Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III. METHODS OF PKEPAKING FOOD. In the preparation of food of yore, the palate has no doubt been. the great guide. Still, a blind instinct seems also to have been at work. The cook has been led to prepare vegetables with meat; to unite grain and milk; to boil the highly nitrogenised beans with fat bacon; or peas and pork. Experience at work through countless ages has no doubt instructed Man, albeit darkly, what combinations of foods are requisite for health under certain conditions. Sauer-kraut was a wise provision of vegetable food during the long winter, when salted foods and cereals formed the chief dietary of the people. A Lenten fast of vegetables was a useful hygienic measure for clearing away the maladies incidental to such a dietary; as useful as vegetables to scurvy-stricken crews before the days of lime-juice. No wonder people long ago spoke of the anti-scorbutic properties of certain vegetables. Before proceeding with the preparation of foods, it may be well to give a Letheby Table of the comparative value of various edible articles as tissue-food and fuel-food, without any pledge as to the absolute accuracy of it. It is certainly useful, as giving a good broad idea of the value of various comestibles: CARBON. NITROGEN. Fresh Butter, 64.56 Dry Bacon 59.87 .95 Dripping, 54.56 Green Bacon, 54.26 .76 Lard, 48.19 Suet, 47.10 Salt Butter 45.85 Fat Pork 41.13 1.06 Cocoa 39.34 1.40 Cheddar Cheese 33.44 3.06 Indian Meal, 30.16 1.20 Sugar 29.55 Oatmeal, 28.31 1.36 Rice 27.32 .68 Seconds Flour 27.00 1.16 Split Peas 26.99 2.48 CARBON. NITROGEN. Eye Meal, 26.93 .86 Pearl Barley 26.60 .91 Barley Meal, 25.63 .68 Treacle, 23.95 Bakers' Bread 19.75 .88 Skim Cheese 19.45 4.83 Mutton...