Page:Marion Harland's Complete Cook Book.djvu/21
A calf's head, scraped free of hair and well-cleaned, may be bought in country markets for fifty cents, and can be made into a dainty dish fit for John and John's unexpected friend.
Sweetbreads are an acknowledged delicacy, and liver, properly cooked, will be approved by all.
By the way, lamb's liver costs less than calf's liver, and is more toothsome.
In choosing poultry, slip your bare forefinger under the wing where it joins the body and press hard with the nail. If the skin breaks easily, the fowl is probably young. Then try the tip of the breast-bone. If the cartilage gives readily and springs back slowly, the signs are still favorable. Next, look for hairs on the body and hard horny scales on the legs; for scrawny necks and a livid hue in the flesh—all unfavorable indications. Tough fowls should be cheaper far than tender. If your market-man calls them frankly "fowls," commend his honesty, and if you contemplate a fricassee or chicken pie, reward his integrity by a purchase. Chickens may be "fowls," yet good,—that is, nourishing and amenable to judicious "tendering."
A veteran housewife, with a reputation to support, tells me she has but one method of securing really excellent meats for her table: "When a market-man sells me tough flesh, or superannuated poultry, or ancient fish, I give him warning. At the second offense, I transfer my custom to another dealer. The rule works well!"
It is especially useful when one would be certain of getting fresh fish. Now that fish and oysters are bedded in ice until the wiliest connoisseur may be mistaken in their age, it behooves the housemother to know, first of all, that she is dealing with a man with a conscience as free from reproach as she would have her halibut, salmon and oysters.