*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 49707 ***
THE “SURE to RISE” COOKERY BOOK
[Transcriber's Note: Bold text is surrounded by =equal signs= and
italic text is surrounded by _underscores_.]
ALL RECIPES IN THIS BOOK
In which Baking Powder is used have been tested successfully
with . . . . .
EDMONDS’ PRIZE Baking Powder
As all Baking Powders are not made alike, we cannot vouch for good
cooking if other brands are used. . . .
Your Grocer Sells EDMONDS’
ORDER A TIN and TRY the RECIPES
THE “SURE to RISE”
COOKERY BOOK
Is Especially Compiled, and contains
_USEFUL EVERYDAY RECIPES_,
also, _COOKING HINTS_.
_THIRD EDITION of_
150,000
[Illustration]
POST FREE
_TO ANY ADDRESS_
Published by
T. J. EDMONDS,
BAKING POWDER MANUFACTURER,
CHRISTCHURCH.
CHRISTCHURCH, N.Z.:
PRINTED BY THE CHRISTCHURCH PRESS COMPANY LIMITED.
1914.
There’s a rush for Milk Puddings
[Illustration]
When the weather is hot and sultry.
The dish that will then tempt the appetite is the cool, delightful
Custard with Milk Pudding or luscious fruit.
Nothing is more delicious than a few stewed peaches, pears or apricots,
served with custard made with Edmonds’ Custard Powder.
There is no element of uncertainty about the success of the custard—if
you use Edmonds’ you can take the rest for granted.
Let the children have all the custards they want, and like Oliver
Twist, they will be “waiting for more.”
EDMONDS CUSTARD POWDER
[Illustration]
CONTENTS.
PAGE
SCONES.
Preserved Ginger Scones 5
Cinnamon Scones 5
Girdle Scones 5
Yorkshire Tea Scones 6
Scotch Scones 6
Carraway Biscuits 6
Brown Scones 7
Sultana Scones 7
Plain Scones 7
BREAD and ROLLS.
Coffee Rolls 8
Milk Rolls 8
Date Rolls 8
Cottage Loaf 9
Aerated Bread 9
Brown Bread 9
PUDDINGS.
Rice Pudding, without Eggs 10
Sago Puddings, without Eggs 10
Yorkshire Pudding 10
Bread and Butter Pudding without Eggs 11
Raspberry Pudding 11
Date Pudding 11
Rita’s Apple Pudding 12
Fruit Pudding 12
American Pudding 12
Dominion Pudding 13
Beef Steak Pudding 13
Cocoanut Custard 13
Suet Dumplings 14
Apple Dumplings 14
Rolled French Pudding 14
Baked Jam Roll 15
Hendy Pudding 15
Baked Apple Dumplings 15
Christmas Plum Pudding 16
Doughnuts 16
“Love in a ——” 16
PASTRY.
Mince Pies 17
Mince Meat 17
Marmalade Cheese Cakes 17
Plain Puff Pastry 18
Short Pastry 18
Yorkshire Cheese Cakes 18
Apple Sandwich 19
A Good Pie Crust 19
Cornish Pastry 19
Testimonials 20
CAKES and BUNS.
English Queen Cakes 21
Raspberry Delights 21
Chelsea Buns 21
Almond Fingers 22
Rich Plum Cake 22
Buffalo Cake 22
Small Cakes, without Eggs 23
Elsie’s Fingers 23
Pikelets 23
Factory 24 & 25
Rene’s Kisses 26
Sponge Sandwich 26
Sponge Roll 26
Christmas Cake 27
Express Cakes 27
New Zealand Buns 27
Sponge Cake 28
Rock Cakes 28
Children’s Cakes 28
Shortbread 29
Fruit Cake 29
Rice Cakes 29
Sunbeam Cake 30
Pancakes 30
Grated Nut Cakes 30
Afternoon Tea Cakes 31
Rice Cakes, without eggs 31
Walnut Cake 31
A Good Plain Cake 32
Chocolate Cakes 32
Ginger Snaps 32
Madeira Cake 33
Date Cake 33
Pyramids 34
Picnic Dainties 34
Seed Cake 34
Ginger Cake 34
Victoria Sandwich 35
Sultana Cake 35
Girdle Cakes 35
Growth in Sales 36
Lemon Tea Cakes 37
Tea Cakes, without Eggs 37
Tennis Buns 37
“Egg Powder” Rock Cakes 38
Small Cocoanut Cakes 38
Excellent for Suppers 38
Coffee Cake 39
Bath Buns 39
Cocoanut Delicacies 40
MISCELLANEOUS.
Delicious Trifle 41
Egg Drink, without Eggs 41
To Make a Custard 41
Pear Ginger 41
Lemon Honey 42
Lemon Sponge 42
Edmonds’ Custards, with Stewed Fruits 42
Pineapple Jelly 43
Fig and Banana Salad 43
Baked Pears 43
Tomato and Macaroni 44
Tomato Soup 44
Apple Sauce 44
White Sauce 44
Tomato Sauce, No. 1 45
Tomato Sauce, No. 2 45
Easy Breakfast or Tea Dish 45
Salad Dressing 46
Apple Chutney 46
Tomato Sausage 46
Vegetarian Roast 47
Savoury Omelet 47
Ham or Tongue Omelet 47
Cooking Hints 48
DID YOU READ OPENING REMARKS INSIDE THE FRONT COVER OF THIS BOOK?
RECIPES
PRESERVED GINGER SCONES.
½ lb. flour (one breakfastcup)
1 oz. butter
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon sugar
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Preserved Ginger
Milk and water to mix
Sift baking powder and salt with flour, rub in butter, mix to a stiff
dough, turn out on board, cut in two equal parts, roll out, spread
one-half with thinly-cut ginger, place the other half on top, cut in
squares, brush over the milk, and bake in quick oven.
CINNAMON SCONES.
1 lb. flour
3 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder (moderate)
2 ozs. butter
1 egg
2 teaspoonfuls ground cinnamon
Milk to mix, sugar to taste, salt to taste
Make a light scone mixture, roll out quickly, sprinkle over the
cinnamon, fold in three, roll lightly to required thickness, cut into
shape, and bake in quick oven.
GIRDLE SCONES.
3 level breakfastcups flour
3 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Salt to taste
Mix with large cup of milk and water, divide dough into half, roll out,
and cut 4 scones from each. Cook on hot girdle.
YORKSHIRE TEA SCONES.
¾ lb. flour (or 1½ large cups)
1 oz. butter (or a tablespoonful)
1 dessertspoonful sugar
½ cup milk
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 egg
Put butter into a saucepan, when dissolved put in the milk, and make
warm; place sugar in a basin, and pour on the warm milk. Then place
flour in mixing bowl, and mix in Edmonds’ Baking Powder, make a well in
centre, and drop in the egg, then pour on milk and mix well. The paste
should be thin, roll and cut into shapes, place on hot floured oven
shelf, and bake in hot oven 10 minutes.
SCOTCH SCONES.
2 breakfastcups flour
2 heaped teaspoons Edmonds’ Baking Powder
2 ozs. butter
1 cup milk
Salt to taste
Mix flour and baking powder, then rub in 2 ozs. butter, half a pint
milk, mix quickly, roll and cut into shapes, bake in hot oven.
CARRAWAY BISCUITS.
1½ lbs. of flour
½ lb. butter
¾ lb. Sugar
2 eggs
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
2 ozs. currants
2 ozs. candied peel
1 teaspoonful carraway seeds
Little milk
Rub the butter into the flour, add the sugar, baking powder, cleaned
currants, carraway seeds, and finely-chopped candied peel. Mix to a
stiff paste with the well-beaten eggs, and a little milk. Roll out on a
floured board, cut into shapes, and bake in quick oven.
“UP-TO-DATE” BROWN SCONES.
2 breakfastcups of wheatmeal
1 breakfastcup plain flour
3 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
3 ozs. butter (or lard)
2 heaped dessertspoonfuls sugar
1 egg
Large cup milk. Salt to taste
Mix the wheatmeal, flour, sugar and Edmonds’ Baking Powder, then rub in
butter (or lard), beat the egg and milk together, and make into stiff
dough. Roll and cut into shapes, place on hot floured oven shelf, and
bake in quick oven.
SULTANA SCONES.
2 breakfastcups flour
3 moderate teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
2 tablespoonfuls butter
2 dessertspoonfuls sugar
1 egg, half pint milk, salt to taste
1 oz. sultanas or currants
Rub the butter (or lard) into the flour, and add the sugar, sultanas,
and baking powder. Beat the egg, and add the milk to it, then mix all
together to a wet dough. Roll out on floured board; cut into shapes,
and bake in moderate oven 20 minutes.
PLAIN SCONES.
1 breakfastcup flour (piled up)
1½ teaspoons Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 oz. butter (or lard)
1 teaspoon sugar
1 egg
Rub butter (or lard) into flour, then add other dry ingredients, beat
egg with little water, mix all into dough. Bake as usual, quick oven.
If made without the egg, use milk in place of water.
COFFEE ROLLS.
3 breakfastcups flour
2 tablespoonfuls butter
3 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 egg
½ pint milk, or more if needed.
1 tablespoonful sugar
Mix baking powder and flour together. Beat butter and sugar to a cream;
add egg (beaten), then milk, shape dough oblong, and cut. Make dough
same consistency as for scones.
MILK ROLLS.
2 breakfastcups flour
2 tablespoonfuls butter
1 breakfastcup milk
2 heaped teaspoons Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Mix into a stiff dough, roll into oblong shape, cut into pieces, brush
over with milk, and bake about 20 minutes.
DATE ROLLS.
1 lb. flour (or 2 breakfastcups)
4 ozs. sugar
2 eggs
4 ozs. butter
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
½ lb. dates or sultanas chopped
Milk to mix, salt a pinch, cinnamon
Rub butter into flour, add all dry ingredients, beat egg till frothy,
mix all together to a stiff paste, turn out on a board, form into a
roll, and cut in equal parts, put on cold, greased, and floured oven
tray, and put in quick oven; when nearly done brush over with hot
water, and sprinkle liberally with cinnamon and sugar; return to oven
to dry.
COTTAGE LOAF.
2 lbs. flour
2 moderate dessertspoonfuls of Edmonds’ Prize Baking Powder
½ teaspoonful salt
1 pint milk
Mix the baking powder and salt thoroughly with the flour, and work into
light dough with milk. Bake in quick oven.
AERATED BREAD.
To every cup of flour add a heaped teaspoonful of Edmonds’ Prize Baking
Powder, with a pinch of salt, thoroughly mix while in a dry state, then
pour on gradually about half pint of cold water or milk; mix quickly
but thoroughly into dough of the usual consistence. Do not knead it
more than necessary to mix it perfectly. Make into small loaves, and
place immediately in quick oven. (When fully risen open door to let out
the steam just a second).
BROWN BREAD.
2 breakfastcups of wheatmeal
1 small cup flour
1 teaspoon sugar
2 heaped teaspoons Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 small teaspoon salt
1 tablespoonful butter
1 breakfastcup milk and water
Mix all the ingredients with the milk and water into dough, turn out
and flatten with hand, inch thick, cut four lines across the top, and
prick with fork. Bake about 20 minutes.
RICE PUDDING (Without Eggs).
Stir sufficient rice in boiling water, let boil quarter of an hour,
then drain water off, stirring into the boiled rice a cupful of milk
and dessertspoonful of sugar. Make a custard (see direction for
Custard, page 41), put the rice into a dish, mix thoroughly with the
custard while hot. Grate nutmeg on top; bake as usual.
SAGO PUDDING (Without Eggs).
Stir sufficient sago in boiling water, let boil 15 minutes, then drain
water off, stir into the sago a cupful of milk and dessertspoonful
sugar; make custard (see direction for Custard, page 41); pour the
stewed sago into a dish, mix well with the custard while hot. Grate
nutmeg on top; bake as usual.
YORKSHIRE PUDDING.
1 heaped breakfastcup flour
1 pint milk, good measure
½ teaspoon salt
3 eggs
1 tablespoon dripping
Sift flour into a basin, sprinkle salt over it, and make a hole in
the middle. Break each egg separately, and stir gradually in, add
sufficient milk with wooden spoon until thick batter, then add and mix
remainder of milk, and allow the batter to stand for half-an-hour.
Place the dripping into a baking dish, make quite hot, and pour in
batter; bake slowly for half-hour. A layer of raisins put in bottom of
tin before pouring in batter makes a nice raisin Batter Pudding; try
this.
BREAD AND BUTTER PUDDING (Without Eggs).
Slice sufficient white or brown bread (stale) to fill a good-sized
pie dish, and spread each slice thinly with butter. Grease the dish,
then lay in the slices, sprinkling some currants, sultanas, and sliced
candied peel between each layer, adding a little sugar and spice also.
Then moisten the bread with a cup of milk. Prepare a pint custard (see
direction for Custard, page 41), and pour over while hot, grate nutmeg
on; bake as usual.
RASPBERRY PUDDING.
¼ lb. butter
¼ cupful sugar
2 eggs
1 teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
2 tablespoonfuls raspberry jam
1 breakfastcup flour
MODE.—Beat butter and sugar to a cream, add eggs (well beaten), then
the flour, baking powder and jam; put into a buttered basin, and steam
2½ hours.
DATE PUDDING.
3 ozs. butter
6 ozs. flour
2 or 3 eggs
1 small teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
4 ozs. sugar
4 ozs. dates
3 tablespoons milk
1 teaspoon lemon juice
MODE.—Beat butter and sugar to a cream, add eggs, and beat well. Then
add milk, dates (chopped up fine), lemon juice, and last sift in the
flour and baking powder mixed. Steam 2 hours in a buttered mould.
RITA’S APPLE PUDDING.
Mix thoroughly a teaspoon of Edmonds’ Baking Powder with a breakfastcup
of flour. Beat 2 eggs well, add 1 gill of milk, and a tablespoon of
butter, beat all together 15 minutes. Place 2 inches of stewed apples
(sweetened) in a pie dish. Pour in batter, and bake in quick oven;
serve hot.
FRUIT PUDDING.
1 small cup sugar
2 breakfastcups flour
1 tablespoonful butter
2 eggs
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
¾ cup milk (or more)
Beat butter and sugar to a cream, add eggs (beaten) and milk. Mix
flour and baking powder together, and add to mixture. Grease two small
dishes, fill half full of fresh fruit, pour over the batter; bake 1
hour.
AMERICAN PUDDING.
4 apples
½ pint milk
2 eggs
1 tablespoon flour
½ nutmeg
1 tablespoon minced suet
½ teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Sugar, sweeten to taste
Core and halve the apples, beat eggs, add flour, baking powder and
milk. Grease a pie dish; lay the apples in (cut part down), pour the
mixture over, then sprinkle in the minced suet, and grate nutmeg on
top. Bake moderate half-hour.
DOMINION PUDDING.
1 breakfastcup flour
½ breakfastcup sugar
1 tablespoonful butter
1 egg
½ cupful sweet milk
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Rub butter into flour and Edmonds’ Baking Powder, add sugar, beat egg
and milk together, and mix all into batter. Place some raisins at
bottom of mould or basin, pour batter over, and steam for 1¼ hours.
BEEF STEAK PUDDING.
½ lb. bread crumbs
½ lb. flour
1 teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 lb. of steak
½ lb. suet
3 kidneys
Seasoning
Mix crumbs, flour, suet, salt to taste, and baking powder, with enough
cold water to make stiff paste. Roll out and line a basin, leaving a
small hole at the bottom of paste. Cut steak up and dredge with flour.
Cut kidney small; add pepper and seasoning; cover with a thick layer of
paste, and boil about 3 hours.
COCOANUT CUSTARD.
Put small teacupful of desiccated cocoanut in pie-dish, then make a
pint custard of 2 eggs, and pint of milk, with two dessertspoonfuls
sugar. Pour over cocoanut, and bake as usual.
SUET DUMPLINGS.
1 teacupful flour
2 tablespoonfuls chopped suet
Cold water
pepper and salt to taste
½ teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 dessertspoonful chopped parsley
Mix all the dry ingredients, rubbing suet into the flour, and make all
into stiff paste with cold water. Cut and roll into balls, covering the
outsides with flour, which prevents breaking. When ready, drop them
into the stew, which must be boiling slowly, and cook for half-hour
longer.
APPLE DUMPLINGS.
3 ozs. flour
½ teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
3 apples
3 ozs. suet
3 ozs. breadcrumbs
¼ teaspoon salt
3 dessertspoonfuls sugar
Prepare the apples, make a paste of flour, suet, breadcrumbs, add
baking powder, salt, and water to mix. Place a piece of paste round
each apple, put dessertspoonful sugar in each, then cover the top. Put
dumplings loose into pan of boiling water, when they come to surface
give them ½ hour.
ROLLED FRENCH PUDDING.
Roll out a nice suet crust as for rolly poly, scatter over some chopped
figs, dates, apple or lemon juice, finely chopped candied peel,
breadcrumbs, golden syrup, ground ginger, and nutmeg, little pieces of
butter here and there, roll up, secure ends, tie in cloth, and boil
about 2 hours; put pudding into boiling water.
BAKED JAM ROLL.
½ lb. flour
4 ozs. dripping (or lard or butter)
Salt a little
½ teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
½ teaspoon Sugar (fine)
Water to mix
Beat butter (or dripping) to a cream, add all other ingredients, and
sufficient water to make a dough, roll out into shape, and spread with
apricot or raspberry jam, sliced apples, plums, or any fruit desired
could be substituted for jam. Put in a baking dish; bake in moderate
oven.
HENDY PUDDING.
1 cup suet (chopped)
2 breakfastcups flour
¼ breakfastcup sugar
2 teaspoons Edmonds’ Baking Powder (heaped)
Jam, water to mix
Mix all dry ingredients with water to a stiff dough, which divide into
three, place alternately in greased basin a layer of dough, then jam,
steam 3 hours. Serve with sweet or jam sauce.
BAKED APPLE DUMPLINGS.
1 lb. flour (or 2 breakfastcups)
½ lb. butter (or dripping)
½ teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Water to mix
Pare and core the apples, fill cavity with sugar and nutmeg, roll each
separately in paste, put in baking dish, and quarter cover with hot
water containing half cup sugar, one ounce of butter, one tablespoonful
of Golden Syrup. Baste frequently, allow three-quarters of an hour to
bake, try with skewer; serve with custard or cream.
CHRISTMAS PLUM PUDDING.
¾ lb. flour (or 1½ breakfastcups)
2 heaped teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
2 ozs. stale bread crumbs
1½ lb. suet
2 lbs. raisins
1 lb. currants
6 eggs
10 ozs. sugar (brown)
¼ lb. almonds
½ lb. mixed candied peel
Salt and spice to taste
Mix ingredients well together, and add 6 eggs well beaten, and
three-quarters of a pint of milk; divide into two, and boil 8 hours, or
four, and boil 6 hours.
DOUGHNUTS.
3½ breakfastcups flour
1 breakfastcup sugar
½ breakfastcup butter
4 eggs
1 cup milk
3 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
½ teaspoonful salt
Beat sugar and eggs together in a separate basin, rub butter into
flour, add salt and baking powder, mix well, then mix flour with the
eggs and sugar, roll out, cut into rounds, and fry in hot lard; serve
hot.
“LOVE IN A ——”
“Do you love me?” said the cup to the custard.
“I’m just brimming up in you,” replied the custard.
“You sweet thing,” answered the cup.
“Delightful.”
A GOLDEN RULE.—Hold fast to that which is good.
MINCE PIES.
INGREDIENTS.—Mince meat, a sufficiency, and puff or short paste Recipes
(see page 18).
Roll out the paste to a suitable thickness, line with it the patty
pans, previously well buttered; put in each sufficient mince meat, make
lids of paste, cover over, press lightly at the edges, neatly trim
round with a knife, and bake in a moderately quick oven. When done,
sprinkle with powdered white sugar.
MINCE MEAT.
2 lbs. apples (pared and cored)
2 lbs. raisins (stoned)
2 lbs. currants
2 lbs. suet (chopped fine)
¾ lb. mixed candied peel (chopped)
½ lb. sugar
½ pint brandy (or 1 breakfastcup)
¼ pint sherry (or ½ breakfastcup)
1 small nutmeg (grated)
1 dessertspoonful powdered cinnamon
1 dessertspoonful salt
The juice of two small oranges
The juice of two small lemons
The peel of one each grated
Put apples and raisins through mincer, then mix with all other
ingredients well together, put into jars, with piece of paper on top
dipped in brandy, then cover.
MARMALADE CHEESE CAKES.
2 tablespoonfuls marmalade
2 eggs
2 ozs. butter
Melt the butter, beat the eggs, and add to marmalade. Line patty pans
with puff paste (see recipe page 18), pour in the mixture, and bake in
a quick oven.
PLAIN PUFF PASTRY.
½ lb. flour
7 ozs. butter
½ teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Water to mix
MODE.—Place the flour on a pastry-board with the butter, chop the
butter into the flour with a knife, then put into a basin, add baking
powder, and sufficient water to make a soft dough. Roll out several
times.
SHORT PASTRY.
1 breakfastcup flour, pinch salt
4 ozs. butter or lard
½ teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Water to mix
MODE.—Rub the butter into the flour, add salt, baking powder, and water
a little at a time to make a firm dough. Roll out to required thickness.
YORKSHIRE CHEESE CAKES.
1 teacup curds
1 oz. butter
1 oz. sugar
1 egg
1 tablespoon currants
MODE.—Cream butter and sugar, mix with the curds, mix all ingredients
together. Fill patty-pans, lined with pastry.
To prepare the curd, boil 2 quarts of milk, and as it rises pour in
either ½ pint of vinegar or buttermilk to turn it to curds. Draw the
pan to side of the fire, let it stand 5 minutes, then strain through a
sieve.
Pastry requires a hot oven; if it contains baking powder—must be baked
at once.
APPLE SANDWICH.
½ lb. butter
1 lb. flour
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Mince 2 or 3 apples
1 cupful clean currants
1 piece of peel
1 dessertspoonful cinnamon
1 lemon
1 egg
2 tablespoons sugar
MODE.—Rub butter into flour, then add baking powder, make into a firm
dough with water. Roll out to required thickness; mince all other
ingredients together, and mix in egg last. Place mince between pastry,
and bake.
A GOOD PIE CRUST.
4 breakfastcups flour
2 heaped teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 level teaspoon salt
1 lb. butter (lard or dripping may be used)
Mix well together, then add 2 cups of water, and roll out. This makes
light paste for pies, tarts, custard, etc.
CORNISH PASTY.
¼ lb. pastry
1 teacupful raw potato
1 teacupful raw meat
A small piece of onion chopped fine
½ teaspoonful salt
¼ teaspoonful pepper
3 tablespoonfuls cold water or gravy
Mix all ingredients together on a plate, roll pastry into an oval
shape, put the mixture on the paste, wet the edges on the top, and
prick well. Brush over a little egg or milk, and bake in a hot oven for
about half-an-hour.
TESTIMONIALS.
Taumarunui,
T. J. EDMONDS, ESQ., Nov. 8th, 1911.
Christchurch.
Dear Sir,—At the Levin and Horowhenua Autumn Shows
I was awarded 10 Firsts, 3 Seconds, and 2 Highly
Commended Prizes for Cakes, etc., made with your Baking
Powder. I always recommend your Powder, as it is the
best I have used.
Yours faithfully,
MRS. H. BROMLEY.
17 Oxford Street,
South Dunedin.
TO T. J. EDMONDS,
I have used your Baking Powder for 14 years, and would
not think of using any other. When I first asked my
grocer for it, he did not know anything about it, so he
sent to Christchurch for it, and now has good sales. I
have introduced it to many of my friends, and all are
more than satisfied. My daughter-in-law received Second
Prize in the Winter Show the first year she competed;
she used your Powder.
Yours etc.,
MRS. SEYMOUR.
Kia Ora Tea Rooms,
Tahunanui,
Nelson.
MR. T. J. EDMONDS.
Dear Sir,—After using “Edmonds’ Prize Baking Powder”
for a period extending over ten years, I have come to
the conclusion that it is the best on the market, and
highly recommend all who have not tried it to do so
without delay.
MRS. T. J. WILSON.
March 23rd, 1911.
Kaponga,
Taranaki.
MR. EDMONDS.
Dear Sir,—I have been a big user of your Baking Powder
for the last seven years. I have won prizes at various
Shows for my cooking, and I have always used your
Baking Powder. I use 1½ tins a month, and always refuse
any other offered to me.
MRS. A. T. PHILLIPS.
ENGLISH QUEEN CAKES.
4 eggs
Their weight in butter, sugar and flour
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
4 ozs. currants
Flavouring to taste
Beat butter and sugar to a cream, then beat in eggs. Mix currants with
flour and baking powder, and add to mixture. Bake in hot oven.
RASPBERRY DELIGHTS.
2 tablespoonfuls sugar
1 egg
2 tablespoonfuls butter
½ teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 teaspoonful flour
1 tablespoonful Edmonds’ Custard Powder
MODE.—Cream butter and sugar together, add the egg; mix flour, baking,
and custard powder together, and add by degrees to mixture. Place in
greased patty-tins on cold oven shelf, and bake ten minutes. When
nearly baked, place a teaspoonful of raspberry jam on each, and then
bake a little longer.
CHELSEA BUNS.
2 breakfastcups flour
2 heaped teaspoons Edmonds’ Prize Baking Powder
2 tablespoonfuls sugar
2 tablespoonfuls butter
1 egg
Spice, and milk to mix
Rub all dry ingredients together, mix with milk to desired paste, roll
out, cover with spice, and sugar, and bake as usual.
ALMOND FINGERS.
1 breakfastcup of flour
¼ lb. butter
2 ozs. sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Beat butter and sugar to a cream, add yolk of egg, and beat well. Mix
flour and baking powder together, and add to mixture with the hand.
Paste must be very stiff. Roll out thin. Make the icing with the white
of the egg, spread on top of paste. Place chopped almonds on. Cut into
fingers; bake moderate oven.
RICH PLUM CAKE.
Take ½ lb. butter, and ½ lb. sugar, beat these well together with the
hand to a cream, add 4 eggs, one at a time, beat well into the butter
and sugar, lightly mix in 2 breakfastcups of flour previously mixed
with one heaped teaspoon of Edmonds’ Baking Powder, then lightly mix in
½ lb. sultanas. Bake at once thoroughly in fairly quick oven.
BUFFALO CAKE.
1¼ breakfastcups flour
¼ lb. butter
2 eggs
¾ breakfastcup sugar
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Cream butter and sugar, add eggs beaten, mix flour and baking powder,
and add to mixture, then enough milk to make thin. Cook in sponge
sandwich tins. Put together with lemon honey or raspberry jam. Icing on
top.
SMALL CAKES (Without Eggs).
3 ozs. butter (or dripping)
3 ozs. sugar
½ lb. flour (or 1 breakfastcup)
1 teaspoonful ground ginger
1 heaped teaspoonful Edmonds’ Egg Powder
Milk to mix about ¼ pint.
Soften butter or dripping if very hard, add sugar and beat to a cream.
Slightly warm the milk, and beat it in by degrees. Stir in lightly the
flour previously sifted with the Egg powder, ground ginger, and half a
saltspoon of salt, drop in spoonfuls on a cold baking tray, sprinkle
a little sugar over, and bake in hot oven for about ten minutes. The
mixture for these and all eggless cakes must be fairly firm, and the
spoonfuls piled high on the baking tray.
ELSIE’S FINGERS.
¼ lb. butter
3 ozs. sugar
2 small cups flour
1½ teaspoonfuls Baking Powder (Edmonds’)
1 egg
Beat butter and sugar, add egg and flour mixed with baking powder, roll
small pieces between the hands, dip in sugar, and put on cold tray;
bake in moderate oven till slightly brown.
PIKELETS.
1 breakfastcup flour
1 dessertspoonful sugar
1 egg (well beaten)
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
¾ breakfastcup milk
1 oz. butter
Mix flour, sugar, and Edmonds’ Baking Powder together, then mix egg and
milk, make a well in centre of dry ingredients, and mix to a smooth
paste with milk. Cook in small lots on hot greased girdle.
[Illustration]
RENE’S KISSES.
½ lb. cornflour
½ lb. butter
½ lb. sugar
½ lb. flour
4 eggs
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Cream butter and sugar, add eggs beaten and flavouring, mix baking
powder, flour, and cornflour, and add to mixture; mix until quite
light, drop in teaspoon lots on cold oven shelf, bake in quick oven;
when cold, fasten together with jam.
SPONGE SANDWICH.
3 eggs
1 cup sugar (small)
1 cup flour (small)
½ teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Beat eggs and sugar well, then add flour and baking powder mixed; bake
in hot oven in sandwich tins.
SPONGE ROLL.
1 cup flour
1 tea cup sugar
3 eggs
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
2 tablespoons cold water
METHOD.—Beat eggs and sugar till stiff and frothy, sift flour and
baking powder, add water to eggs and sugar, then stir in the sifted
flour and baking powder lightly and quickly, pour into greased tin, and
bake in hot oven from 8 to 10 minutes. This recipe will also serve for
a Jam Sandwich.
CHRISTMAS CAKE.
1 lb. butter
1 lb. currants
1 lb. raisins
1 lb. sultanas
¼ lb. mixed peel
¼ lb. almonds
4 breakfastcups flour
2 breakfastcups sugar
10 eggs
1 heaped teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Wine glass brandy
Beat butter to a cream, add sugar, then eggs one by one (unbeaten); mix
baking powder with flour, and put in, then fruit dredged with flour.
Brandy. Cook 4½ hours, moderate oven.
EXPRESS CAKES.
1 breakfastcup flour
1 teacup sugar
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
3 eggs
¼ cup milk
(Essence vanilla or lemon)
Mix flour, sugar, and Edmonds’ baking powder together, beat in the eggs
and milk, put into small greased tins. Bake in moderate oven about 20
minutes.
NEW ZEALAND BUNS.
1 breakfastcup flour
1 tablespoonful sugar
1 heaped teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 egg
3 ozs. butter
Rub the butter into flour, sugar, and baking powder, then add the egg
well beaten, and enough milk to make a stiff dough. Place in heaps on
cold greased oven shelf. Bake quick oven 10 to 15 minutes.
SPONGE CAKE.
2 level breakfastcups flour
1 level breakfastcup sugar
4 tablespoons milk
2 teaspoons Edmonds’ Prize Baking Powder
4 eggs
Pinch salt
Beat the eggs, then beat in the sugar, add salt and milk. Mix flour and
powder together in dry state, then sift it in; beat all together, and
bake in quick oven.
ROCK CAKES.
1 breakfastcup flour
2 heaped dessertspoonfuls sugar
2 ozs. currants
2 ozs. butter (or lard)
1 oz. or 1 round candied peel
1 dessertspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Milk to mix
Rub the butter (or lard) into flour, then add other dry ingredients,
the egg beaten, and sufficient milk to make stiff dough. Place in
rocky shapes on cold greased oven shelf, and bake in hot oven 10 or 12
minutes.
CHILDREN’S CAKES.
2 breakfastcups flour
3 ozs. dripping
1 teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
¼ lb. sugar
¼ lb. sultanas
1 oz. peel
½ teaspoonful salt
1 egg
MODE.—Rub dripping well into the flour, add all dry ingredients. Beat
the egg well, mix with a breakfastcup nearly full of milk. Mix all
together, and bake in greased patty-tins about 15 minutes.
SHORTBREAD.
½ lb. flour (or one breakfastcup)
¼ lb. butter
2 ozs. sugar (or 2 tablespoonfuls)
Cream butter and sugar, then work in the flour, continue to work until
it becomes a firm dough. Place into an ungreased tin, press well down
with the knuckles, then smooth over with a knife, and prick with fork.
Bake in a slow oven 1 hour. Cut into shapes whilst hot in the tin.
FRUIT CAKE.
2 breakfastcups flour
½ lb. butter
½ lb. sugar
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
8 eggs
1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 lb. currants
4 ozs. almonds
½ lb. mixed peel
MODE.—Beat butter to a cream, add sugar gradually, then white of eggs
(beaten 10 minutes), then yolks (beaten 10 minutes), then flour and
other ingredients. Bake 2½ hours moderate oven.
RICE CAKES.
1 cup flour
½ cup ground rice
¼ lb. sugar
3 ozs. butter
1 egg
½ cup milk
1 teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
A pinch of salt
Cream butter and sugar, sift dry ingredients together, whisk the egg
well, and mix all thoroughly. Add flavouring, and a few currants if
liked. Bake in patty pans in moderate oven about 10 minutes.
SUNBEAM CAKE.
½ lb. sugar
½ lb. butter
½ lb. sultanas
¼ lb. peel
¾ lb. flour
6 eggs
1 small teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
A few almonds and flavouring
MODE.—Whip butter and sugar to a cream, beat in eggs one by one, then
add flour and baking powder, fruit, peel, almonds, and flavouring. Bake
in moderate oven 2 hours.
PANCAKES.
2 breakfastcups flour
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Prize Baking Powder
Pinch of salt
Mix well in dry state, add two eggs, well beaten, and enough milk to
make thin batter. Fry with lard or butter.
GRATED NUT CAKES.
1½ breakfastcups flour
¼ lb. desiccated cocoanut (or almonds)
6 tablespoonfuls sugar
4 ozs. butter
½ teacup milk
1 dessertspoonful Edmonds’ Egg Powder
Mix cocoanut with the flour, sugar, and Egg Powder. Soften the butter
a little, then rub it lightly into the other ingredients, moisten the
whole with the milk slightly warmed, and bake in moderate quick oven in
buttered patty pans.
AFTERNOON TEA CAKES.
1 breakfastcup flour
2 heaped dessertspoonfuls sugar
3 ozs. butter (or 3 tablespoonfuls)
1 egg (well beaten) and some milk
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Jam (raspberry preferred)
Rub butter into flour, then add sugar and Edmonds’ Baking Powder, mix
well, add egg and sufficient milk to make a light dough. Roll and cut
into rounds; place a little raspberry jam on each, wet the edges, and
press them together. Put on cold, greased oven shelf, and bake about 10
minutes.
RICE CAKES (Without Eggs).
1 cup flour
½ cup ground rice
¼ lb. sugar
4 ozs. butter
½ cup milk (good measure)
1 heaped teaspoonful Edmonds’ Egg Powder
Pinch salt
Cream butter and sugar, sift and mix dry ingredients into same, mix all
thoroughly with the milk, add flavouring, and bake in patty pans in
moderate oven from 10 to 12 minutes.
WALNUT CAKE.
1 large cup flour
1 small cup sugar
1 small cup butter
1 tablespoon cocoa
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 cup walnuts
3 eggs
Beat butter and sugar to a cream, add eggs well beaten, mix cocoa with
a little milk, then add the other ingredients, and bake in shallow cake
tin in moderate oven. When cold, ice with water icing, and place some
walnuts halved on top.
Currants should be rubbed in a colander with a little flour before
using.
A GOOD PLAIN CAKE.
Mix well together two breakfastcups of flour, two teaspoonfuls Edmonds’
Baking Powder, a little salt and spice, and ¼ lb. sugar. Rub in ½ lb.
butter, then mix in 6 ozs. sultanas, 2 ozs. currants, a few pieces
sliced peel. Beat 3 eggs and half-cupful milk together, and moisten the
lot. Bake in quick oven thoroughly.
CHOCOLATE CAKES.
¼ lb. flour
¼ lb. sugar
2 eggs
2 tablespoonfuls butter
1 teaspoon chocolate (or 1½ teaspoons cocoa)
½ teaspoonful vanilla essence
½ teaspoonful Edmonds’ Prize Baking Powder
Beat butter and sugar together, then add flour, baking powder, cocoa
and essence. Bake in moderate oven 15 to 20 minutes in sandwich tins.
Ice with chocolate icing.
LEMON BISCUITS.
½ lb. butter
½ lb. sugar
1 lb. (or 2 breakfastcups) flour
2 eggs
1 teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Flavour with essence of lemon
Cream butter and sugar together, add eggs, then flour and powder mixed
well, roll out thin, cut into shapes and bake.
MADEIRA CAKE.
3 eggs, their weight in butter and sugar
The weight of 4 eggs in flour
1 teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Juice of one small lemon
Cream butter and sugar, add eggs one by one, beat well, add lemon
juice, flour, and baking powder. Bake in buttered cake tin in moderate
oven for about one hour. Ice the top if desired.
DATE CAKE.
½ lb. butter
½ lb. sugar
6 eggs
½ lb. dates
1½ breakfastcups flour
1 teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Beat butter and sugar to a cream, add eggs 2 at a time; beat well, add
flour, powder, and fruit. Bake about 1½ hours.
PYRAMIDS.
1 breakfastcup flour
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 teaspoonful cornflour (or potato flour)
¼ lb. sugar
¼ lb. butter
4 eggs
Flavouring
Beat butter and sugar to a cream, well whisk the eggs, sift dry
ingredients together, make a hole in centre of flour, in which put
butter and eggs, mix thoroughly but lightly; add flavouring liked, and
bake in small patty pans in hot oven for about 10 minutes.
PICNIC DAINTIES.
1½ breakfastcups flour
3 tablespoonfuls butter
2 tablespoonfuls sugar
1 dessertspoonful Edmonds’ Egg Powder
Milk to mix
Rub butter into flour, then stir in sugar, egg powder and sufficient
milk to make firm dough. Roll and cut into rounds, place one
teaspoonful of raspberry jam in the centre; wet the edges and press
them together. Place on cold greased oven shelf. Bake 12 minutes.
SEED CAKE.
½ lb. butter
½ lb. sugar
6 eggs
2 cups flour
1 teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Caraway seed, lemon peel
Beat butter and sugar to a cream, then add the eggs, beating in one by
one with the hand; lastly, add flour and baking powder, mixed together,
with seeds and lemon peel as desired.
GINGER CAKE.
2 breakfastcups flour
1 teacup sugar
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 teacup golden syrup
1 teacup butter
1 teacup milk
2 eggs
2 dessertspoonfuls ground ginger
1 teaspoonful cinnamon
½ teaspoonful spice
Mix dry ingredients, add eggs well beaten, and butter (melted) last of
all; bake three-quarters of an hour.
VICTORIA SANDWICH.
2 level breakfastcups flour
1 level breakfastcup sugar
4 ozs. butter
3 eggs
2 teaspoons Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 small cup water
Essence flavouring to taste
Warm the butter, and beat in the sugar, drop in the eggs one at a time,
then the flour with the baking powder mixed, must be lightly beaten in;
add flavouring and water gradually. The baking powder may be added last
of all to give better results. Bake in quick oven 15 minutes.
SULTANA CAKE.
1 lb. flour
½ lb. butter
½ lb. sultanas
½ lb. sugar
4 eggs
3 ozs. peel
1 heaped teaspoonful Edmonds’ Baking Powder
A little milk
Cream the butter and sugar together, add eggs well beaten, then the
other ingredients; bake in moderate oven two hours
GIRDLE CAKES.
Rub into two breakfastcups flour 6 ozs. of butter, add 3 teaspoonfuls
Edmonds’ Baking Powder, and mix thoroughly. Mix into this ¼ lb.
currants, pinch salt, a little nutmeg, and make into light dough with
milk. Roll out, cut into rounds, bake 15 minutes on a girdle or in the
oven. If required sweet, add tablespoonful sugar.
[Illustration: _They’ve Broken the Record this year_]
OVER
ONE MILLION
TINS OF EDMONDS
The following list shows the growth in Sales of
EDMONDS’ BAKING POWDER
each year for the past 9 years.
* * * * *
In 1905 Tins Sold 370,600
” 1906 ” 429,780
” 1907 ” 502,548
” 1908 ” 655,668
” 1909 ” 743,796
” 1910 ” 818,772
” 1911 ” 878,268
” 1912 ” 1,077,084
” 1913 ” 1,171,34
These are big figures, but the greatest record yet broken is in the
tremendous increase of the number of dainty cakes, wholesome scones,
and beautifully light puddings and pastry made by the thousands of
housewives in the Dominion who use
EDMONDS’ PRIZE BAKING POWDER.
* * * * *
MERIT COUNTS—That’s why we are doing the business.
LEMON TEA CAKES.
Rub into 1½ breakfastcups of flour 3 tablespoonfuls each of lard and
butter; add 6 ozs. moist sugar, the grated rind of one lemon, a little
of the juice, and a heaped teaspoonful of Edmonds’ Prize Baking Powder.
Mix into moderate paste, with 2 well beaten eggs. Divide into cakes;
place on greased oven shelf, and bake in brisk oven 20 minutes.
TEA CAKES (Without Eggs).
1 lb. flour
4 ozs. sugar
4 ozs. butter
2 teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Egg Powder
½ lb. dates (or sultanas) chopped
Milk to mix, salt a pinch
Rub butter into flour, add all dry ingredients, mix all together to a
paste with milk, turn out on board, form into a roll, and cut in equal
parts, put on cold greased and floured tray, and bake in quick oven.
TENNIS BUNS.
1 breakfastcup flour
3 heaped dessertspoonfuls sugar
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 egg
3 ozs. butter
Candied peel and milk
Essence of lemon to taste
Rub butter into flour, add other dry ingredients, mix well, then add
the egg well beaten, and enough milk to make a stiff dough. Place in
small lots on a cold greased oven shelf. Put a piece of candied peel on
top of each. Bake in quick oven about 10 minutes.
“EGG POWDER” ROCK CAKES.
1 breakfastcup flour
2 dessertspoonfuls sugar
2 ozs. currants
4 ozs. butter (or lard)
½ oz. or 1 round candied peel
1 dessertspoonful Edmond’s Egg Powder
Milk to mix
Rub the butter (or lard) into flour, add the other dry ingredients, and
sufficient milk to make a stiff dough, place on cold greased oven shelf
in rocky shapes. Bake in hot oven.
SMALL COCOANUT CAKES.
1 breakfastcup flour
4 ozs. desiccated cocoanut
2 dessertspoonfuls sugar
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
2 ozs butter (or 2 tablespoonfuls)
Milk
Rub butter into flour, mix in cocoanut, Edmonds’ baking powder, and
sugar, making into stiff dough with milk. Place in small lots on cold
greased oven shelf, and bake in hot oven about 20 minutes.
EXCELLENT FOR SUPPERS.
Edmonds’ Custards, served hot (grate little nutmeg on top to taste),
are delicious also for children’s parties.
A tablespoonful of flour equals 1 ounce, and so on. One large
breakfastcup of flour equals half pound.
TO YOUNG PEOPLE.
To make sure that cakes are baked enough, stick a clean bright skewer,
or straw through it; if it comes out clean and free from the cake
mixture it is done, if otherwise, it requires longer cooking. Careful
practice will bring you success.
COFFEE CAKE.
¼ lb. butter (or dripping)
¼ lb. sugar
½ cup Golden Syrup
1 large cup of strong coffee
1 lb. flour (or 2 breakfastcups)
2 heaped teaspoonfuls Edmonds’ Baking Powder
1 teaspoonful ground ginger
A few raisins and peel
A little spice or nutmeg
Cream butter and sugar, add syrup warmed and mixed with the coffee,
together with sifted flour, add spices to creamed butter, add raisins
and peel, then beat in baking powder; bake in moderate oven about 2
hours.
BATH BUNS.
½ cupful butter
1 cupful sugar
3 eggs
½ cupful lemon peel (cut up)
3 breakfastcups flour
3 teaspoons Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Beat butter and sugar to a cream, add the eggs, and beat few minutes
longer, add other ingredients, and mix into moderate paste with milk.
Place on cold oven shelf (greased), and bake about 12 or 15 minutes in
hot oven.
=Special.=—If Edmonds’ Baking Powder should appear lumpy in tin, it
will easily powder up again (with back of spoon) before using in
cooking.
ABOUT CAKE MIXING.
Always cream together the butter and sugar in a basin, before
commencing to add the eggs already beaten; this will add success to
your cakes.
COCOANUT DELICACIES.
½ breakfastcup flour (or ¼ lb.)
½ breakfastcup cocoanut (or ¼ lb.) desiccated
3 ozs. butter (or 3 tablespoonfuls)
2 heaped dessertspoonfuls sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon Edmonds’ Baking Powder
Rub butter into flour, add other dry ingredients, and mix, then add egg
beaten, this should make stiff dough (if not add very little milk, as
dough must be stiff). Place on cold greased oven shelf in small lots.
Bake in hot oven from 10 to 12 minutes.
A RIDDLE
For the young generations and new arrivals in the Dominion.
WHY IS
EDMONDS’
PRIZE
BAKING POWDER
=“LIKE THE SUN?”=
Send us your name and address when you require a new Cookery Book.
Posted Free.
=EDMONDS’ BAKING POWDER WORKS,
Christchurch.=
* * * * *
To soften scones always turn out on clean towel, and cover them with
the ends.
DELICIOUS TRIFLE.
Cut up stale sponge cakes in dish, spread over with jam (raspberry
preferred), then make a pint custard, (as per direction for Custard),
and pour when cooked over the cakes. Let stand till cold, then spread
whipped cream on top. This dish is improved by adding a little sherry
or wine to the cut sponges.
EGG DRINK (Without Eggs).
Two large cups of milk; take sufficient to mix smooth 1 heaped
teaspoon of Edmonds’ Custard Powder. Place remainder in saucepan
with 2 teaspoonfuls sugar; when it boils add mixture, stir and place
immediately into glasses (grate nutmeg on top to taste).
TO MAKE A CUSTARD.
From a pint of new milk take enough to mix smooth one large
dessertspoonful of Edmonds’ Custard Powder, sweeten the remainder of
the milk to taste (say, a heaped dessertspoonful sugar), and when
the milk is boiling, pour the mixed custard into it, stir and pour
immediately into jug. When cold, place in glasses (grate nutmeg on if
desired).
PEAR GINGER.
6 lb. pears (nearly ripe)
1 lb. preserved ginger (full lb.)
4 lbs. sugar
Cut up pears, and let stand over night with sugar on, boil with ginger
following day until soft.
LEMON HONEY (For Sponges or Tarts).
1 lb. sugar
Rind and juice of 4 lemons
4 ozs. butter
4 eggs
Grate only the yellow part of the lemon rinds (avoid white part, as it
is bitter), strain the juice, beat eggs a little, put all ingredients
into enamelled pot; cook slowly until thick and smooth. Do not let it
boil. Put in jar, and cover when cold.
LEMON SPONGE.
½ packet isinglass or gelatine
5 ozs. loaf sugar
¾ pint cold water
2 lemons
Whites of 2 eggs
Soak the isinglass or gelatine in ¾ pint cold water, then dissolve over
the fire with the rind of two lemons thinly pared, add the sugar and
the juice of 2 lemons. Boil all together 2 or 3 minutes; strain and let
it remain until nearly cold, and beginning to set, then add the white
of 2 eggs, well beaten, and whisk 10 minutes, when it will become the
consistence of sponge; put it lightly into a glass dish immediately,
leaving it in appearance as rocky as possible.
All fruit sponges are made in the same way. If syrups are used for
flavouring, use ¾ oz. gelatine.
EDMONDS’ CUSTARD, WITH STEWED PRUNES AND FIGS.
Barely cover fruit with water, and sugar to taste. Simmer till tender
(with no addition of water), then serve either hot or cold, with
custard.
(To make custard, see page 41).
PINEAPPLE JELLY.
1 tin pineapple chunks
2 packets White’s jelly crystals
Cut up pineapple into small dice, dividing fruit and juice into two
jelly moulds; make jellies separately, using little less water than
directed, then pour into moulds.
FIG AND BANANA SALAD.
Slice in equal quantities some nice bananas and freshly preserved figs,
sprinkle castor sugar over each layer, add lemon juice if desired,
place in glass dish, and cover with whipped cream flavoured with
vanilla, put in a cool place for 2 hours.
BAKED PEARS.
Pears
Golden syrup
Water
Wipe some large sound pears, arrange them in an enamel baking dish with
stalk ends upwards, pour a little water over them, and enough golden
syrup to sweeten (say one tablespoonful to every three pears). Bake in
a slow oven 2 hours or more. If baked slowly they will be juicy, tender
and sweet, baste them frequently with the syrup and water, if oven is
too hot cover with oven shelf. Serve with cream or custard.
TOMATO AND MACARONI.
¼ lb. macaroni
Tomatoes, onion, butter
Pepper and salt
Break up macaroni and boil in plenty of water slightly salted, boil one
onion in the same water, strain and put a layer in a buttered pie dish,
put next a layer of sliced tomato and the boiled onion, another layer
of macaroni, and so on with pepper and salt on each layer till dish is
full; have tomato on top layer, sprinkle bread crumbs over, and some
little pieces of butter. Bake till tomatoes are cooked about one hour.
TOMATO SOUP.
2 lbs. tomatoes
1 oz. butter
2 ozs. sago
1 large onion
1 quart stock
Pepper and salt
Slice the tomatoes and onion, and boil in stock until tender, strain
through a colander, and return to the saucepan, then add butter, sago,
and seasoning; boil till sago is cooked.
WHITE SAUCE.
Boil 1 pint of rich milk. Stir into it 1 tablespoonful of flour,
previously made smooth in a little milk. To this add salt (and, if
preferred, 1 teaspoonful of olive oil). Serve hot. For parsley sauce,
just add before serving half teaspoonful of finely-chopped parsley.
TOMATO SAUCE (No. 1).
12 lbs. tomatoes
2 lbs. onions
2 ozs. garlic (chopped fine)
1 oz. ground ginger
½ oz. cloves
4 ozs. salt
½ oz. cayenne pepper
Place spices in a bag, and boil with rest of ingredients 2 hours
(occasionally squeeze the spice bag), then beat through a sieve or
colander till nothing but skin and seed remains. When cool, add a quart
of best malt vinegar, half a lb. brown sugar, boil again until it is as
thick as cream. Bottle and cork when cold. Always put sauce in small
bottles if convenient, it keeps better, and seal top of same.
TOMATO SAUCE (No. 2).
12 lbs. tomatoes
2 lb. cooking apples
1 lb. onions
¾ lb. sugar
¼ lb. salt
2 ozs. each of allspice and garlic
¼ oz. each of chillies, mace and cloves
1 quart best English malt vinegar
Wipe and break the tomatoes, cut up garlic, apples, and onions. Boil
all together with rest of ingredients 3 to 4 hours. Strain and bottle.
APPLE SAUCE.
Pare and core six large apples, cut up, and stew half hour with small
cup of water, then add small cup sugar, mash together with a wooden
stirrer.
EASY BREAKFAST OR TEA DISH.
Stew gently some tomatoes with a little butter, pepper and salt, when
soft mash with a fork, and add to them a well-beaten egg until they
thicken. Serve on hot buttered toast.
SALAD DRESSING.
½ teaspoonful mustard
Pinch of salt
Little pepper
2 heaped dessertspoonfuls sugar
Yolks of 2 hard-boiled eggs
Mix all together, add sufficient milk (breakfastcup), then vinegar,
stirring it until it thickens.
APPLE CHUTNEY.
4 lbs. green apples
2 lbs. onions
2 lbs. brown sugar
½ lb. raisins
2 teaspoonfuls salt
1 teaspoonful cayenne pepper
1 teaspoonful ground cloves
1 oz. garlic
Chop ingredients up fine (or put all through a mincer, except apples,
salt, pepper, and cloves). Cut apples as for stewing, put all into pot,
cover with vinegar, boil slowly 4 or 5 hours.
TOMATO SAUSAGE.
2 lbs. mutton, fat and lean (or any cold meat)
1 lb. tomatoes
¾ oz. black pepper
1 oz. salt, and little grated nutmeg
Put meat through fine mincer, mash the tomatoes, and rub through a
sieve, removing skins. Mix meat and tomatoes together, add beaten egg
to bind mixture, form into cakes, roll in flour, egg, and bread crumbs,
and fry in boiling fat.
VEGETARIAN ROAST.
Bread
Peanuts
Milk, seasoning
1 onion
Brown some crusts of bread in the oven, shell peanuts and put them
through the mincer, putting the bread through the mincer afterwards.
Take a cup of the bread crumbs, pour on them a little milk, just enough
to moisten, but not to make them too soft.
Mix with them half a cup of the ground peanuts, salt, and a little
powdered herb, either sage or thyme, and one minced onion, put all into
a buttered pie dish, and bake slowly till nicely browned. If it appears
to be getting too dry, a very little water may be put on top as it is
cooking, or a few pieces of butter on top makes a fine improvement.
SAVOURY OMELET.
4 eggs
1 tablespoon flour
Large breakfastcup milk
Parsley, onion, salt and pepper to taste
Beat eggs, mix flour smooth with a little of the milk, then add
remainder; stir into the eggs, add parsley, onion, pepper and salt; put
a small piece of butter or dripping in frying-pan, pour in the mixture,
and cook gradually. When brown underneath, cut in pieces, and turn.
HAM OR TONGUE OMELET,
Is made by adding about 2 tablespoonfuls of grated ham or tongue to the
egg mixture, before it is cooked, omitting parsley.
COOKING HINTS
Cakes should be baked as soon as they are mixed.
Raisins should always be stoned.
Candied peel should always be thinly sliced.
For nice pastry, always sift the flour.
For scones and rolls, always use a very quick oven.
For buns and small cakes, a moderate quick oven.
For large cakes, not quite so quick.
For sponge cakes, a moderate oven.
Test the oven before baking—don’t guess.
Before baking, have everything ready, and suitable fire.
Never slam the oven door when cooking, it spoils cakes,
pastry, and puddings.
Two breakfastcups of flour piled up equal 1 lb.
Wooden spoons are better than metal for all cooking.
Always rub butter or lard into the flour with the
fingers, not the palms of the hand.
Currants, sultanas, raisins, or sugar equal ½ lb. in
barely level breakfastcup.
Edmonds’ Baking Powder should always be mixed in dry
ingredients, unless otherwise mentioned.
One breakfastcup of milk equals ½-pint; 1 teacupful of
milk equals 1 gill.
A cake should rise before browning to its full height,
especially sponge cakes.
You can always guess amount of butter to use in cooking
by dividing the 1 lb. squares.
* * * * *
This book is published and edited by the manufacturers, with the hope
that it may prove of service to all who are in any way interested with
that very necessary and important branch of domesticity, cooking. If
this =COOKERY BOOK= serves the end already mentioned, it will in some
degree act as a return of thanks for the generous and whole hearted
support given to =EDMONDS’ “SURE TO RISE” BAKING POWDER= by the general
public.
WHEN EGGS ARE DEAR
Edmonds’ Egg Powder
Makes Eggs Unnecessary
CURRANT CAKES, SEED CAKES, ALL CAKES,
and Plum Puddings, too, can be made beautifully light by using
Edmonds’ Egg Powder
It is unwise to experiment with eggs—they’re generally more or less
doubtful and expensive. For a modest sixpence you can buy a tin of
EDMONDS’ EGG POWDER. It is always reliable and is a perfect substitute
for Eggs. Large Tins are cheapest.
Test it next time you bake—you will always use it.
YOUR GROCER HAS IT. ASK HIM FOR IT.
[Illustration]
* * * * *
Transcriber’s Notes:
Obvious punctuation errors repaired. As “breakfastcup” was used
overwhelmingly more often than “breakfast cup,” the eleven uses of the
spaced version were changed to conform to the 31.
Page 1, “Pubilshed” changed to “Published” (Published by)
Page 6, Yorkshire Tea Scones, “desertspoonful” changed to
“dessertspoonful” (1 dessertspoonful sugar)
Page 19, Apple Sandwich, “dessertspoon” changed to “dessertspoonful” to
match rest of usage (1 dessertspoonful cinnamon)
Page 19, Cornish Pasty neglects to mention that the pastry should be
folded over and closed before baking.
Page 32, “teasponful” changed to “teaspoonful” (1 teaspoonful Edmonds’
Baking)
Page 34, Ginger Cake, “dessertspoons” changed to “dessertspoonfuls” to
match rest of usage (2 dessertspoonfuls ground ginger)
Page 45, “stirer” changed to “stirrer” (with a wooden stirrer)
Page 47, “pea nuts” changed to “peanuts” (the oven, shell peanuts)
End of Project Gutenberg's The Sure to Rise Cookery Book, by T. J. Edmonds
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 49707 ***
The Sure to Rise Cookery Book - Is Especially Compiled, and Contains Useful, Everyday Recipes, also Cooking Hints
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Excerpt
[Transcriber's Note: Bold text is surrounded by =equal signs= and
italic text is surrounded by _underscores_.]
In which Baking Powder is used have been tested successfully
with . . . . .
As all Baking Powders are not made alike, we cannot vouch for good
cooking if other brands are used. . . .
Is Especially Compiled, and contains
_USEFUL EVERYDAY RECIPES_,
also, _COOKING HINTS_.
Published by
T. J. EDMONDS,
BAKING POWDER MANUFACTURER,
CHRISTCHURCH.
CHRISTCHURCH, N.Z.:...
Read the Full Text
— End of The Sure to Rise Cookery Book - Is Especially Compiled, and Contains Useful, Everyday Recipes, also Cooking Hints —
Book Information
- Title
- The Sure to Rise Cookery Book - Is Especially Compiled, and Contains Useful, Everyday Recipes, also Cooking Hints
- Author(s)
- T.J. Edmonds Ltd.
- Language
- English
- Type
- Text
- Release Date
- August 15, 2015
- Word Count
- 8,366 words
- Library of Congress Classification
- TX
- Bookshelves
- Browsing: Cooking & Drinking
- Rights
- Public domain in the USA.
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