LEFT-OVERS OF BEEF meat goes on the table in some households day after day in the same style, with the carver doing his best at each meal to leave it as sightly as possible. Its last appear ance is calculated to take away the appetite of an entire family. The careful housewife, whose aim is economy and .1. healthful, attractive table, on the second day studies the cold roast with a keen eye. It comes from the refrigerator on a clean plate, and with it a bowl of brown gravy to which has been added every drop of the meat juices left in the platter on which the roast was served. Probably for luncheon she plans cold meat, cut in neat slices from the choicest bits of the roast, rare slices and well done, to appeal to various tastes. The meat is not cut until al most ready to put on the table. It is nicely arranged on a small platter with 0. garnish of parsley, cress, or cubes of aspic. She does not reheat the gravy to serve on cold plates. Worcestershire, tomato, or some cold homemade sauce makes a more fitting accompaniment. Then she carves the roast and plans for future meals. The tough outside pieces are laid away to be chopped, the fat to be rendered down for drippings, the tender bits of meat to be deviled, used for pie, ragout, or warmed up in the gravy, while the bones and gristle go to the soup kettle. Not a morsel of the meat is wasted in such a kitchen, and the daintily served, ap petizing meals that follow the roast at intervals do not hint to the unin itiated of rechauff es.
To make warmed-up meats appetiz ing, there are various commodities which ought alwa,ys to occupy a place in the pantry. Have a small jar of onion butter, a bottle of caramel, a glass can filled with browned flour, jar of finely rolled bread crumbs, Worcestershire Sauce, celery salt, mace, bay leaves, a bottle of McIl henny's Tabasco Sauce, cayenne, cur ry, catsup, canned mushrooms, pap rika, kitchen bouquet, and horse radish. The secret of appetizing food is good flavoring, and a frequent varying of flavor has more to do with a tempting table than a large butcher bill.
Meat Minced with Poached Eggs. 0 cupfuls cold meat, 1 cupful gravy or stock, Pepper, Salt, 1 teaspoonful butter.
Chop a pint of meat coarsely, sea son well, heat in a cupful of left-over gravy or stock. Do not allow it to boil, merely to come to a simmer. Serve on diamonds of toast with a poached egg on top of each slice.
Bubble and Squeak.
4 cupfuls cold corned beef or beef left from a pot roast, 3 tablespoonfuls butter, 2 cupfuls cold boiled cabbage, Salt and pepper.
Cut the cold meat into small strips and saute them in a tablespoonful butter. Chop the cabbage and 2 ta blespoonfuls butter in an omelet pan. Pepper and salt it, then stir over the fire till it begins to brown. Arrange on a hot platter as a border and into the middle put the hot meat. Serve with boiled potatoes.
Grilled Slices with Creole Sauce.
Cut from roast beef 6 slices of rarest meat, broil for five minutes over a clear fire, put on a hot plate, and serve with a sauce made as fol lows: In a saucepan put 2 table spoonfuls butter, 2 tablespoonfuls chopped onion, and 1 tablespoonful chopped green pepper. Fry light brown, stirring constantly. Add 2 tablespoonfuls flour and stir to a paste; then put in a pint brown stock, 2 teaspoonfuls Worcestershire Sauce, a teaspoonful dry mustard, and 2 teaspoonfuls vinegar. Salt and pep per to taste. Cook over a slow fire, beating the sauce smooth. Add a teaspoonful chopped parsley and can mushrooms cut in halves. Let the sauce come to a boil, then pour over the grilled meat.
Deviled Beef.
Take slices of rare roast beef and spread with butter on each side, as if you were buttering bread. Over this scrape a mustard made by mixing a tablespoonful vinegar with 3 table spoonfuls mustard and a dash salt and pepper. Lay on a smoking-hot iron spider and fry till the slices be gin to curl over.
Mock Terrapin.