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GENUINE BOSTON CREAM CAKES
Cream filling:
1 qt. milk
4 tbs. flour, sifted
4 eggs, separated and beaten
5 heaping tablespoons sugar
Grated rind and juice of 1 lemon
Cakes:
1 pint flour, sifted
1/4 lb (1 stick) butter
1 qt milk
3/4 lb. flour
12 eggs, separated
Butter for greasing baking tins
1 egg to coat finished cakes
Take one quart of sweet new milk, from which take three
table-spoonfuls to moisten four tablespoonfuls of sifted flour, and
put the remainder on to boil; separate four eggs and beat them as
stiff as possible; add to the yolks five heaping table-spoonfuls of
pulverized loaf-sugar; when the milk is boiling hot, stir in first
the moistened flour, let it thicken but not boil, then stir the
whites and yolks together and beat them well, pour a little of the
boiled milk in the egg, stir it well, and then mix it in the hot
milk, let it boil three minutes, then add the grated rind and juice
of one lemon, and set it away to cool, then proceed to make the
paste [dough for the cakes]; take one pint of sifted flour and
one-fourth of a pound of butter, set it over hot water until it
melts, then add a quart of milk and stir in three-fourths of a pound
of flour, let it scald through; then let it become cold, beat all
the lumps out, separate and beat twelve eggs, stir them in the
paste, first the yolks and then the whites; butter twenty-four round
tins, fill them not quite half full; bake thoroughly; when cold,
open them a little with a knife and put in the cream; press the
edges together and wet them over with egg. These cakes must be used
the same day they are baked.
The Housekeeper's Encyclopedia by Mrs. E. F. Haskell, 1861
Comment: We freely confess this is not a recipe we have ever
actually tried to make, nor for that matter even seriously
considered it. Just reading the recipe--was it a matter of actual
law or merely custom that seems to have barred the use of the period
as a punctuation mark? This entire recipe, for two totally separate
items, the cakes and the filling, uses a mere two sentences, the
second of which is just advisory--is so exhausting that we have to
go lie down rather than reach for the flour, eggs and utensils.
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