Page:Art of Cookery 1774 edition.djvu/135

This page needs to be proofread.

To dress larks pear fashion.

YOU must truss the larks close, and cut off the legs, season them with salt, pepper, cloves, and mace; make a force-meat thus: take a veal sweetbread, as much beef-suet, a few morels and mushrooms, chop all fine together, some crumbs of bread, and a few sweet-herbs, a little lemon-peel cut small, mix all together with the yolks of an egg, wrap up every lark in force-meat, and shape them like a pear, stick one leg in the top like the stalk of a pear, rub them over with the yolk of an egg and crumbs of bread, bake them in a gentle oven, serve them without sauce; or they make a good garnish to a very fine dish. You may use veal, if you have not a sweetbread.

To dress a hare.

AS to roasting of a hare, I have given full directions in the beginning of the book.

A jugged hare.

CUT it into little pieces, lard them here and there with little slips of bacon, season them with a very little pepper and salt, put them into an earthen jugg, with a blade or two of mace, an onion stuck with cloves, and a bundle of sweet-herbs; cover the jugg or jar you do it in so close that nothing can get in, then set it in a pot of boiling water, keep the water boiling, and three hours will do it; then turn it out into the dish, and take out the onion and sweet-herbs, and send it to table hot. If you don't like it larded, leave it out.

To scare a hare.

LARD your hare and put a pudding in the belly; put it into a pot or fish-kettle, then put to it tow quarts of strong drawed gravy, one of red wine, a whole lemon cut, a faggot of sweet-herbs, nutmeg, pepper, a little salt, and six cloves: cover it close, and stew it over a very slow fire, till it is three parts done; then take it up, put it into a dish, and strew it over with crumbs of bread, a few sweet-herbs chopped fine, some lemon-peel grated, and half a nutmeg; set it before the fire, and baste it till it is all of a fine light brown. In the mean time take the fat off your gravy, and thicken it with the yolk of an egg; take six eggs boiled hard and chopped small, some pickled cucumbers cut very thin; mix these with the sauce, and pour it into the dish.

A fillet of mutton or neck of venison may be done the same way.

Note, You may do rabbits the same way, but it must be veal gravy, and white wine; adding mushrooms for cucumbers.

To