The Boston cooking-school cook book by Fannie Merritt Farmer
7. =By Evaporation.= There are examples where considerable moisture
remains, though much is driven off. Example: beef extract.
Chapters
- Chapter 1 Ch.1
- CHAPTER I Ch.2
- 1. Proteid (nitrogenous or albuminous) Ch.3
- 3. Fats and oils Ch.4
- 2. Water Ch.5
- CHAPTER II Ch.6
- 2. Use same test for uncooked mixtures, allowing one minute for bread to Ch.7
- 1. =By Freezing.= Foods which spoil readily are frozen for Ch.8
- 2. =By Refrigeration.= Foods so preserved are kept in cold storage. The Ch.9
- 3. =By Canning.= Which is preserving in air-tight glass jars, or tin Ch.10
- 5. =By Exclusion of Air.= Foods are preserved by exclusion of air in Ch.11
- 6. =By Drying.= Drying consists in evaporation of nearly all moisture, Ch.12
- 7. =By Evaporation.= There are examples where considerable moisture Ch.13
- 8. =By Salting.= There are two kinds of salting,—dry, and corning or Ch.14
- 9. =By Smoking.= Some foods, after being salted, are hung in a closed Ch.15
- 10. =By Pickling.= Vinegar, to which salt is added, and sometimes sugar Ch.16
- 12. =By Antiseptics.= The least wholesome way is by the use of Ch.17
- CHAPTER III Ch.18
- CHAPTER IV Ch.19
- CHAPTER V Ch.20
- CHAPTER VI Ch.21
- CHAPTER VII Ch.22
- CHAPTER VIII Ch.23
- CHAPTER IX Ch.24
- CHAPTER X Ch.25
- CHAPTER XI Ch.26
- CHAPTER XII Ch.27
- CHAPTER XIII Ch.28
- CHAPTER XIV Ch.29
- CHAPTER XV Ch.30
- CHAPTER XVI Ch.31
- CHAPTER XVII Ch.32
- CHAPTER XVIII Ch.33
- CHAPTER XIX Ch.34
- CHAPTER XX Ch.35
- CHAPTER XXI Ch.36
- CHAPTER XXII Ch.37
- CHAPTER XXIII Ch.38
- CHAPTER XXIV Ch.39
- CHAPTER XXV Ch.40
- CHAPTER XXVI Ch.41
- CHAPTER XXVII Ch.42
- CHAPTER XXVIII Ch.43
- CHAPTER XXIX Ch.44
- CHAPTER XXX Ch.45
- CHAPTER XXXI Ch.46
- CHAPTER XXXII Ch.47
- CHAPTER XXXIII Ch.48
- CHAPTER XXXIV Ch.49
- CHAPTER XXXV Ch.50
- CHAPTER XXXVI Ch.51
- 1. Pick over strawberries, place in colander, pour over cold water, Ch.52
- 2. Pick over selected strawberries, place in colander, pour over cold Ch.53
- 1. Wipe orange and cut in halves crosswise. Place one-half on a fruit Ch.54
- 2. Peel an orange and remove as much of the white portion as possible. Ch.55
- 3. Remove peel from an orange in such a way that there remains a Ch.56
- CHAPTER XXXVII Ch.57
- CHAPTER XXXVIII Ch.58
- 7. Superscripts are denoted by a caret before a single superscript Ch.59
- 8. Subscripts are denoted by an underscore before a series of Ch.60