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.
Venison Soup.
Boiled Leg of Mutton.
Stuffed Potatoes.
Pancakes.
3 lbs. of venison, the coarser parts of the meat will do; 1 lb. lean ham; 1 onion sliced; 3 stalks of celery; quarts of water; 1 can of corn, drained and chopped, pepper and salt; butter and flour.
Cut up the meat and put on with the onion, celery, and water. Stew slowly three and a half hours. Strain, pressing hard; cool, skim, and return the soup to the fire with the chopped corn. Stew half an hour; add the seasoning, a lump of butter rolled in flour, a half-cup of tomato-juice, and simmer ten minutes more.
If you cannot get venison use mutton for this soup.
Put on in plenty of boiling water, a little salt. Cook fifteen minutes to the pound. When done, wipe dry and rub all over with butter. Make a boat of drawn butter, using as a base a cup of the strained pot-liquor, and, when made, add a great spoonful of chopped cucumber pickle.
Of course you will pour the pot-liquor into the stock-jar.
Pare, quarter, and cook the turnips tender in boiling salted water. Mash in a hot colander; add butter, pep per, and salt, and serve in a hot dish.
See Thursday, Second Week in November.
Bake large potatoes soft, and cut a round piece from the top of each. Scrape out the insides carefully and mash smooth with butter, cream, and a little grated cheese.
Beat soft with milk, season with pepper and salt, and heat in a greased saucepan, stirring all the time. Fill the skins with the mixture, put on the caps and set in the oven for three minutes. Serve upon a dish lined with a napkin.
2 cups of prepared flour; 6 eggs; 1 saltspoonful of salt; milk to make a thin batter.
Beat the eggs light; add salt, two cups of milk, then, the whites and flour alternately with milk, until the batter is of the right consistency. Run a teaspoonful of lard over the bottom of a hot frying-pan, pour in a large ladleful of batter, and fry quickly. Roll the pancake up like a sheet of paper; lay upon a hot dish; put in more lard, and fry another pancake. Keep hot over boiling water, sending half a dozen to the table at a time. Eat with sauce.
 
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