This section is from the book "Better Meals For Less Money", by Mary Green. Also available from Amazon: Better Meals for Less Money.
2 eggs
2 1/2 tablespoons sugar
Few grains salt l 1/2 teaspoons instantaneous coffee 3 cups milk
Beat the eggs until light; add the other ingredients, and strain into glasses. Serve very cold. (This recipe fills four tumblers.)
Pick over and wash grapes, barely cover with water, and cook until soft and white; drain through cheesecloth, and to each quart of juice add one cup each of water and sugar; bring to boiling point, skim, bottle, and cork tightly. When cold, dip corks into melted paraffin.
1 egg
1/3 cup grape juice
1 teaspoon powdered sugar 1/4 cup milk
Nutmeg
Beat egg until very light, add grape juice and sugar, and beat again, add milk, beat well, pour into a glass, and dust with nutmeg.
1 1/4 cups sugar
1 quart boiling water
Grated rind 1 lemon
2 teaspoons Jamaica ginger 1/2 cup orange juice 1/3 cup lemon juice
Boil sugar and water with the lemon rind for ten minutes; when cool, add ginger and fruit juice, and strain over cracked ice.
1/2 cup mint leaves 1 1/4 cups sugar Juice of 3 lemons
1 cup boiling water
2 pints ginger ale 1 pint grape juice
Pour boiling water over mint leaves, sugar, and grated rind of one lemon, and let stand until cool; strain into a punch bowl containing ice, add ginger ale, grape juice, and strained lemon juice; garnish with sprigs of mint.
3/4 cup sugar 1 cup water
Juice of 3 lemons 4 sprigs mint
1 pint ginger ale
Boil sugar and water ten minutes, and cool; add strained lemon juice, mint leaves bruised, and ginger ale; half fill glasses with crushed ice, add julep, and garnish with a sprig of mint.
1 cup sugar 6 cups water
1 cup mint leaves Juice of 3 lemons
Boil sugar and water twenty minutes; add mint, and let stand until cold; add lemon juice, and strain into glasses half filled with cracked ice. Garnish with sprigs of mint.
Tea should be made from freshly drawn, freshly boiled water, poured over the dry tea, which has been put into a clean, scalded teapot. Cover with a cozy or stand on back of range for three or four minutes. Allow from a half to a full teaspoon of tea to each cup, according to the variety used. The finer varieties made from the first pickings require less than the coarser kinds. Be sure that tea does not boil. Serve with sugar, cream, lemon, cloves, mints, ginger, or bits of candied fruit.
Fill a large glass two-thirds full with cracked ice, add two thin slices of lemon with seeds removed, two teaspoons of powdered sugar, and fill with freshly made hot tea. One or two mint leaves may be added.
4 teaspoons cocoa 2 tablespoons sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt
2 cups boiling water
2 cups hot milk
Mix cocoa, sugar, salt, and boiling water, and boil five minutes; add hot milk, and beat with egg beater until frothy.
1 1/2 squares chocolate 1/4 cup sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt 2 cups boiling water
2 cups hot milk
Melt chocolate in a saucepan over hot water; add sugar, salt, and boiling water; stir well, and boil five minutes; add hot milk, and beat with egg beater until frothy. Evaporated milk makes excellent chocolate or cocoa. For marshmallow chocolate put two marshmallows in each cup and pour hot chocolate over them.
1/2 cup pulverized coffee
4 cups boiling water
Put coffee into bag or filter, add boiling water gradually; pour through a second time, or even a third time if liked strong. Do not boil. Serve with hot milk and cream. Wash coffee pot and bag thoroughly, and dry in the sun if possible; renew bag often.
1/2 cup pulverized coffee
2 cups boiling water
Put coffee into a filter coffee pot, add boiling water, and filter three times. Serve very hot.
To recipe for After-dinner Coffee (see No. 30) add one and a half cups of hot milk.
 
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