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RICE PUDDING
1/2 c. rice
1 c. water
1 qt. milk
5-6 peach leaves
Butter
Salt
3-4 eggs
1/2 c. sugar
Ground nutmeg
Boil a teacupful of rice in two teacups of water. When it has
swelled so as to absorb all the water, add a quart of milk and five
or six peach leaves and boil it until the rice is perfectly soft.
Take it from the fire, remove the peach leaves, add a small piece of
butter, a little salt, and three or four eggs, beaten with a teacup
of sugar. Put it into a buttered dish, grate nutmeg over the top,
and bake three quarters of an hour. Most people prefer this pudding
cold.
From The Young Housekeeper's Friend by Mrs. [M. H.] Cornelius,
Boston, 1863
Comment: Rosewater is unusual today, fried parsley as a garnish is
obscure, but if you want an ingredient which is completely unknown
to the 21st century cook, the peach leaf surely qualifies. Ideally
this should be a leaf of the early spring, just recently hatched
from the bud, but apparently they were considered suitable for use
at any time of year as long as they were still green. Why the leaf
of the peach tree, and not the apple, plum or cherry? Beats the heck
out of us, as we have been trying to grow peach trees for six years
now and have nothing but dried up woody corpses to show for our
efforts. We had in mind more the fruit of the tree than its leaves
(peaches as sold in stores are a shame and a disgrace to the name)
but in either case our efforts have come to naught.
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