Well folks,
another full chapter is complete!
It’s rather difficult to reflect upon what Jane thought directly, because Chapter 8 is the only one that does not benefit from a written introduction. It was obviously an important area for her though, as she really looks towards under-used ingredients and uses a variety of techniques, so it’s well worth having a look through yourself.
This was a
bit of an odds-and-ends one which was full of revelations for me because it
covered a large area of cookery even most chefs don’t bother with these days.
#272 Melted Butter
It’s rather difficult to reflect upon what Jane thought directly, because Chapter 8 is the only one that does not benefit from a written introduction. It was obviously an important area for her though, as she really looks towards under-used ingredients and uses a variety of techniques, so it’s well worth having a look through yourself.
#343 Oyster Stuffing
I – unsurprisingly
– split the chapter into the following sections:
8.1:
Stuffings (5 recipes)
8.2:
Sauces (19 recipes)
8.3:
Preserves (21 recipes)
Giving a
total of 35 recipes. Click on the hyperlinks to see my review of the individual
sections.
The chapter scored an overall mean of 7.6, the highest score
so far for a completed chapter, fuelled by three recipes receiving top marks
and a lack of total disasters. For those who care (and I know none of you do),
here’s a little bar chart showing the mean scores for the chapter as a whole
and as separate sections with standard deviation bars.
The five Stuffing
recipes are absolutely delicious, with #343
Oyster Stuffing being one of the
most delicious things I have ever made. Growing up in a Paxo household meant I
simply did not know how good a simple stuffing could be.
The Sauces
were diverse and delicious, the simplest – #306 Mint Sauce – being the best, but
there are other great recipes, such as #272
Melted Butter and #432
White Devil Sauce.
#109 Quince Comfits
There’s a
huge variety in the Preserves
section too, with Jane avoiding the obvious things like raspberry jam. Instead she
uses ingredients like cornel cherries, medlars and sorbs, so you can make
preserves you are very unlikely to find in any store or farmers’ market. There is
variety too in the types of preserves; jams, jellies, chutneys, sugars,
comfits, candies and liqueurs all make an appearance. #397
Herb Jelly is one of my
favourites, as is #46
Rich Orangeade, and I have never
found a better, or more simple, (#24) Seville
Orange Marmalade recipe.
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