To Dress the Ptarmigan

The Book of Household Management · Beeton, Mrs. (Isabella Mary) · 1861
Source
The Book of Household Management
Time
Cook: 30 min Total: 30 min
Yield
2.0 dishes
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (7)
for serving
to accompany
Instructions (6)
  1. Pluck, draw, and truss the ptarmigan in the same manner as grouse, No. 1025.
  2. Roast them before a brisk fire.
  3. Flour and froth them nicely.
  4. Serve on buttered toast, with a tureen of brown gravy.
  5. Bread sauce may be sent to table with them, if liked.
  6. Fried bread crumbs may be substituted for the toasted bread.
Original Text
TO DRESS THE PTARMIGAN. 1045. INGREDIENTS.—2 or 3 birds; butter, flour, fried bread crumbs. Mode.—The ptarmigan, or white grouse, when young and tender, are exceedingly fine eating, and should be kept as long as possible, to be good. Pluck, draw, and truss them in the same manner as grouse, No. 1025, and roast them before a brisk fire. Flour and froth them nicely, and serve on buttered toast, with a tureen of brown gravy. Bread sauce, when liked, may be sent to table with them, and fried bread crumbs substituted for the toasted bread. Time.—About 1/2 hour. Sufficient,—2 for a dish. Seasonable from the beginning of February to the end of April. THE PTARMIGAN, OR WHITE GROUSE.—This bird is nearly the same size as red grouse, and is fond of lofty situations, where it braves the severest weather, and is found in most parts of Europe, as well as in Greenland. At Hudson's Bay they appear in such multitudes that so many as sixty or seventy are frequently taken at once in a net. As they are as tame as chickens, this is done without difficulty. Buffon says that the Ptarmigan avoids the solar heat, and prefers the frosts of the summits of the mountains; for, as the snow melts on the sides of the mountains, it ascends till it gains the top, where it makes a hole, and burrows in the snow. In winter, it flies in flocks, and feeds on the wild vegetation of the hills, which imparts to its flesh a bitter, but not altogether an unpalatable taste. It is dark-coloured, and has something of the flavour of the hare, and is greatly relished, and much sought after by some sportsmen. [Illustration: THE PTARMIGAN.]
Notes