Stewed Water Turtles, or Terrapins
Instructions
- 1
Select the largest, thickest and fattest, the females being the best; they should be alive when brought from market.
- 2
Wash and put them alive into boiling water, add a little salt, and boil them until thoroughly done, or from ten to fifteen minutes, after which take off the shell, extract the meat, and remove carefully the sand-bag and gall; also all the entrails; they are unfit to eat, and are no longer used in cooking terrapins for the best tables.
- 3
Cut the meat into pieces, and put it into a stewpan with its eggs, and sufficient fresh butter to stew it well.
- 4
Let it stew till quite hot throughout, keeping the pan carefully covered, that none of the flavor may escape, but shake it over the fire while stewing.
- 5
In another pan make a sauce of beaten yolk of egg, highly flavored with Madeira or sherry, and powdered nutmeg and mace, a gill of currant jelly, a pinch of cayenne pepper, and salt to taste, enriched with a large lump of fresh butter.
- 6
Stir this sauce well over the fire, and when it has almost come to a boil take it off.
- 7
Send the terrapins to the table hot in a covered dish, and the sauce separately in a sauce tureen, to be used by those who like it, and omitted by those who prefer the genuine flavor of the terrapins when simply stewed with butter.
- 8
This is now the usual mode of dressing terrapins in Maryland, Virginia, and many other parts of the South, and will be found superior to any other.
- 9
If there are no eggs in the terrapin, "egg balls" may be substituted. (See recipe.).