<h2>BUTTER, CHEESE, COFFEE, TEA, &c.</h2>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>Butter.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>It is of the first importance that every thing connected with milk
and
butter should be kept clean; if the milk acquires an unpleasant taste,
it communicates it to the butter. Tin pans are best to keep milk in,
and
they should be painted on the outside to keep them from rusting when
they are put in water.</p>
<p>In summer, milk should be kept as cool as possible; before it is
strained, the pans and strainer should be rinsed with cold water, and
the milk not covered until it is cold, as soon as the cream rises
sufficiently, it should be skimmed, and put in a large tin bucket with
a
lid that fits down tight, and stirred every day. Butter will be spoiled
by neglecting to stir the cream, a yellow scum will form on it, which
gives it an unpleasant taste. And if you leave a pan of milk till the
cream is covered with spots of mould, you had better throw it away than
put it in, as it will spoil the taste of a whole churning.</p>
<p>If you have no way of keeping your cream cool in hot weather, it
ought
to be churned twice a week, the earlier in the morning the better.
Always put cold water in your churn the night before you use it, and
change it in the morning just before you put in the cream. When the
butter is gathering, take off the lid of the churn to let the heated
air
escape, and move it gently, have your butter ladle and pan scalded and
cooled, take out the butter and work it till all the milk is out,
scrape
some lumps of salt, and work in, cover it up, and set away in a cool
place till the next morning, when work it again.</p>
<p>If you have neither an ice, or spring house, a box by the side of
the
pump, with a cover over it, is very convenient to put cream and butter
down the well, put them in tin kettles with covers to fit tight, and
fasten them to strong tarred ropes twenty feet long. The air of a well
will keep butter sweet for several weeks in the hottest weather. It is
best to have one kettle or basket to put the butter in that is used at
the table, it should be deep enough to hold five or six plates, each
covered with a saucer. It can be kept in this way as firm and sweet as
in an ice house. You can have a separate kettle to put a large lump of
butter in for seasoning vegetables. If you print butter for home use,
it
is not necessary to weigh it, make it out in little lumps that will
weigh about half a pound, scald the print and ladle, and put them in
cold water, as you print each lump, lay it on a dish.</p>
<p>In winter it is more difficult to have good butter, as much depends
on
the food of the cows, the milk should be kept in a cellar, where it
will
not freeze, if you have a safe to keep it in, it need not be covered.
Cream takes much longer to rise in winter, after it has stood two days,
to put it on the top of a moderately heated stove will assist it, when
it is hot, set it away to skim the next day, when the cream will be
thick and rich, and churns easier.</p>
<p>If the weather is very cold, and the cream has been chilled, have a
large pot of water over the fire, set in the bucket when it is near
boiling heat, and keep stirring till it is milk warm, have the churn
scalded and put it in, by churning steadily, it will come as quick as
in
summer, one good working answers very well for butter in winter, always
scald the churn before you put in the cream in cold weather.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>To put up Butter for Winter.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>Work it well, and salt it rather more than for table use, and pack
it
in stone pans or jars, with a thin cloth on the top, and salt on it
an inch thick, keep it in a cool place, and if it is sweet when made,
it will keep good till spring. It should be tied up with paper to
exclude the air.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>To Cure Butter that will keep for a Length of Time.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>Reduce separately to a fine powder two pounds of the best fine salt,
one
pound of loaf sugar and half a pound of saltpetre. Sift these
ingredients one above another, on a large sized sheet of paper, then
mix
them well together, keep this mixture covered up close in a nice jar,
and placed in a dry closet.</p>
<p>When your butter is worked and salted in the usual way, and ready to
put
in the jars, use one ounce of this composition to every pound of
butter,
work it well into the mass.</p>
<p>Butter cured in this way, (it is said) will keep good for several
years.
I have never kept it longer than from the fall until late in the
spring,
it was then very sweet and good.</p>
<p>It will not do to use for a month, because earlier, the salts will
not
be sufficiently blended with it. It should be kept in wooden vessels,
or
nice stone jars. Earthen-ware jars are not suitable for butter, as
during
the decomposition of the salts, they corrode the glazing; and the
butter
becomes rancid and unhealthy.</p>
<p>A friend of mine, and a lady of much experience, remarked on reading
the
above--"This is an admirable receipt, and by attention to its
directions, butter may be packed away with success even in the summer
months. Thus in cities during warm weather butter is often cheap, a
house-keeper may then purchase her winter supply.</p>
<p>"Select that which is sweetest and most firm, begin by putting a
layer
of the prints in the bottom of a stone pot, press the butter down
close, so that no cavities for the admission of air may remain, then
strew more of the mixture over it, proceed in this manner until the
vessel is filled, when put on the top a small muslin bag filled with
salt, and tie the jar up close. It is very important to keep the butter
in a cool place."</p>
<p>A great deal depends on the butter being well worked. Persons that
have
large dairies should always have a machine to work it. A large churning
may be more effectually cleared of the butter-milk in a few minutes,
than in the old way in an hour. By doing it quickly, it does not get
soft and oily in hot weather.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>A Pickle for Butter.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>To three gallons of water, add four and a half pounds of good brown
sugar, one and a half ounces of saltpetre, one ounce of salaeratus; put
them into an iron pot, and let them come to a boil; take off the scum;
when cold it is ready for use; the butter should be salted in the usual
way, and well worked; then made into rolls of two or three pounds each;
have little bags of coarse muslin, tie each roll in a bag and put them
in a large stone jar or clean firkin; when the pickle is entirely cold,
pour it over, and put a plate on the top, with a weight on it to keep
the butter under; tie it up close and keep it in a cold place; when a
roll is wanted, take it out of the bag, and slice it off for table use.
It should be put on little plates, and each covered with a saucer, to
exclude the air. If the butter is good when put up in the fall, it will
keep till you can get grass butter, in the spring. The jars for this
purpose should not have been previously used for pickles.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>Cheese.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>Persons living in the country sometimes have more milk than they can
use, of which cheese may be made. Put four gallons of new milk in a
clean tub that is kept for the purpose; skim your night's milk, and put
two gallons of it over the fire; when it is near boiling, put it in the
tub with the new milk, and the rest of the night's milk; it should be
rather more than milk warm, if it is too warm the cheese will have a
strong taste. The day before you make cheese, put a piece of rennet
three inches square in a tea-cup of water, and stir it in the milk;
cover the tub and let it stand in a warm place; when the curd begins to
form, cut it in squares with a long wooden knife, and spread a thin
towel over it. When the whey comes through the cloth, you can dip it
off
with a saucer, then put a thin towel in the cheese vat, put in the
curd,
spread the cloth over the top, put on the lid, and press it moderately
about half an hour; then put it back in the tub and salt it to your
taste; mix it well, and if you want it very rich put in a quarter of a
pound of butter; it is always better to skim the night's milk and put
in
butter, as the cream is apt to press out.</p>
<p>Have a clean cloth in the vat, put in the curd, close it over and
put on
the cover; if you have no cheese press, a heavy stone will answer the
purpose; press it very gently at first, to keep the richness from
running out. The next morning draw it out by the cloth, wash and wipe
the vat, put in a clean cloth, and turn in the cheese upside down; do
this morning and evening for two days; when you take out the cheese,
and
put it on a clean board; set it where the mice and flies will not get
at
it; rub it every morning with a little butter, and turn it three times
a
day; dust it over with cayenne pepper if you cannot keep it from the
flies, and if it should crack, plaster on a piece of white paper with
butter; it is fit for use in two weeks.</p>
<p>Cheese made in this way has a rich, mild taste, and most persons are
fond of it. If you get eight gallons of milk a day, you may make cheese
twice a week, and still have butter for the family. You should keep
four
thin cloths on purpose for cheese.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>Pennsylvania Cream Cheese.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>The cheese called by this name is not in reality made of cream. Take
three gallons of milk, warm from the cow, and strain it into a tub,
have
a piece of rennet two inches square, soaked in half a pint of water for
several hours, drain off the water, and stir it in; when it is
sufficiently turned, cut the curd, spread a thin linen cloth over the
top, and as the whey rises, dip it off with a saucer, put the curd as
whole as possible into a cheese-hoop about the size of a dinner plate,
first spreading a wet cloth inside, then fold the cloth smoothly over
the top, put a weight on the top heavy enough to make the whey drain
out
gradually. In six or seven hours it will be ready to take out of the
press, when rub it over with fine salt, set it in a dry dark place,
change it from one plate to another twice a day, and it will be fit for
use in less than a week.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>To Prepare Rennet for making Whey or Cheese.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>When the rennet is taken from the calf, wash it, lay it on a plate
well
covered with salt, put more on in two days, keep it in a cold place, in
three or four days it will do to stretch on sticks, hang it up in a dry
cool place, with as much salt as will stick to it, when quite dry, put
it in a paper bag and hang it up, a piece two inches square soaked in
two table-spoonsful of water will make a cold custard, the same piece
salted and dried will do several times.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>Cottage Cheese or Smearcase.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>The best plan of making this dish, is to set the tin pan of clabber
on
a hot stove, or in a pot of water that is boiling over the fire. When
the whey has risen sufficiently, pour it through a colander, and put
the curd or cheese away in a cold place, and just before going to
table, season it with salt and pepper to your taste, and pour some
sweet cream over it.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>Roasting Coffee.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>Pick out the stones and black grains from the coffee, and if it is
green, let it dry in an oven, or on a stove, then roast it till it is a
light-brown, be careful that it does not burn, as a few burnt grains
will spoil the flavor of the whole.</p>
<p>White coffee need not be dried before roasting, and will do in less
time. Two pounds is a good quantity to roast for a small family. The
whites of one or two eggs, well beaten, and stirred in the coffee when
half cold, and well mixed through it, are sufficient to clear two
pounds, and is the most economical way of using eggs. It will answer
either for summer or winter. Some persons save egg shells for clearing
coffee. Many persons use coffee roasters,--but some old experienced
housekeepers think that the fine flavor flies off more than when done
in
a dutch-oven, and constantly stirred.</p>
<p>If you are careful, it can be done very well in the dripping-pan of
a
stove. Let the coffee get quite cold, and put it away either in a
canister or tight box, and keep it in a dry place. Coffee may be
roasted
in a dripping-pan in a brick oven. After the bread is taken out, there
will be heat sufficient, put about two pounds in a pan, stir it a few
times--it will roast gradually, and if not sufficiently brown, finish
in
a stove or before the fire. If you have a large family, by using
several
pans, six pounds of coffee can thus be roasted, and but little time
spent on it.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>Boiling Coffee.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>A large tea-cupful of unground coffee will be sufficient for six
persons, unless they take it very strong, (which is injurious to
health,) grind it, and put it in the tin pot, with half a tea-cup of
cold water, and the white of half an egg; shake it till it is mixed,
then pour boiling water on it, and let it stand close to the fire, and
just come to a boil, stir it, and do not let it boil over, let it keep
at boiling heat five or ten minutes; then take it from the fire, and
put
in half a tea-cup of water to settle it, let it stand five minutes, and
pour it off,--if you wish it particularly nice, strain it through a
thin
linen cloth, kept for the purpose, keep it by the fire till it goes to
table. If you boil coffee too long, the aromatic flavor flies off.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>Tea, &c.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>Always be sure that the kettle is boiling when you make tea, or the
flavor will not be so good, scald the pot, and allow a tea-spoonful for
each person. Let green tea draw by the fire from two to five minutes.
Black tea should draw ten minutes, and is much more suitable for
delicate persons than green. Persons with weak nerves should never
drink
strong tea and coffee. I have known instances of persons being
afflicted
with violent attacks of nervous head-ache, that were cured by giving up
the use of tea and coffee altogether, and their general health was also
improved by it. Before pouring out tea, it should be stirred with a
spoon that the strength of each cup may be alike.</p>
<p>Milk is the best drink for children, but if that cannot be had,
sweetened water, with a little milk, will do.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<h3>A New Mode of Preparing Chocolate.</h3>
<p></p>
<p>Have a pound of chocolate pulverized, and put in a jar, with the
same
quantity of rice flour, and an ounce of arrow-root, put on coals a
quart of milk, when it boils, stir in a heaped table-spoonful of the
above preparation, (dissolved in a tea-cup of water,) keep stirring it
until it boils again, when pour it out, drink it with sugar and cream
to your taste.</p>
<p>This is called by some "Rac-a-haut" chocolate, and is very nice for
delicate persons, as well as those in health.</p>
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