111 egg recipes
Any single food containing all the elements necessary to supply the
requirements of the body is called a complete or typical food. Milk
and eggs are frequently so called, because they sustain the young
animals of their kind during a period of rapid growth. Nevertheless,
neither of these foods forms a perfect diet for the human adult. Both
are highly nutritious, but incomplete.
Served with bread or rice, they form an admirable meal and one that is
nutritious and easily digested. The white of eggs, almost pure
albumin, is nutritious, and, when cooked in water at 170 degrees
Fahrenheit, requires less time for perfect digestion than a raw egg.
The white of a hard-boiled egg is tough and quite insoluble. The yolk,
however, if the boiling has been done carefully for twenty minutes, is
mealy and easily digested. Fried eggs, no matter what fat is used, are
hard, tough and insoluble. The yolk of an egg cooks at a lower
temperature than the white, and for this reason an egg should not be
boiled unless the yolk alone is to be used.
Ten eggs are supposed to weigh a pound, and, unless they are unusually
large or small, this is quite correct.
To Preserve Eggs Egging and Crumbing Shirred Eggs
Mexicana On a Plate de Lesseps
Meyerbeer a la Reine au Miroir
a la Paysanne a la Trinidad Rossini
Baked in Tomato Sauce a la Martin a la Valenciennes
Fillets a la Suisse with Nut-Brown Butter
Timbales Coquelicot Suzette
en Cocotte Steamed in the Shell Birds Nests
Eggs en Panade Egg Pudding a la Bonne Femme
To Poach Eggs Eggs Mirabeau Norwegian
Prescourt Courtland Louisiana
Richmond Hungarian Nova Scotia
Lakme Malikoff Virginia
Japanese a la Windsor Buckingham
Poached on Fried Tomatoes a la Finnois a la Gretna
a lImperatrice with Chestnuts a la Regence
a la Livingstone Mornay Zanzibar
Monte Bello a la Bourbon Bernaise, a la Rorer
Benedict To Hard-boil Creole
Curried Beauregard Lafayette
Jefferson Washington au Gratin
Deviled a la Tripe a lAurore