Cookbooks - Volume 4
Volume 4 deals with salads, sandwiches, cold
desserts, cakes, both large and small, puddings, pastry, and pies. Such foods constitute some of the
niceties of the diet, but skill in their preparation signifies at once a cooks mastery this science.
In Salads and Sandwiches are presented so simply the secrets of appetizing salads that they can be grasped by
even a novice, and sandwiches of numerous varieties, from those appropriate for afternoon teas to those suitable
for the main dish in the meal, are so treated that they appear to rise above the ordinary place usually accorded
them.
You will never need to hesitate to prepare a menu for an afternoon or evening social affair or the salad course
in a luncheon or dinner after a study of this part of the volume.
A glance through Cold and Frozen Desserts will convince you very quickly that a large number of the desserts
that complete our meals are served cold.
The mere mention of custards, gelatine desserts, and such frozen mixtures as ice creams, ices, frappes,
sherbets, mousses, parfaits, and biscuits, all of which are explained here, is sufficient to indicate that this is
an extremely delightful part of the subject food preparation.
Entertaining takes on a new and simplified meaning when you know how to make and serve such dishes. To be able
to make cakes and puddings well is one of the ambitions of the modern cook, and you have an opportunity to realize
it in a study of Cakes, Cookies, and Puddings, Parts 1 and 2.
Sweet food in excess is undesirable, but in a moderate quantity it is required in each person's diet and may be
obtained in this form without harm if it is properly prepared.
The two classes of cakes--butter and sponge--are treated in detail both as to the methods of making and the
required ingredients, and numerous recipes are given which will enable you to provide both plain and fancy cakes
for ordinary and special occasions.
Puddings that are prepared by boiling, steaming, and baking, and the sauces that make them appetizing, receive a
goodly share of attention. Pastries and Pies completes this volume, rounding out, as it were, the cooks
understanding of dessert making.
To many persons, pastry making is an intricate matter, but with the principles thoroughly explained and each
step clearly illustrated, delicious pies of every variety, as well as puff-paste dainties, may be had with very
little effort.
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