Quail On Toast

Take five quail, but don't remove the legs, for you would lose all the taste of the game. Wipe them well; string them tight, so as to raise the breasts. Put a little butter on each, a little lemon juice, and inside each the quarter of a lemon without the peel. Then put a very thin slice of pork, about two inches square, around each quail, with two or three cuts in each side, and string it tight. Let cook on a good fire, and when they are nearly well done, for white meat game must be well done, cut the strings; dress nicely on toast and serve hot. Pour the juice on the quail after having taken the fat off, and put some slices of lemon around the dish, one for each quail.

Roast Tame Duck

Take a young farmyard duck fattened at liberty, but cleansed by being shut up two or three days and fed on barley meal and water. Pluck, singe and empty; scald the feet, skin and twist round on the back of the bird; head, neck and pinions must be cut off, the latter at the first joint, and all skewered firmly to give the breast a nice plump appearance. For stuffing, one-half pound of onions, one teaspoonful of powdered sage, three tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs, the liver of a duck parboiled and minced with cayenne pepper and salt. Cut fine onions, throwing boiling water over them for ten minutes; drain through a gravy strainer, and add the bread crumbs, minced liver, sage, pepper and salt to taste; mix, and put inside the duck. This amount is for one duck, more onion and more sage may be added, but the above is a delicate compound not likely to disagree with the stomach. Let the duck be hung a day of two, according to the weather, to make the flesh tender. Roast before a brisk, clear fire, baste often, and dredge with flour to make the bird look frothy. Serve with a good brown gravy in the dish, and apple sauce in a tureen. It takes about an hour.

Rabbit Pie

Cut a rabbit into seven pieces, soak in salted water one-half hour and stew until half done in enough water to cover it. Lay slices of pork in the bottom of a pie dish and upon these a layer of rabbit. Then follow slices of hard-boiled egg, peppered and buttered. Continue until the dish is full, the top layer being bacon. Pour in the water in which the rabbit was stewed, and adding a little Gold Medal Flour, cover with puff paste, cut a slit in the middle and bake one hour, laying paper over the top should it brown too fast.

Venison Steak Broiled

Take the leg and cut slices from it, having a quick, clear fire. Turn them constantly. They should be served underdone. Butter both sides of the steak; sprinkle salt and pepper over the venison, garnish with parsley and accompanying it by a jelly sauce.