To Dress a Turtle.

Fill a  boiler  or kettle, with a quantity of  water  sufficient to scald the callapach and Callapee, the fins, &c. and about 9 o'clock hang up your  Turtle  by the hind fins, cut off the head and save the blood, take a sharp pointed knife and seperate the callapach from the callapee, or the back from the belly part, down to the shoulders, so as to come to the entrails which take out, and clean them, as you would those of any other animal, and throw them into a tub of clean  water,  taking great care not to break the gall, but to cut it off from the  liver  and throw it away, then seperate each distinctly and put the  guts  in another vessel, open them with a small pen-knife end to end, wash them clean, and draw them through a woolen cloth, in  warm water,  to clear away the slime and then put them in clean  cold water  till they are used with the other parts of the entrails, which must be cut up small to be mixed in the  baking dishes  with the  meat;  this done, separate the back and belly pieces, entirely cutting away the fore fins by the upper joint, which scald; peal off the loose skin and cut them into small pieces, laying them by themselves, either in another vessel, or on the table, ready to be seasoned; then cut off the  meat  from the belly part, and clean the back from the  lungs,   kidneys,  &c. and that  meat  cut into pieces as small as a walnut, laying it likewise by itself; after this you are to scald the back and belly pieces, pulling off the shell from the back, and the yellow skin from the belly, when all will be white and clean, and with the kitchen  cleaver  cut those up likewise into pieces about the bigness or breadth of a card; put those pieces into clean cold  water,  wash them and place them in a heap on the table, so that each part may lay by itself; the  meat  being thus prepared and laid seperate for seasoning; mix two thirds part of  salt  or rather more, and one third part of  cayenne pepper,   black pepper,  and a  nutmeg,  and mace  pounded fine, and mixt altogether; the quantity to be proportioned to the size of the  Turtle,  so that in each dish there may be about three spoonfuls of  seasoning  to evey twelve pound of  meat;  your  meat  being thus seasoned, get some  sweet herbs,  such as  thyme,   savory,  &c. let them be dryed and rub'd fine, and having provived some deep dishes to bake it in, which should be of the common brown ware, put in the coarsest part of the  meat,  put a quarter pound of  butter  at the bottom of each dish, and then put some of each of the several parcels of  meat,  so that the dishes may be all alike and have equal portions of the different parts of the  Turtle,  and between each laying of  meat  strew a little of the mixture of  sweet herbs,  fill your dishes within an inch an half, or two inches of the top; boil the  blood of the Turtle,  and put into it, then lay on  forcemeat balls made of veal,  highly seasoned with the same  seasoning  as the  Turtle;  put in each dish a gill of  Madeira Wine,  and as much  water  as it will conveniently hold, then break over it five or six  eggs  to keep the  meat  from scorching at the top, and over that shake a handful of shread  parsley,  to make it look green, when done put your dishes into an oven made hot enough to bake bread, and in an hour and half, or two hours (according to the size of the dishes) it will be sufficiently done. 

American Cookery
Amelia Simmons
1798



Northampton
Massachusetts

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