotel-tables being shown to a French
artiste, he declared that to
serve such a dinner properly
would take till midnight. A traveler can not but be struck with our
national plenteousness, on returning from a Continental tour, and going
directly from the ship to a New-York hotel, in the bounteous season of
autumn. For months habituated to neat little bits of chop or poultry,
garnished with the inevitable cauliflower or potato, which seemed to be
the sole possibility after the reign of green peas was over; to sit down
all at once to such a carnival! to such ripe, juicy tomatoes, raw or
cooked; cucumbers in brittle slices; rich, yellow sweet-potatoes; broad
lima-beans, and beans of other and various names; tempting ears of
Indian-corn steaming in enormous piles; great smoking tureens of the
savory succotash, an Indian gift to the table for which civilization
need not blush; sliced egg-plant in delicate fritters; and
marrow-squashes, of creamy pulp and sweetness; a rich variety,
embarrassing to the appetite, and perplexing to the choice.
Verily, the thought must often occur that the vegetarian doctrine
preached in America leaves a man quite as much as he has capacity to eat
or enjoy, and that in the midst of such tantalizing abundance he has
really lost the apology, which elsewhere bears him out in preying upon
his less gifted and accomplished animal neighbors.
But with all this, the American table, taken as a whole, is inferior
to that of England or France. It presents a fine abundance of material,
carelessly and poorly treated. The management of food is nowhere in the
world, perhaps, more slovenly and wasteful. Every thing betokens that
want of care that waits on abundance; there are great capabilities and
poor execution. A tourist through England can seldom fail, at the
quietest country-inn, of finding himself served with the essentials of
English table-comfort--his mutton-chop done to a turn, his steaming
little private apparatus for concocting his own tea, his choice pot of
marmalade or slice of cold ham, and his delicate rolls and creamy
butter, all served with care and neatness. In France, one never
asks in vain for delicious
café-au-lait, good bread and butter, a nice omelet, or some
savory little portion of meat with a French name. But to a tourist
taking like chance in American country-fare, what is the prospect? What
is the coffee? what the tea? and the meat? and above all, the butter?
In writing on cooking, the main topics should be first, bread;
second, butter; third, meat; fourth, vegetables; and fifth, tea--by
which last is meant, generically, all sorts of warm, comfortable drinks
served out in tea-cups, whether they be called tea, coffee, chocolate,
broma, or what not.
If these five departments are all perfect, the great ends of
domestic cookery are answered, so far as the comfort and well-being of
life are concerned. There exists another department, which is often
regarded by culinary amateurs and young aspirants as the higher branch
and very collegiate course of practical cookery; to wit, confectionery,
by which is designated all pleasing and complicated compounds of sweets
and spices, devised not for health and nourishment, and strongly
suspected of interfering with both--mere tolerated gratifications of the
palate, which we eat, not with the expectation of being benefited, but
only with the hope of not being injured by them. In this large
department rank all sorts of cakes, pies, preserves, etc., whose
excellence is often attained by treading under foot and disregarding the
five grand essentials.
There is many a table garnished with three or four kinds of
well-made cake, compounded with citron and spices and all imaginable
good things, where the meat was tough and greasy, the bread some hot
preparation of flour, lard, saleratus, and acid, and the butter
unutterably detestable, where, if the mistress of the feast had given
the care, time, and labor to preparing the simple items of bread,
butter, and meat, that she evidently had given to the preparation of
these extras, the lot of her guests and family might be much more
comfortable.
But she does not think of these common articles as constituting a good
table. So long as she has puff pastry, rich black cake, clear jelly and
preserves, she considers that such unimportant matters as bread, butter,
and meat may take care of themselves. It is the same inattention to
common things as that which leads people to build houses with stone
fronts, and window-caps and expensive front-door trimmings, without
bathing-rooms or fireplaces, or ventilators.
Those who go into the country looking for summer board in
farm-houses know perfectly well that a table where the butter is always
fresh, the tea and coffee of the best kinds and well made, and the meats
properly kept, dressed, and served, is the one table of a hundred, the
fabulous enchanted island. It seems impossible to get the idea into the
minds of many people that what is called common food, carefully
prepared, becomes, in virtue of that very care and attention, a
delicacy, superseding the necessity of artificially compounded dainties.
To begin, then, with the very foundation of a good table--Bread:
What ought it to be?
It should be light, sweet, and tender. This matter of lightness is
the distinctive line between savage and civilized bread. The savage
mixes simple flour and water into balls of paste, which he throws into
boiling water, and which come out solid, glutinous masses, of which his
common saying is, "Man eat dis, he no die," which a facetious traveler
who was obliged to subsist on it interpreted to mean, "Dis no kill you,
nothing will." In short, it requires the stomach of a wild animal or of
a savage to digest this primitive form of bread, and of course more or
less attention in all civilized modes of bread-making is given to
producing lightness. By lightness is meant simply that in order to
facilitate digestion the particles are to be separated from each other
by little holes or air-cells; and all the different methods of making
light bread are neither more nor less than the formation of bread with
these air-cells.
So far as we know, there are four practicable methods of aerating
bread; namely, by fermentation; by effervescence of an acid and an
alkali; by aerated egg, or egg which has been filled with air by the
process of beating; and lastly, by pressure of some gaseous substance
into the paste, by a process much resembling the impregnation of water
in a soda-fountain. All these have one and the same object--to give us
the cooked particles of our flour separated by such permanent air-cells
as will enable the stomach more readily to digest them.
A very common mode of aerating bread in America is by the
effervescence of an acid and an alkali in the flour. The carbonic acid
gas thus formed produces minute air-cells in the bread, or, as the cook
says, makes it light. When this process is performed with exact
attention to chemical laws, so that the acid and alkali completely
neutralize each other, leaving no overplus of either, the result is
often very palatable. The difficulty is, that this is a happy
conjunction of circumstances which seldom occurs. The acid most commonly
employed is that of sour milk, and, as milk has many degrees of
sourness, the rule of a certain quantity of alkali to the pint must
necessarily produce very different results at different times. As an
actual fact where this mode of making bread prevails, as we lament to
say it does to a great extent in this country, one finds five cases of
failure to one of success.
It is a woeful thing that the daughters of our land have abandoned
the old respectable mode of yeast-brewing and bread-raising for this
specious substitute, so easily made, and so seldom well made. The green,
clammy, acrid substance, called biscuit, which many of our worthy
republicans are obliged to eat in these days, is wholly unworthy of the
men and women of the republic. Good patriots ought not to be put off in
that way--they deserve better fare.
As an occasional variety, as a household convenience for obtaining
bread or biscuit at a moment's notice, the process
of effervescence may be retained; but we earnestly entreat American
housekeepers, in scriptural language, to stand in the way and ask for
the old paths, and return to the good yeast-bread of their sainted
grandmothers.
If acid and alkali must be used, by all means let them be mixed in
due proportions. No cook should be left to guess and judge for herself
about this matter. There are articles made by chemical rule which
produce very perfect results, and the use of them obviates the worst
dangers in making bread by effervescence.
Of all processes of aeration in bread-making, the oldest and most
time-honored mode is by fermentation. That this was known in the days of
our Saviour is evident from the forcible simile in which he compares the
silent permeating force of truth in human society to the very familiar
household process of raising bread by a little yeast.
There is, however, one species of yeast, much used in some parts of
the country, against which protest should be made. It is called
salt-risings, or milk-risings, and is made by mixing flour, milk, and a
little salt together, and leaving them to ferment. The bread thus
produced is often very attractive, when new and made with great care. It
is white and delicate, with fine, even air-cells. It has, however, when
kept, some characteristics which remind us of the terms in which our old
English Bible describes the effect of keeping the manna of the ancient
Israelites, which we are informed, in words more explicit than
agreeable, "stank, and bred worms." If salt-rising bread does not
fulfill the whole of this unpleasant description, it certainly does
emphatically a part of it. The smell which it has in baking, and when
more than a day old, suggests the inquiry, whether it is the saccharine
or the putrid fermentation with which it is raised. Whoever breaks a
piece of it after a day or two, will often see minute filaments or
clammy strings drawing out from the fragments, which, with the
unmistakable smell, will cause him to pause before consummating a nearer
acquaintance.
The fermentation of flour by means of brewer's or distiller's yeast
produces, if rightly managed, results far more palatable and wholesome.
The only requisites for success in it are, first, good materials, and,
second, great care in small things. There are certain low-priced or
damaged kinds of flour which can never by any kind of domestic chemistry
be made into good bread; and to those persons whose stomachs forbid them
to eat gummy, glutinous paste, under the name of bread, there is no
economy in buying these poor brands, even at half the price of good
flour.
But good flour and good yeast being supposed, with a temperature
favorable to the development of fermentation, the whole success of the
process depends on the thorough diffusion of the proper proportion of
yeast through the whole mass, and on stopping the subsequent
fermentation at the precise and fortunate point. The true housewife
makes her bread the sovereign of her kitchen--its behests must be
attended to in all critical points and moments, no matter what else be
postponed.
She who attends to her bread only when she has done this, and
arranged that, and performed the other, very often finds that the forces
of nature will not wait for her. The snowy mass, perfectly mixed,
kneaded with care and strength, rises in its beautiful perfection till
the moment comes for filling the air-cells by baking. A few minutes now,
and the acetous fermentation will begin, and the whole result be
spoiled. Many bread-makers pass in utter carelessness over this sacred
and mysterious boundary. Their oven has cake in it, or they are skimming
jelly, or attending to some other of the so-called higher branches of
cookery, while the bread is quickly passing into the acetous stage. At
last, when they are ready to attend to it, they find that it has been
going its own way,--it is so sour that the pungent smell is plainly
perceptible. Now the saleratus-bottle is handed down, and a quantity of
the dissolved alkali mixed with the paste--an expedient sometimes making
itself too
manifest by greenish streaks or small acrid spots in the bread. As the
result, we have a beautiful article spoiled--bread without sweetness, if
not absolutely sour.
In the view of many, lightness is the only property required in this
article. The delicate refined sweetness which exists in carefully
kneaded bread, baked just before it passes to the extreme point of
fermentation, is something of which they have no conception; and thus
they will even regard this process of spoiling the paste by the acetous
fermentation, and then rectifying that acid by effervescence with an
alkali, as something positively meritorious. How else can they value and
relish bakers' loaves, such as some are, drugged with ammonia and other
disagreeable things; light indeed, so light that they seem to have
neither weight nor substance, but with no more sweetness or taste than
so much cotton wool?
Some persons prepare bread for the oven by simply mixing it in the
mass, without kneading, pouring it into pans, and suffering it to rise
there. The air-cells in bread thus prepared are coarse and uneven; the
bread is as inferior in delicacy and nicety to that which is well
kneaded as a raw servant to a perfectly educated and refined lady. The
process of kneading seems to impart an evenness to the minute air-cells,
a fineness of texture, and a tenderness and pliability to the whole
substance, that can be gained in no other way.
The divine principle of beauty has its reign over bread as well as
over all other things; it has its laws of Æsthetics; and that bread
which is so prepared that it can be formed into separate and
well-proportioned loaves, each one carefully worked and moulded, will
develop the most beautiful results. After being moulded, the loaves
should stand usually not over ten minutes, just long enough to allow the
fermentation going on in them to expand each little air-cell to the
point at which it stood before it was worked down, and then they should
be immediately put into the oven.
Many a good thing, however, is spoiled in the oven. We can not but
regret, for the sake of bread, that our old steady brick ovens have been
almost universally superseded by those of ranges and cooking-stoves,
which are infinite in their caprices, and forbid all general rules. One
thing, however, may be borne in mind as a principle--that the excellence
of bread in all its varieties, plain or sweetened, depends on the
perfection of its air-cells, whether produced by yeast, egg, or
effervescence; that one of the objects of baking is to fix these
air-cells, and that the quicker this can be done through the whole mass,
the better will the result be. When cake or bread is made heavy by
baking too quickly, it is because the immediate formation of the top
crust hinders the exhaling of the moisture in the centre, and prevents
the air-cells from cooking. The weight also of the crust pressing down
on the doughy air-cells below destroys them, producing that horror of
good cooks, a heavy streak. The problem in baking, then, is the quick
application of heat rather below than above the loaf, and its steady
continuance till all the air-cells are thoroughly dried into permanent
consistency. Every housewife must watch her own oven to know how this
can be best accomplished.
Bread-making can be cultivated to any extent as a fine art--and the
various kinds of biscuit, tea-rusks, twists, rolls, into which bread may
be made, are much better worth a housekeeper's ambition than the
getting-up of rich and expensive cake or confections. There are also
varieties of material which are rich in good effects. Unbolted flour,
altogether more wholesome than the fine wheat, and when properly
prepared more palatable--rye-flour and corn-meal, each affording a
thousand attractive possibilities--all of these come under the general
laws of bread-stuffs, and are worth a careful attention.
A peculiarity of our American table, particularly in the Southern
and Western States, is the constant exhibition of various preparations
of hot bread. In many families of the
South and West, bread in loaves to be eaten cold is an article quite
unknown. The effect of this kind of diet upon the health has formed a
frequent subject of remark among travelers; but only those know the full
mischiefs of it who have been compelled to sojourn for a length of time
in families where it is maintained. The unknown horrors of dyspepsia
from bad bread are a topic over which we willingly draw a vail.
Next to Bread comes Butter--on
which we have to say, that, when we remember what butter is in civilized
Europe, and compare it with what it is in America, we wonder at the
forbearance and lenity of travelers in their strictures on our national
commissariat.
Butter, in England, France, and Italy, is simply solidified cream,
with all the sweetness of the cream in its taste, freshly churned each
day, and unadulterated by salt. At the present moment, when salt is five
cents a pound and butter fifty, we Americans are paying, at high prices,
for about one pound of salt to every ten of butter, and those of us who
have eaten the butter of France and England do this with rueful
recollections.
There is, it is true, an article of butter made in the American
style with salt, which, in its own kind and way, has a merit not
inferior to that of England and France. Many prefer it, and it certainly
takes a rank equally respectable with the other. It is yellow, hard, and
worked so perfectly free from every particle of buttermilk that it might
make the voyage of the world without spoiling. It is salted, but salted
with care and delicacy, so that it may be a question whether even a
fastidious Englishman might not prefer its golden solidity to the white,
creamy freshness of his own. But it is to be regretted that this article
is the exception, and not the rule, on our tables.
America must have the credit of manufacturing and putting into
market more bad butter than all that is made in all the rest of the
world together. The varieties of bad
tastes and smells which prevail in it are quite a study. This has a
cheesy taste, that a mouldy, this is flavored with cabbage, and that
again with turnip, and another has the strong, sharp savor of rancid
animal fat. These varieties probably come from the practice of churning
only at long intervals, and keeping the cream meanwhile in unventilated
cellars or dairies, the air of which is loaded with the effluvia of
vegetable substances. No domestic articles are so sympathetic as those
of the milk tribe: they readily take on the smell and taste of any
neighboring substance, and hence the infinite variety of flavors on
which one mournfully muses who has late in autumn to taste twenty
firkins of butter in hopes of finding one which will simply not be
intolerable on his winter table.
A matter for despair as regards bad butter is, that at the tables
where it is used it stands sentinel at the door to bar your way to every
other kind of food. You turn from your dreadful half-slice of bread,
which fills your mouth with bitterness, to your beef-steak, which proves
virulent with the same poison; you think to take refuge in vegetable
diet, and find the butter in the string-beans, and polluting the
innocence of early peas; it is in the corn, in the succotash, in the
squash; the beets swim in it, the onions have it poured over them.
Hungry and miserable, you think to solace yourself at the dessert; but
the pastry is cursed, the cake is acrid with the same plague. You are
ready to howl with despair, and your misery is great upon
you--especially if this is a table where you have taken board for three
months with your delicate wife and four small children. Your case is
dreadful, and it is hopeless, because long usage and habit have rendered
your host perfectly incapable of discovering what is the matter. "Don't
like the butter, sir? I assure you I paid an extra price for it, and
it's the very best in the market. I looked over as many as a hundred
tubs, and picked out this one." You are dumb, but not less despairing.
Yet the process of making good butter is a very simple one. To keep
the cream in a perfectly pure, cool atmosphere, to churn while it is yet
sweet, to work out the buttermilk thoroughly, and to add salt with such
discretion as not to ruin the fine, delicate flavor of the fresh
cream--all this is quite simple, so simple that one wonders at thousands
and millions of pounds of butter yearly manufactured which are merely a
hobgoblin bewitchment of cream into foul and loathsome poisons.
The third head of my discourse is that of
Meat, of which America
furnishes, in the gross material, enough to spread our tables royally,
were it well cared for and served.
The faults in the meat generally furnished to us are, first, that it
is too new. A beef steak, which three or four days of keeping might
render palatable, is served up to us palpitating with freshness, with
all the toughness of animal muscle yet warm.
In the next place, there is a woeful lack of nicety in the butcher's
work of cutting and preparing meat. Who that remembers the neatly
trimmed mutton-chop of an English inn, or the artistic little circle of
lamb-chop fried in bread-crumbs coiled around a tempting centre of
spinach which may always be found in France, can recognize any family
resemblance to those dapper, civilized preparations, in these coarse,
roughly-hacked strips of bone, gristle, and meat which are commonly
called mutton-chop in America? There seems to be a large dish of
something resembling meat, in which each fragment has about two or three
edible morsels, the rest being composed of dry and burnt skin, fat, and
ragged bone.
Is it not time that civilization should learn to demand somewhat
more care and nicety in the modes of preparing what is to be cooked and
eaten? Might not some of the refinement and trimness which characterize
the preparations of the European market be with advantage introduced
into our own? The housekeeper who wishes to garnish her table
with some of those nice things is stopped in the outset by the butcher.
Except in our large cities, where some foreign travel may have created
the demand, it seems impossible to get much in this line that is
properly prepared.
If this is urged on the score of Æsthetics, the ready reply will be,
"Oh! we can't give time here in America to go into niceties and French
whim-whams!" But the French mode of doing almost all practical things is
based on that true philosophy and utilitarian good sense which
characterize that seemingly thoughtless people. Nowhere is economy a
more careful study, and their market is artistically arranged to this
end. The rule is so to cut their meats that no portion designed to be
cooked in a certain manner shall have wasteful appendages which that
mode of cooking will spoil. The French soup-kettle stands ever ready to
receive the bones, the thin fibrous flaps, the sinewy and gristly
portions, which are so often included in our roasts or broilings, which
fill our plates with unsightly débris,
and finally make an amount of blank waste for which we pay our butcher
the same price that we pay for what we have eaten.
The dead waste of our clumsy, coarse way of cutting meats is
immense. For example, at the beginning of the season, the part of a lamb
denominated leg and loin, or hind-quarter, may sell for thirty cents a
pound. Now this includes, besides the thick, fleshy portions, a quantity
of bone, sinew, and thin fibrous substance, constituting full one third
of the whole weight. If we put it into the oven entire, in the usual
manner, we have the thin parts overdone, and the skinny and fibrous
parts utterly dried up, by the application of the amount of heat
necessary to cook the thick portion. Supposing the joint to weigh six
pounds, at thirty cents, and that one third of the weight is so treated
as to become perfectly useless, we throw away sixty cents. Of a piece of
beef at twenty-five cents a pound, fifty cents' worth is often lost in
bone, fat, and burnt skin.
The fact is, this way of selling and cooking meat in
large, gross portions is of English origin, and belongs to a country
where all the customs of society spring from a class who have no
particular occasion for economy. The practice of minute and delicate
division comes from a nation which acknowledges the need of economy, and
has made it a study. A quarter of lamb in this mode of division would be
sold in three nicely prepared portions. The thick part would be sold by
itself, for a neat, compact little roast; the rib-bones would be
artistically separated, and all the edible matter would form those
delicate dishes of lamb-chop, which, fried in bread-crumbs to a golden
brown, are so ornamental and palatable a side-dish; the trimmings which
remain after this division would be destined to the soup-kettle or
stew-pan.
In a French market is a little portion for every purse, and the
far-famed and delicately flavored soups and stews which have arisen out
of French economy are a study worth a housekeeper's attention. Not one
atom of food is wasted in the French modes of preparation; even tough
animal cartilages and sinews, instead of appearing burned and blackened
in company with the roast meat to which they happen to be related, are
treated according to their own laws, and come out either in savory
soups, or those fine, clear meat-jellies which form a garnish no less
agreeable to the eye than palatable to the taste.
Whether this careful, economical, practical style of meat-cooking
can ever to any great extent be introduced into our kitchens now is a
question. Our butchers are against it; our servants are wedded to the
old wholesale wasteful ways, which seem to them easier because they are
accustomed to them. A cook who will keep and properly tend a soup-kettle
which shall receive and utilize all that the coarse preparations of the
butcher would require her to trim away, who understands the art of
making the most of all these remains, is a treasure scarcely to be hoped
for. If such things are to be done, it must be primarily through the
educated brain of cultivated women who do not scorn to turn their
culture and refinement upon domestic problems.
When meats have been properly divided, so that each portion can
receive its own appropriate style of treatment, next comes the
consideration of the modes of cooking. These may be divided into two
great general classes: those where it is desired to keep the juices
within the meat, as in baking, broiling, and frying--and those whose
object is to extract the juice and dissolve the fibre, as in the making
of soups and stews. In the first class of operations, the process must
be as rapid as may consist with the thorough cooking of all the
particles. In this branch of cookery, doing quickly is doing well. The
fire must be brisk, the attention alert. The introduction of
cooking-stoves offers to careless domestics facilities for gradually
drying-up meats, and despoiling them of all flavor and
nutriment--facilities which appear to be very generally accepted. They
have almost banished the genuine, old-fashioned roast-meat from our
tables, and left in its stead dried meats with their most precious and
nutritive juices evaporated. How few cooks, unassisted, are competent to
the simple process of broiling a beefsteak or mutton-chop! how very
generally one has to choose between these meats gradually dried away, or
burned on the outside and raw within! Yet in England these articles
never come on the table done
amiss; their perfect cooking is as absolute a certainty as the rising of
the sun.
No one of these rapid processes of cooking, however, is so generally
abused as frying. The frying-pan has awful sins to answer for. What
untold horrors of dyspepsia have arisen from its smoky depths, like the
ghost from witches' caldrons! The fizzle of frying meat is a warning
knell on many an ear, saying, "Touch not, taste not, if you would not
burn and writhe!"
Yet those who have t raveled abroad remember that some of the
lightest, most palatable, and most digestible
preparations of meat have come from this dangerous source. But we fancy
quite other rites and ceremonies inaugurated the process, and quite
other hands performed its offices, than those known to our kitchens.
Probably the delicate côtelettes
of France are not flopped down into half-melted grease, there gradually
to warm and soak and fizzle, while Biddy goes in and out on her other
ministrations, till finally, when they are thoroughly saturated, and
dinner-hour impends, she bethinks herself, and crowds the fire below to
a roaring heat, and finishes the process by a smart burn, involving the
kitchen and surrounding precincts in volumes of Stygian gloom. From such
preparations has arisen the very current medical opinion that fried
meats are indigestible. They are indigestible, if they are greasy; but
French cooks have taught us that a thing has no more need to be greasy
because emerging from grease than Venus had to be salt because she rose
from the sea.
There are two ways of frying employed by the French cook. One is, to
immerse the article to be cooked in
boiling fat, with an emphasis on the present participle--and the
philosophical principle is, so immediately to crisp every pore, at the
first moment or two of immersion, as effectually to seal the interior
against the intrusion of greasy particles; it can then remain as long as
may be necessary thoroughly to cook it, without imbibing any more of the
boiling fluid than if it were inclosed in an egg-shell. The other method
is to rub a perfectly smooth iron surface with just enough of some oily
substance to prevent the meat from adhering, and cook it with a quick
heat, as cakes are baked on a griddle. In both these cases there must be
the most rapid application of heat that can be made without burning, and
by the adroitness shown in working out this problem the skill of the
cook is tested. Any one whose cook attains this important secret will
find fried things quite as digestible, and often more palatable, than
any other.
In the second department of meat-cookery, to wit, the
slow and gradual application of heat for the softening and dissolution
of its fibre and the extraction of its juices, common cooks are equally
untrained. Where is the so-called cook who understands how to prepare
soups and stews? These are precisely the articles in which a French
kitchen excels. The soup-kettle, made with a double bottom, to prevent
burning, is a permanent, ever-present institution, and the coarsest and
most impracticable meats distilled through that alembic come out again
in soups, jellies, or savory stews. The toughest cartilage, even the
bones, being first cracked, are here made to give forth their hidden
virtues, and to rise in delicate and appetizing forms.
One great law governs all these preparations: the application of
heat must be gradual, steady, long protracted, never reaching the point
of active boiling. Hours of quiet simmering dissolve all dissoluble
parts, soften the sternest fibre, and unlock every minute cell in which
Nature has stored away her treasures of nourishment. This careful and
protracted application of heat and the skillful use of flavors
constitute the two main points in all those nice preparations of meat
for which the French have so many names--processes by which a delicacy
can be imparted to the coarsest and cheapest food superior to that of
the finest articles under less philosophic treatment.
French soups and stews are a study, and they would not be an
unprofitable one to any person who wishes to live with comfort and even
elegance on small means.
There is no animal fibre that will not yield itself up to
long-continued, steady heat. But the difficulty with almost any of the
common servants who call themselves cooks is, that they have not the
smallest notion of the philosophy of the application of heat. Such a one
will complacently tell you concerning certain meats, that the harder you
boil them the harder they grow--an obvious fact which, under her mode of
treatment by an indiscriminate galloping boil, has frequently
come under her personal observation. If you tell her that such meat must
stand for six hours in a heat just below the boiling point, she will
probably answer, "Yes, ma'am," and go on her own way. Or she will let it
stand till it burns to the bottom of the kettle--a most common
termination of the experiment.
The only way to make sure of the matter is, either to obtain a
French kettle, or to fit into an ordinary kettle a false bottom, such as
any tinman may make, that shall leave a space of an inch or two between
the meat and the fire. This kettle may be maintained in a constant
position on the range, and into it the cook may be instructed to throw
all the fibrous trimmings of meat, all the gristle, tendons, and bones,
having previously broken up these last with a mallet. Such a kettle, the
regular occupant of a French cooking-stove, which they call the pot au
feu, will furnish the basis for clear, rich soups, or other palatable
dishes. This is ordinarily called "stock."
Clear soup consists of the dissolved juices of the meat and gelatine
of the bones, cleared from the fat and fibrous portions by straining.
The grease, which rises to the top of the fluid, may be easily removed
when cold.
English and American soups are often heavy and hot with spices.
There are appreciable tastes in them. They burn your mouth with cayenne,
or clove, or allspice. You can tell at once what is in them, oftentimes
to your sorrow. But a French soup has a flavor which one recognizes at
once as delicious, yet not to be characterized as due to any single
condiment; it is the just blending of many things. The same remark
applies to all their stews, ragouts, and other delicate preparations. No
cook will ever study these flavors; but perhaps many cooks' mistresses
may, and thus be able to impart delicacy and comfort to economy.
As to those things called hashes, commonly manufactured by
unwatched, untaught cooks out of the remains of yesterday's meal, let us
not dwell too closely on their memory--
compounds of meat, gristle, skin, fat, and burnt fibre, with a handful
of pepper and salt flung at them, dredged with lumpy flour, watered from
the spout of the tea-kettle, and left to simmer at the cook's
convenience while she is otherwise occupied. Such are the best
performances a housekeeper can hope for from an untrained cook.
But the cunningly devised minces, the artful preparations choicely
flavored, which may be made of yesterday's repast--by these is the true
domestic artist known. No cook untaught by an educated brain ever makes
these, and yet economy is a great gainer by them.
As regards the department of
Vegetables, their number and variety in America are so great that
a table might almost be furnished by these alone. Generally speaking,
their cooking is a more simple art, and therefore more likely to be
found satisfactorily performed, than that of meats. If only they are not
drenched with rancid butter, their own native excellence makes itself
known in most of the ordinary modes of preparation.
There is, however, one exception. Our staunch old friend, the
potato, is to other vegetables what bread is on the table. Like bread,
it is held as a sort of sine-qua-non;
like that, it may be made invariably palatable by a little care in a few
plain particulars, through neglect of which it often becomes
intolerable. The soggy, waxy, indigestible viand that often appears in
the potato-dish is a down-right sacrifice of the better nature of this
vegetable.
The potato, nutritive and harmless as it appears, belongs to a
family suspected of very dangerous traits. It is a family connection of
the deadly-nightshade and other ill-reputed gentry, and sometimes shows
strange proclivities to evil--now breaking out uproariously, as in the
noted potato-rot, and now more covertly, in various evil affections. For
this reason scientific directors bid us beware of the water in which
potatoes are boiled--into which, it appears, the evil principle is drawn
off; and they caution us not to shred
them into stews without previously suffering the slices to lie for an
hour or so in salt and water. These cautions are worth attention.
The most usual modes of preparing the potato for the table are by
roasting or boiling. These processes are so simple that it is commonly
supposed every cook understands them without special directions; and yet
there is scarcely an uninstructed cook who can boil or roast a potato.
A good roasted potato is a delicacy worth a dozen compositions of
the cook-book; yet when we ask for it, what burnt, shriveled abortions
are presented to us! Biddy rushes to her potato-basket and pours out two
dozen of different sizes, some having in them three times the amount of
matter of others. These being washed, she tumbles them into her oven at
a leisure interval, and there lets them lie till it is time to serve
breakfast, whenever that may be. As a result, if the largest are cooked,
the smallest are presented in cinders, and the intermediate sizes are
withered and watery. Nothing is so utterly ruined by a few moments of
overdoing. That which at the right moment was plump with mealy richness,
a quarter of an hour later shrivels and becomes watery--and it is in
this state that roast potatoes are most frequently served.
In the same manner we have seen boiled potatoes from an untaught
cook coming upon the table like lumps of yellow wax--and the same
article, under the directions of a skillful mistress, appearing in snowy
balls of powdery whiteness. In the one case, they were thrown in their
skins into water, and suffered to soak or boil, as the case might be, at
the cook's leisure, and after they were boiled to stand in the water
till she was ready to peel them. In the other case, the potatoes being
first peeled were boiled as quickly as possible in salted water, which
the moment they were done was drained off, and then they were gently
shaken for a moment or two over the fire to dry them still more
thoroughly. We have never yet seen the potato so depraved
and given over to evil that it could not be reclaimed by this mode of
treatment.
As to fried potatoes, who that remembers the crisp, golden slices of
the French restaurant, thin as wafers and light as snow-flakes, does not
speak respectfully of them? What cousinship with these have those
coarse, greasy masses of sliced potato, wholly soggy and partly burnt,
to which we are treated under the name of fried potatoes in America? In
our cities the restaurants are introducing the French article to great
acceptance, and to the vindication of the fair fame of this queen of
vegetables.
Finally, we arrive at the last great head of our subject, to wit--Tea--meaning
thereby, as before observed, what our Hibernian friend did in the
inquiry, "Will y'r honor take 'tay tay' or coffee tay?"
We are not about to enter into the merits of the great
tea-and-coffee controversy, further than in our general caution
concerning them in the chapter on Healthful Drinks; but we now proceed
to treat of them as actual existences, and speak only of the modes of
making the best of them.
The French coffee is reputed the best in the world; and a thousand
voices have asked, What is it about the French coffee?
In the first place, then, the French coffee is coffee,
and not chickory, or rye, or beans, or peas. In the second place, it is
freshly roasted, whenever made--roasted with great care and evenness in
a little revolving cylinder which makes part of the furniture of every
kitchen, and which keeps in the aroma of the berry. It is never
overdone, so as to destroy the coffee-flavor, which is in nine cases out
of ten the fault of the coffee we meet with. Then it is
ground, and placed in a coffee-pot with a filter through which, when it
has yielded up its life to the boiling water poured upon
it, the delicious extract percolates in clear drops, the coffee-pot
standing on a heated stove to maintain the temperature. The nose of the
coffee-pot is stopped up to prevent the escape
of the aroma during this process. The extract thus obtained is a
perfectly clear, dark fluid, known as
café noir, or black coffee. It is black only because of its
strength, being in fact almost the very essential oil of coffee.
A table-spoonful of this in boiled milk would make what
is ordinarily called a strong cup of coffee. The
boiled milk is prepared with no less care. It must be fresh and
new, not merely warmed or even brought to the boiling-point, but slowly
simmered till it attains a thick, creamy richness. The coffee
mixed with this, and sweetened with that sparkling beet-root sugar
which ornaments a French table, is the celebrated
café-au-lait, the name of which
has gone round the world.
As we look to France for the best coffee, so we must look to England
for the perfection of tea. The tea-kettle is as much an English
institution as aristocracy or the Prayer-Book; and when one wants to
know exactly how tea should be made, one has only to ask how a fine old
English housekeeper makes it.
The first article of her faith is, that the water must not merely be
hot, not merely have boiled a
few moments since, but be actually
boiling at the moment it touches the tea. Hence, though servants
in England are vastly better trained than with us, this delicate mystery
is seldom left to their hands. Tea-making belongs to the drawing-room,
and high-born ladies preside at "the bubbling and loud hissing urn," and
see that all due rites and solemnities are properly performed--that the
cups are hot, and that the infused tea waits the exact time before the
libations commence.
Of late, the introduction of English breakfast-tea has raised a new
sect among the tea-drinkers, reversing some of the old canons.
Breakfast-tea must be boiled! Unlike the delicate article of olden time,
which required only a momentary infusion to develop its richness, this
requires a longer and severer treatment to bring out its strength--thus
confusing all the established usages, and throwing the
work into the hands of the cook in the kitchen. The faults of tea, as
too commonly found at our hotels and boarding-houses, are, that it is
made in every way the reverse of what it should be. The water is hot,
perhaps, but not boiling; the tea has a general flat, stale, smoky
taste, devoid of life or spirit; and it is served usually with thin
milk, instead of cream. Cream is as essential to the richness of tea as
of coffee. Lacking cream, boiled milk is better than cold.
Chocolate is a French and Spanish article, and one seldom served on
American tables. We in America, however, make an article every way equal
to any which can be imported from Paris, and he who buys the best
vanilla-chocolate may rest assured that no foreign land can furnish any
thing better. A very rich and delicious beverage may be made by
dissolving this in milk, slowly boiled down after the French fashion.
A word now under the head of
Confectionery, meaning by this the whole range of ornamental
cookery--or pastry, ices, jellies, preserves, etc. The art of making all
these very perfectly is far better understood in America than the art of
common cooking. There are more women who know how to make good cake than
good bread--more who can furnish you with a good ice-cream than a
well-cooked mutton-chop; a fair charlotte-russe is easier to gain than a
perfect cup of coffee; and you shall find a sparkling jelly to your
dessert where you sighed in vain for so simple a luxury as a well-cooked
potato.
Our fair countrywomen might rest upon their laurels in these higher
fields, and turn their great energy and ingenuity to the study of
essentials. To do common things perfectly is far better worth our
endeavor than to do uncommon things respectably. We Americans in many
things as yet have been a little inclined to begin making our shirt at
the ruffle; but, nevertheless, when we set about it, we can make the
shirt as nicely as any body; it needs only that we
turn our attention to it, resolved that, ruffle or no ruffle, the shirt
we will have.
A few words as to the prevalent ideas in respect to French cookery.
Having heard much of it, with no very distinct idea of what it is, our
people have somehow fallen into the notion that its
forte lies in high spicing--and
so when our cooks put a great abundance of clove, mace, nutmeg, and
cinnamon into their preparations, they fancy that they are growing up to
be French cooks. But the fact is, that the Americans and English are far
more given to spicing than the French. Spices in our made dishes are
abundant, and their taste is strongly pronounced. Living a year in
France one forgets the taste of nutmeg, clove, and allspice, which
abounds in so many dishes in America. The English and Americans deal in
spices, the French in
flavors--flavors many and fine,
imitating often in their delicacy those subtle blendings which nature
produces in high-flavored fruits. The recipes of our cookery-books are
most of them of English origin, coming down from the times of our
phlegmatic ancestors, when the solid, burly, beefy growth of the foggy
island required the heat of fiery condiments, and could digest heavy
sweets. Witness the national recipe for plum-pudding: which may be
rendered: Take a pound of every indigestible substance you can think of,
boil into a cannon-ball, and serve in flaming brandy. So of the
Christmas mince-pie, and many other national dishes. But in America,
owing to our brighter skies and more fervid climate, we have developed
an acute, nervous delicacy of temperament far more akin to that of
France than of England.
Half of the recipes in our cook-books are mere murder to such
constitutions and stomachs as we grow here. We require to ponder these
things, and think how we, in our climate and under our circumstances,
ought to live; and in doing so, we may, without accusation of foreign
foppery, take some leaves from many foreign books.
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