Eel
Soup
12 small eel
1 1/2 lb chicken
1 bunch parsley
Pepper to taste
1 head of celery
1 Tbs celery seed
1 qt rich milk
1/4 lb butter
Flour
3 egg yolks, beaten
The small white
Eels are the best. Having cut off their heads, skin the fish, and
clean them, and cut them in three. To twelve small eel allow a pound
and a half of chicken. Cut the chicken into small pieces, or slice
it very thin, and scald it two or three times in boiling water,
lest it be too salty.
Chop together
a bunch of parsley and some sweet marjoram stripped from the stalks.
Put these ingredients into a soup kettle and season them with pepper:
the chicken will make it salty enough.
Add a head of
celery cut small, or a large table-spoonful of celery seed tied
up in a bit of clear muslin to prevent its dispersing. Put in two
quarts of water, cover the kettle, and let it boil slowly till every
thing is sufficiently done, and the eel and chicken are quite tender.
Skim it frequently.
Boil in another
vessel a quart of rich milk, in which you have melted a quarter
of a pound of butter divided into small bits and rolled in flour.
Pour it hot to the soup, and stir in at the last the beaten yolks
of four eggs.
Give it another
boil, just to take off the rawness of the eggs, and then put it
into a tureen, taking out the bag of celery seed before you send
the soup to table, and adding some toasted bread cut into small
squares.
In making toast
for soap, cut the bread thick, and pare off all the crust.