Everything in the make-up of a salad should be of the freshest
material, the vegetables crisp and fresh, the oil or butter the very
best, meats, fowl and fish well cooked, pure cider or white wine
vinegar--in fact, every ingredient first class, to insure success.
The vegetables used in salad are: Beet-root, onions, potatoes,
cabbage, lettuce, celery, cucumbers, lentils, haricots, winter cress,
peas, French beans, radish, cauliflower--all these may be used
judiciously in salad, if properly seasoned, according to the following
directions.
Chervil is a delicious salad herb, invariably found in all salads
prepared by a French gourmet. No man can be a true epicure who is
unfamiliar with this excellent herb. It may be procured from the
vegetable stands at Fulton and Washington markets the year round. Its
leaves resemble parsley, but are more divided, and a few of them added
to a breakfast salad give a delightful flavor.
Chervil Vinegar.--A few drops of this vinegar added to fish sauces
or salads is excellent, and well repays the little trouble taken in
its preparation. Half fill a bottle with fresh or dry chervil leaves;
fill the bottle with good vinegar and heat it gently by placing it in
warm water, which bring to boiling point; remove from the fire; when
cool cork, and in two weeks it will be ready for use.