Cookbooks - Volume
2
Volume 2 deals with such
essentials of diet as the dairy products--milk, butter,
and cheese--the protein food, eggs, and the
energy-producing nutrients, vegetables.
In Milk, Butter, and Cheese, Parts 1 and 2, are explained
the place that milk occupies in the diet, its composition,
grades, and the dishes for which it is used.
The purchase, care, and use of butter and butter
substitutes; and the characteristics, care, and varieties of
both domestic and imported cheeses, as well as a number of
excellent recipes for cheese dishes.
A luncheon menu, in which a cheese dish is substituted for
meat, is of interest in this connection, for it shows you,
early in your studies, not only how to combine dishes to
produce a balanced meal, but also how to make up a menu in
which meat is not needed.
In Eggs, we discussed the nutritive value of
eggs, the ways in which to select, preserve, cook, and serve
them, and how to utilize left-over eggs.
So many uses have eggs in the diet and so
nourishing is this food that too much attention cannot be paid
to its preparation.
In this lesson, also, is given a breakfast menu to afford
practice in preparing several simple dishes usually served in
this meal. In Vegetables, Parts 1 and 2, every variety of
vegetable is discussed as to food value, preparation, place in
the meal, and proper methods of serving.
With such a fund of knowledge, you will be well equipped to
give pleasing variety to your meals. In addition to the
instruction in these matters, there are many recipes showing
certain steps as well as the finished result.
With such detailed information, it is our desire that as
many of the recipes as possible be tried, for it is only
through constant practice that the rules and principles of
cooking will become thoroughly instilled in the mind.
Nothing is of more value to the aspiring cook than such a
knowledge of food and its preparation, for, as every one knows,
proper diet is the chief requisite of good health.
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