This section is from the book "The Cook Book By "Oscar" Of The Waldorf", by Oscar Tschirky. Also see: How to Cook Everything.
Take sufficient meat from a cooked chicken so that after it has been pounded and passed through a fine hair-sieve there will be one pound of the puree; add to this ten ounces of veal udder, boiled and pounded the same as the chicken, and mix well, adding another ten ounces of panada made with some good stock and seasoning with grated nutmeg, salt and pepper to taste. Pound all the foregoing well together and moisten with reduced allemande sauce until it is of good consistence. Take a small piece and plunge it into boiling water or stock, and if it is too thick add a little double cream or a little more of the sauce. It is then ready for use.
Remove the skin from a chicken, take off all the flesh from the bones and pound it to a pulp in a mortar. Soak half a pound of breadcrumbs in milk, take it out and squeeze it dry, then rub three ounces of warmed butter into it; put in the meat, add a little grated nutmeg and salt to taste; moisten with the yolks of four eggs and form the forcemeat into balls. A thin slice of ham or cooked bacon may be wrapped around each piece and is a great improvement. It is well to add a little chopped parsley.
 
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