Classic Cook Books
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page 61
is reduced to half a pint, take the fish out and lay them on a dish, cover them
to keep them hot, rub a spoonful of butter into one of flour, add a large
tea-spoonful of curry powder, thicken the gravy with it, shake it over the fire
a few minutes, and pour it over the fish; be careful to have the gravy smooth.
TO DRESS A COD'S HEAD AND SHOULDERS.
TAKE out the gills and the blood from the bone, wash the head very clean, rub
over it a little salt, then lay it on your fish plate; throw in the water a good
handful of salt, with a glass of vinegar, then put in the fish, and let it boil
gently half an hour; if it is a large one, three quarters; take it up very
carefully, strip the skin nicely off, set it before a brisk fire, dredge it all
over with flour, and baste it well with butter; when the froth begins to rise,
throw over it some very fine white bread crumbs; you must keep basting it all
the time to make it froth well; when it is a fine light brown, dish it up, and
garnish it with a lemon cut in slices, scraped horse-radish, barberries, a few
small fish fried and laid around it, or fried oysters--cut the roe and liver in
slices, and lay over it a little of the lobster out of the sauce in lumps, and
then serve it up.
TO MAKE SAUCE FOR THE COD'S HEAD.
TAKE a lobster, if it be alive, stick a skewer in the vent of the tail, (to keep
the water out,) throw a handful of salt in the water; when it boils, put in the
lobster, and boil it half an hour; if it has spawn on it,
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Classic Cook Books
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