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| Women's Institute Recipes : Egg
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EGG SOUFFLÉ. If a delicate dish for children or invalids is
desired, egg soufflé will answer the purpose very well. This dish is
light in character, but it is high in protein and to most persons is
very delightful. It is more attractive if baked in individual baking
dishes, but it may be baked in a large baking dish and served directly
from the dish. To improve the flavor of egg soufflé and make it a more
appetizing dish, tomato sauce is often served with it.
EGG SOUFFLÉ
(Sufficient to Serve Eight)
- 1 c. milk
- 2 Tb. fat
- 2 Tb. flour
- 1/2 tsp. salt
- 1 Tb. chopped parsley
- 4 eggs
Heat the milk. Brown the fat in a saucepan, add to it the flour, salt,
and parsley, and mix well. Pour in the hot milk, stir constantly until
the sauce thickens, and then remove from the fire. Separate the eggs and
add the well-beaten yolks to the sauce, stirring rapidly so that the egg
will not curd. Beat the whites stiff and fold them carefully into the
sauce. Turn into well-greased individual baking dishes until they are
about two-thirds full, place in a shallow pan of hot water, and bake
until firm when touched with the finger. Serve at once in the dishes in
which they are baked, because they shrink when they are allowed to cool.
TOMATO SAUCE
- 1 1/2 c. strained stewed tomatos
- 2 Tb. fat
- 1/2 tsp. salt
- 1/8 tsp. pepper
- 2 Tb. flour
Force enough stewed tomatos through a sieve to make 1 1/2 cupfuls of
strained tomato. Heat the strained tomato and to it add the fat, salt,
and pepper. Moisten the flour with a little cold water and add it to the
hot tomato. Cook for 5 minutes. Serve over the soufflé.
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