This section is from the book "The Dinner Year-Book", by Marion Harland. See also: Rachael Ray 365: No Repeats - A Year of Deliciously Different Dinners.
Macaroni Soup.
Roast Goose.
Chocolate and Cocoanut Blanc-Mange.
White Cake.
Skim your stock; pour off and strain two quarts; heat to a slow boil; add a tablespoonful of walnut catsup; skim well, and drop in half a cupful of fancy macaroni, which has been cooked ten minutes in a little boiling water. Simmer five minutes, and serve.
Be wary in the selection of even what the poulterer assures you is a "green goose," and should you be "sold," as well as the bird, take the disappointment good-naturedly. Wash out and wipe dry the body of the goose; add to the usual dressing of crumbs, pepper, salt, etc., a tablespoonful of melted butter; a tablespoonful of minced onion; half as much powdered sage, some bits of fat pork, and the yolks of two eggs. Put into the dripping-pan with two cupfuls of boiling water, and roast, if of fair size, two hours, basting often and very copiously. When half done, cover the breast with a stiff paste of flour and water, removing when you are ready to brown it. Take the fat from the gravy; thicken with browned flour, add a glass of sherry, salt, and pepper; boil and serve in a boat.
See Wednesday Second Week in November.
Cook as directed on Sunday, Third Week in November
See "French Beans," Tuesday, Third Week in November.
Tie in a net, and cook about forty-five minutes in boil ing salted water. Drain; lay in a deep dish, blossom upward, and pour on a cupful of rich drawn butter, with the juice of a lemon stirred in.
1 quart of milk; 3 tablespoonfuls of corn-starch - heaping; 1 cup of sugar; whites of 4 eggs; vanilla flavoring; 3 tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate; 1 grated cocoanut.
Heat the milk; rub the corn-starch smooth with a little cold milk; stir into the hot milk, first the sugar, then the corn-starch. When it is a smooth paste, whip in the frothed whites; cook one minute, and pour off half of the mixture into a bowl upon half the grated cocoanut. Beat in well. Add to that on the fire the chocolate, rubbed smooth in a little milk, and stir until the blanc-mange is colored. Wet a mould; when the chocolate-mixture is cold, pour half into the mould, and set where it will get cold fast. *After half an hour, or so soon as it will bear the weight, put the cocoanut in carefully, and when this is quite firm, add the rest of the chocolate. Next day turn it out upon a dish, and heap the other half of the cocoanut - newly grated - over it. Send around a good boiled custard cold with it. Do this on Saturday.
Please refer to "General Receipts," Series No. 1, of "Common Sense in the Household," page 334.
 
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