PORK AND HAM LEFT-OVERS pork, in the estimation of some persons, is better than when it is hot. Serve it in neatly cut slices for tea or luncheon at the second meal, then take stock of the remains and look to the future. Roa4-pork bones make an excellent brown stock, almost as rich as that of roast beef. Trim the scraps from the bones and consign them to the soup kettle. Cut with a keen knife all the fat from the meat that is not to be served cold. This fat rendered down makes an ex cellent dripping to saute potatoes. Chop, and allow it to melt, strain, and set away in the refrigerator. The tender white meat of pork makes a salad which tastes very much like chicken. Sometimes if one has a few bits of chicken left over, they may be combined with the pork, cut in neat cubes, and the fraud can scarce ly be detected. Pork makes excellent croquettes or is good sliced and re heated in a cup of its brown gravy. it may be minced, enriched by a few spoonfuls of gravy, and poured on toast for a breakfast dish. Cold ham has a multitude of uses. A few scraps may be converted into a delicious sandwich or gives an excellent flavor to a salad omelet or egg dish. Even cold sausage has its uses, while a slice or tvvo of cold broiled bacon put through a meat chopper and added to croquette mixtures provides an agreeable seasoning.
Ham Souffle".
Take 2 cupfuls cold minced ham, add the white of 1 egg and beat till smooth. Then put in a dash of pap rika, 1 cupful whipped cream, and 2 whites of eggs beaten stiff. Pour into an oiled melon mold, bake, and serve with tomato sauce poured around it.
Ham Griddlecakes.
1 cupful minced hlm, 2 cupfuls stale bread crumbs, 2 eggs, Pepper, 1 cupful scalded milk.
Mix the ham and crumbs with the milk and well-beaten eggs. Drop by spoonfuls on d, hot buttered griddle.
Ham Balls.
Mince remains of lean ham, and mix with an equal quantity of mashed potatoes. Mold into small, flat cakes, roll in flour, and brown in a sf ider with slices of salt pork fried out.
Ham Toast.
2 cupfuls cold ham, 2 eggs, cupful cream, it teaspoonful mustard, Pepper.
Chop very fine the cold ham, add the well-beaten eggs, cream, a little pepper and mustard. Heat this mixture till almost at the boiling point, and spread on slices of but tered toast.
Shredded Ham.
I tablespoonful butter, 5 tablespoonfuls currant jelly, Dash cayenne, 1 cupful cold ham.
Cut the ham into narrow strips. Put the butter and currant jelly in a saucepan. As soon as they are melted.
add the cayenne and ham, and sim mer five minutes.
Ham Sandwiches.
2 cupfuls finely chopped ham, 1 cucumber pickle, 2 teaspoonfuls made mustard, 2 tablespoonfuls butter, i teaspoonful pepper.
Put the ham through a meat chop per, using the finest knife. Mix per fectly smooth with the butter and seasonings and spread between slices of bread from which the crusts have been cut.
Ham-and-Potato Pie.
1 cupful cream sauce, 2 cupfuls cold potatoes, cupfuls cold chopped ham, cupful dried bread crumbs.
Chop the ham coarsely and cut the potatoes into dice. Butter a vege. table dish, put in a layer of cold po tato, then a layer of ham, and pour over it cupful cream sauce. C,over with another layer of potato and ham. Pour in the remainder of the sauce, and cover with buttered crumbs. Bake twenty minutes.
Block Island Croquettes.
1 cupful minced ham, 1 cupful stale bread crumbs, 9 cupfuls chopped cold •pota toes, 1 tablespoonful butter, 1 egg.
Mix the ham, crumbs, and potatoes with the butter and egg, make into small balls, flour, egg, crumb, and fry in hot fat.
Pork Cutlets.
2 cupfuls chopped cold pork, 2 eggs, cupful cracker crumbs, 1 teaspoonful minced parsley, 1 teaspoonful minced onion, 1 tablespoonful cream, Pepper and salt.
Beat the eggs thoroughly, mix with the cream, stir in the chopped pork, cracker crumbs, onion, parsley, and seasoning. Form into cutlet-shaped croquettes, roll in flour, egg, and crumbs. At the small end of the cro quette stick in a few inches of maca roni. Fry in deep fat, and serve with tomato sauce.