S. T. Rorer

Ice Creams, Water Ices, Frozen Puddings Together with Refreshments for all Social Affairs

Published by Good Press, 2022
goodpress@okpublishing.info
EAN 4057664617682

Table of Contents


FOREWORD CONTAINING GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR ALL RECIPES
USE OF FRUITS
TIME FOR FREEZING
DIRECTIONS FOR FREEZING
TO REPACK
TO MOLD ICE CREAMS, ICES OR PUDDINGS
TO REMOVE ICE CREAMS, ICES AND PUDDINGS FROM MOLDS
QUANTITIES FOR SERVING
PHILADELPHIA ICE CREAMS
BURNT ALMOND ICE CREAM
APRICOT ICE CREAM
BANANA ICE CREAM
BISCUIT ICE CREAM
APPLE ICE CREAM
BROWN BREAD ICE CREAM
BISQUE ICE CREAM
CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM
COFFEE ICE CREAM
GINGER ICE CREAM
MARASCHINO ICE CREAM
LEMON ICE CREAM
ORANGE ICE CREAM
PINEAPPLE ICE CREAM
GREEN GAGE ICE CREAM
RASPBERRY ICE CREAM
STRAWBERRY ICE CREAM
PISTACHIO ICE CREAM
VANILLA ICE CREAM
WALNUT ICE CREAM
NEAPOLITAN CREAMS
CHOCOLATE
CARAMEL
COFFEE
VANILLA
WALNUT
NEAPOLITAN BLOCKS
ICE CREAMS FROM CONDENSED MILK
BANANA
CARAMEL
COCOANUT
COFFEE
PEACH
ORANGE GELATIN CREAM
SOUR SOP
FROZEN PUDDINGS AND DESSERTS
ALASKA BAKE
ALEXANDER BOMB
BISCUITS AMERICANA
BISCUIT TORTONI
CABINET PUDDING, ICED
ICED CAKE
QUICK CARAMEL PARFAIT
QUICK STRAWBERRY PARFAIT
QUICK CHOCOLATE PARFAIT
MONTE CARLO PUDDING
BOSTON PUDDING
MONTROSE PUDDING
NESSELRODE PUDDING
NESSELRODE PUDDING, AMERICANA
PLOMBIERE
QUEEN PUDDING
ICE CREAM CROQUETTES
ICED RICE PUDDING WITH A COMPOTE OF ORANGES
FOR THE PUDDING
FOR THE COMPOTE
SULTANA ROLL
SULTANA PUDDING
THE MERRY WIDOW
TUTTI FRUTTI PUDDING
TUTTI FRUTTI, ITALIAN FASHION
LALLA ROOKH
PEACHES MELBA
LILLIAN RUSSELL
ARROWROOT CREAM
ENGLISH APRICOT CREAM
FROZEN CUSTARD
GELATIN ICE CREAM
FROZEN PLUM PUDDING
GERMAN CHERRY BISCUITS
FRUIT SALAD, ICED
COUPE ST. JACQUE
WATER ICES AND SHERBETS OR SORBETS
APPLE ICE
APRICOT ICE
CHERRY ICE
CURRANT WATER ICE
CURRANT AND RASPBERRY WATER ICE
GRAPE WATER ICE
LEMON WATER ICE
GINGER WATER ICE
MILLE FRUIT WATER ICE
ORANGE WATER ICE
POMEGRANATE WATER ICE
PINEAPPLE WATER ICE
STRAWBERRY WATER ICE
RASPBERRY WATER ICE
ROMAN PUNCH
SOUR SOP SHERBET OR ICE
CRANBERRY SHERBET
CUCUMBER SORBET
GOOSEBERRY SORBET
ORANGE SHERBET
MINT SHERBET
TOMATO SORBET OR SHERBET
FROZEN FRUITS
FROZEN APRICOTS
FROZEN BANANAS
FROZEN CHOCOLATE
FROZEN PINEAPPLE
FROZEN COFFEE
FROZEN RASPBERRIES
FROZEN WATERMELON
FROZEN STRAWBERRIES
PARFAIT
MOUSSE
BURNT ALMOND MOUSSE
COFFEE MOUSSE
EGYPTIAN MOUSSE
DUCHESS MOUSSE
PISTACHIO MOUSSE
RICE MOUSSE WITH A COMPOTE OF MANDARINS
SAUCES FOR ICE CREAMS
HOT CHOCOLATE SAUCE
MAPLE SAUCE
CLARET SAUCE
NUT SAUCE
MONTROSE SAUCE
ORANGE SAUCE
WALNUT SAUCE
REFRESHMENTS FOR AFFAIRS
COFFEE FOR LARGE HOME AFFAIRS
SOUPS
BOUILLON
CLAM BOUILLON
BELLEVUE BOUILLON
CHICKEN BOUILLON
OYSTER BOUILLON
GLAZE
SWEETBREADS
BAKED SWEETBREADS
LAMBS' SWEETBREADS IN PAPER CASES
SHELL-FISH DISHES
DEVILED CRABS
LOBSTER CUTLETS
LOBSTER NEWBURG
OYSTER CROQUETTES
POULTRY AND GAME DISHES
CHICKEN CROQUETTES
SAUCE BECHAMEL
CHICKEN TIMBALE
CREAM MUSHROOM SAUCE
COLD DISHES
POULET EN BELLEVUE
GALANTINE OF CHICKEN
CHICKEN MOUSSE
PATE-DE-FOIE-GRAS IN ASPIC
BONED TURKEY
BONED QUAIL
SALADS
MAYONNAISE
SAUCE TARTAR
SAUCE SUEDOISE
FRENCH DRESSING
CUCUMBER MOLDS
TOMATO MOLDS
CRABS RAVIGOT
CHICKEN SALAD
LOBSTER SALAD
CRAB SALAD
TONGUE SALAD
LAMB SALAD
TOMATOES EN SURPRISE
SWEETBREAD SALAD
ROAST BEEF SALAD
EAST INDIAN SALAD
POTATO SALAD
FRENCH POTATO SALAD
MACEDOINE SALAD
BANANA SALAD
APPLE AND NUT SALAD
CANTALOUPE SALAD
SANDWICHES
NUT BREAD
SUGGESTIONS FOR CHURCH SUPPERS
NUT MEAT ROLL
JELLIED VEAL
BAGGED VEAL
A SPANISH STEW FOR ONE HUNDRED PERSONS
VEAL ROLL
MAN-OF-WAR SALAD
COOKED DRESSING
GRANDMOTHER'S POTATO SALAD
SALMON PUDDING
NUT CAKE
SCONES FOR TWENTY-FIVE PERSONS
POOR MAN'S FRUIT CAKE
BANANA LAYER
BANANA FILLING
ICE CREAM CAKE
FRUIT JELLY
MOCK EGGS
INDEX
ICE CREAMS, WATER ICES AND FROZEN PUDDINGS
INDEX
REFRESHMENTS FOR AFFAIRS

FOREWORD CONTAINING GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR ALL RECIPES

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In this book, Philadelphia Ice Creams, comprising the first group, are very palatable, but expensive. In many parts of the country it is quite difficult to get good cream. For that reason, I have given a group of creams, using part milk and part cream, but it must be remembered that it takes smart "juggling" to make ice cream from milk. By far better use condensed milk, with enough water or milk to rinse out the cans.

Ordinary fruit creams may be made with condensed milk at a cost of about fifteen cents a quart, which, of course, is cheaper than ordinary milk and cream.

In places where neither cream nor condensed milk can be purchased, a fair ice cream is made by adding two tablespoonfuls of olive oil to each quart of milk. The cream for Philadelphia Ice Cream should be rather rich, but not double cream.

If pure raw cream is stirred rapidly, it swells and becomes frothy, like the beaten whites of eggs, and is "whipped cream." To prevent this in making Philadelphia Ice Cream, one-half the cream is scalded, and when it is very cold, the remaining half of raw cream is added. This gives the smooth, light and rich consistency which makes these creams so different from others.

USE OF FRUITS

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Use fresh fruits in the summer and the best canned unsweetened fruits in the winter. If sweetened fruits must be used, cut down the given quantity of sugar. Where acid fruits are used, they should be added to the cream after it is partly frozen.

TIME FOR FREEZING

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The time for freezing varies according to the quality of cream or milk or water; water ices require a longer time than ice creams. It is not well to freeze the mixtures too rapidly; they are apt to be coarse, not smooth, and if they are churned before the mixture is icy cold they will be greasy or "buttery."

The average time for freezing two quarts of cream should be ten minutes; it takes but a minute or two longer for larger quantities.

DIRECTIONS FOR FREEZING

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Pound the ice in a large bag with a mallet, or use an ordinary ice shaver. The finer the ice, the less time it takes to freeze the cream. A four quart freezer will require ten pounds of ice, and a quart and a pint of coarse rock salt. You may pack the freezer with a layer of ice three inches thick, then a layer of salt one inch thick, or mix the ice and salt in the tub and shovel it around the freezer. Before beginning to pack the freezer, turn the crank to see that all the machinery is in working order. Then open the can and turn in the mixture that is to be frozen. Turn the crank slowly and steadily until the mixture begins to freeze, then more rapidly until it is completely frozen. If the freezer is properly packed, it will take fifteen minutes to freeze the mixture. Philadelphia Ice Creams are not good if frozen too quickly.

TO REPACK

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After the cream is frozen, wipe off the lid of the can and remove the crank; take off the lid, being very careful not to allow any salt to fall into the can. Remove the dasher and scrape it off. Take a large knife or steel spatula, scrape the cream from the sides of the can, work and pack it down until it is perfectly smooth. Put the lid back on the can, and put a cork in the hole from which the dasher was taken. Draw off the water, repack, and cover the whole with a piece of brown paper; throw over a heavy bag or a bit of burlap, and stand aside for one or two hours to ripen.

TO MOLD ICE CREAMS, ICES OR PUDDINGS

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If you wish to pack ice cream and serve it in forms or shapes, it must be molded after the freezing. The handiest of all of these molds is either the brick or the melon mold.

After the cream is frozen rather stiff, prepare a tub or bucket of coarsely chopped ice, with one-half less salt than you use for freezing. To each ten pounds of ice allow one quart of rock salt. Sprinkle a little rock salt in the bottom of your bucket or tub, then put over a layer of cracked ice, another layer of salt and cracked ice, and on this stand your mold, which is not filled, but is covered with a lid, and pack it all around, leaving the top, of course, to pack later on. Take your freezer near this tub. Remove the lid from the mold, and pack in the cream, smoothing it down until you have filled it to overflowing. Smooth the top with a spatula or limber knife, put over a sheet of waxed paper and adjust the lid. Have a strip of muslin or cheese cloth dipped in hot paraffin or suet and quickly bind the seam of the lid. This will remove all danger of salt water entering the pudding. Now cover the mold thoroughly with ice and salt.

Make sure that your packing tub or bucket has a hole below the top of the mold, so that the salt water will be drained off.

If you are packing in small molds, each mold, as fast as it is closed, should be wrapped in wax paper and put down into the salt and ice. These must be filled quickly and packed.

Molds should stand two hours, and may stand longer.

TO REMOVE ICE CREAMS, ICES AND PUDDINGS FROM MOLDS

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Ice cream may be molded in the freezer; you will then have a perfectly round smooth mold, which serves very well for puddings that are to be garnished, and saves a great deal of trouble and extra expense for salt and ice.

As cold water is warmer than the ordinary freezing mixture, after you lift the can or mold, wipe off the salt, hold it for a minute under the cold water spigot, then quickly wipe the top and bottom and remove the lid. Loosen the pudding with a limber knife, hold the mold a little slanting, give it a shake, and nine times out of ten it will come out quickly, having the perfect shape of the can or mold. If the cream still sticks and refuses to come out, wipe the mold with a towel wrung from warm water. Hot water spoils the gloss of puddings, and unless you know exactly how to use it, the cream is too much melted to garnish.

All frozen puddings, water ices, sherbets and sorbets are frozen and molded according to these directions.

The quantities given in these recipes are arranged in equal amounts, so that for a smaller number of persons they can be easily divided.

QUANTITIES FOR SERVING

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Each quart of ice cream will serve, in dessert plates, four persons. In stem ice cream dishes, silver or glass, it will serve six persons. A quart of ice or sherbet will fill ten small sherbet stem glasses, to serve with the meat course at dinner. This quantity will serve in lemonade glasses eight persons.








PHILADELPHIA ICE CREAMS

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BURNT ALMOND ICE CREAM

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1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
4 ounces of sweet almonds
1 tablespoonful of caramel
1 teaspoonful of vanilla extract
4 tablespoonfuls of sherry

Shell, blanch and roast the almonds until they are a golden brown, then grate them. Put half the cream and all the sugar over the fire in a double boiler. Stir until the sugar is dissolved, take it from the fire, add the caramel and the almonds, and, when cold, add the remaining pint of cream, the vanilla and the sherry. Freeze as directed on page 7.

This quantity will serve eight persons.

APRICOT ICE CREAM

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6 ounces of sugar
1 quart of cream
1 can of apricots or
1 quart of fresh apricots

If fresh apricots are used, take an extra quarter of a pound of sugar. Put half the cream and all the sugar over the fire in a double boiler and stir until the sugar is dissolved; take from the fire and, when cold, add the remaining cream. Turn the mixture into the freezer, and, when frozen fairly stiff, add the apricots after having been pressed through a colander. Return the lid, adjust the crank, and turn it slowly for five minutes, then remove the dasher and repack.

This quantity should serve ten persons.

BANANA ICE CREAM

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1 quart of cream
6 large bananas
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla

Put half the cream and all the sugar over the fire and stir until the sugar is dissolved; take from the fire, and, when perfectly cold, add the remaining half of the cream. Freeze the mixture, and add the bananas mashed or pressed through a colander. Put on the lid, adjust the crank, and turn until the mixture is frozen rather hard.

This quantity will serve ten persons.

BISCUIT ICE CREAM

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6 wine biscuits
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla

Grate and sift the biscuits. Scald half the cream and the sugar; when cold, add the remaining cream and the vanilla, and freeze. When frozen, remove the dasher, stir in the powdered biscuits, and repack to ripen.

This quantity will serve six persons.

APPLE ICE CREAM

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4 large tart apples
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 tablespoonful of lemon juice

Put half the cream and all the sugar over the fire and stir until the sugar is dissolved. When the mixture is perfectly cold, freeze it and add the lemon juice and the apples, pared and grated. Finish the freezing, and repack to ripen.

The apples must be pared at the last minute and grated into the cream. If they are grated on a dish and allowed to remain in the air they will turn very dark and spoil the color of the cream.

BROWN BREAD ICE CREAM

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3 half inch slices of Boston Brown Bread
1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla or
1/4 of a vanilla bean or a teaspoonful of vanilla extract

Dry and toast the bread in the oven, grate or pound it, and put it through an ordinary sieve. Heat half the cream and all the sugar; take from the fire, add vanilla, and, when cold, add the remaining cream, and freeze. When frozen, remove the dasher, stir in the brown bread, repack and stand aside to ripen.

This quantity will serve six persons.

CARAMEL ICE CREAM, No. 1

1 quart of cream
1/2 pound of sugar
1 teaspoonful of vanilla

Put four tablespoonfuls of the sugar in an iron frying pan over a strong fire, shake until the sugar melts, turns brown, smokes and burns; add quickly a half cupful of water; let it boil a minute, take from the fire, and put it, with all the sugar and half the cream, in a double boiler over the fire. Stir until the sugar is dissolved, take from the fire, and, when cold, add the remaining cream and vanilla, and freeze.

This quantity will serve six persons.

CARAMEL ICE CREAM, No. 2

1 quart of cream
1 pint of milk
1/2 cupful of brown sugar
1/2 pound of granulated sugar
2 teaspoonfuls of vanilla

Put the brown sugar in a frying pan over the fire, shake it until it melts, burns and smokes. Take it from the fire and add two tablespoonfuls of water; heat until the sugar is again melted, put it in a double boiler with the milk and all the sugar, stir until the sugar is dissolved, and stand aside to cool. When cold, add half the cream and the vanilla, and freeze. When frozen sufficiently stiff to remove the dasher, stir in the remaining pint of cream whipped to a stiff froth, repack and stand aside for three hours.

This quantity will serve ten persons.

BISQUE ICE CREAM

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1 quart of cream
1/4 pound of almond macaroons
4 kisses
1/2 pound of sugar
1 slice of stale sponge cake or
2 stale lady fingers
1 teaspoonful of caramel
1 teaspoonful of vanilla
If you use it, 4 tablespoonfuls of sherry