Science in the Kitchen. by Mrs. E. E. Kellogg
page 106 of 1113 (09%)
page 106 of 1113 (09%)
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Four cupfuls of sifted flour weigh one pound. One pint of oatmeal, cracked wheat, or other coarse grains, weighs about one pound. One pint of liquid weighs one pound. One pint of meat chopped and packed solid weighs one pound. Seven heaping tablespoonfuls of sugar = one cupful. Five heaping tablespoonfuls of flour = one cupful. Two cupfuls of liquid or dry material = one pint Four cupfuls of liquid or dry material = one quart. MIXING MATERIALS.--In the compounding of recipes, various modes are employed for mingling together the different ingredients, chief of which are _stirring_, _beating_, and _kneading_. By _stirring_ is meant a continuous motion round and round with a spoon, without lifting it from the mixture, except to scrape occasionally from the sides of the dish any portion of the material that may cling to it. It is not necessary that the stirring should be all in one direction, as many cooks suppose. The object of the stirring is to thoroughly blend the ingredients, and this may be accomplished as well by stirring--in one direction as in another. |
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