Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1985-11-13, Page 29Page 2B—Crossroads—Nov. 13, 1985 CookingCorner Skyscraper sandwiches They called him Jemmy Twitcher, although he cer- tainly bore more distin- guished titles. gambler and an aristocrat -- a member in good standing of the court of King George III of England. And. while it's doubtful anyone could cite the record of his winnings and losses, he'did succeed in achieving a certain im- mortality, c Jemmy, more properly s known as John Montague, c Fourth Earl of Sandwich, s was given to 24-hour gambl- s ing marathons, and it was a b w T be s 0 b 1 tbsp. finely grated onion ' h tsp. white pepper 18 tsp. garlic salt 12 ozs. bacon, cooked crisp, drained and crumbled 12 slices enriched Russian rye bread 12 ozs. thinly sliced cooked roast beef 1 tbsp. chopped chives Combine blue cheese and margarine. Cream softened ream cheese; place in mall saucepan. Add ° sour ream, onion, pepper, garlic alt and bacon; heat slowly, tirring constantly, until hot nd well blended. Toast read and spread 6 slices ith blue cheese mixture. op each with 2 ounces roast ef. Spread 2 tablespoons our cream mixture on each f 6 remaining slices of read and sprinkle each with teaspoon chopped chives. Serve open-faced on plate. Garnish with curly endive and tomato slice , BEEF DILLY 12 slices enriched dark rye bread Softened butter or marg- arine 3 tbsps. drained dill relish 3 tbsps. drained sweet pickle relish ' 2 cup salad dressing 12 ozs. thinly sliced corned beef 1 6 crisp lettuce leaves 6 (1 oz, ) slices Swiss cheese, cut in half diagonally Butter 12 slices of rye 1 ad on one side. Combine I relish, sweet pickle 1 ish and salad dressing. ead pickle relish mixture ,; buttered side of 6 slices of 1 ad and top each with 2 1 ces sliced corned beef. 1 ce lettuce on meat so it, t- ends over bread edges. P ce 2 ' z -ounce slices Swiss ese overlapping triangles C ips•of cheese extend out dr m bread ends. Close W dwich with bread, but- p d side down, and cut in sa f diagonally. Garnish ha pickle slice and pine- ea le chunk on fringed pick. wi TRIPLE THREAD fr ces enriched white bread 3 ces whole wheat bread wi ices enriched pumper- Se ckle bread pla ened butter or margar- op wi g during one of these that be grabbed a hunk of meat and slapped it between two slabs of bread —• possibly to keep the grease from fouling the cards. Whatever his motiva- tion, he inadvertently started a whole new mode of eating. Although the combination was to be indelibly linked to his name by 1762, it never achieved the popularity in its country of origin that it did in America. By the late 1800s, with the introduction of standardized soft white bread, the sand - wish had become a staple in the Yankee'diet. There were tea sandwiches, toasted sandwiches, open -face sandwiches and hot sand- wiches. Today it's doubt'fu1 Jemmy would recognize half the . creation that bear his name. bre They are made on crois- dil sants, muffins and rolls, as rel well as° buns, bagels and Spr breads — and the number of on • fillings is all but endless. bre oun . If you haven't had a real) pia good sandwich lately you ext might want to adopt one of Pla ext the following winners from che the University of Wisconsin so t contest, fro ITALIAN STALLION san 6 (5 oz.) pieces mild Italian tere sausage• hal 2 tbsps. butter or margarine with 2 cups sliced mushrooms 1.cup chopped green pepper app 1.2 cup chopped onion 6 sli 1 clove garlic, minced 6 sli 6 enriched French rolls g sl 2 cups (2, 8 oz. cans) pizza sauce• ft 6 (1 oz.) slices Mozzarella Sof cheese in 2 tsps. oregano 12 t 12 tsp. paprika sa Simmer sausage in water Two until done. In. skillet • melt 6 sli butter. Saute mushrooms, • gn 12 th green pepper, onion and 2 cu garlic until tender, about 5 to 'ch 7 minutes. Split French rolls. 1 egg Divide vegetable mixture 14 en among rolls. Split cooked 2 t sausage and place on top of dra vegetables. Pour about one- 1 tbsp third cup sauce over each sandwich. Top with a slice of cheese. Sprinkle with ore—a°. and p1p ika. Heat under broiler until cheese melts and begins to brown, 3 to 5 minutes. Garnish' with pickles, parsley and choice of potato. SHENANDOAH 2ozs. domestic blue cheese 14 cup whipped margarine 4 ozs. cream cheese, sof- tened 1.2 cup dairy sour cream broiler 'faantil bubbly golden brown. Let s wiches stand for 1 minutes for topping to Garnish with dill pickles radish roses on endive. ST. LOUISIAN 6 large enriched Kaiser or individual loave French bread 44 cup butter or ma.rgar melted 1,4 tsp. garlic powder '.2 tsp. leaf marjoram 1 tsp. seasoned salt ',4 tsp. pepper 6 (1 oz.) slices Mozzar cheese 1.4 cup finely chopped onio 2 tsps. butter or margarin 12 slices tomato, each cut inch thick ' 18 ozs. thinly sliced ro pork loin Split rolls or bread, hr lightly with melted butt Combine garlic powd marjoram, seasoned s and pepper. . Spri'n seasonings over butered r halves. Top each roll bott with slice of cheese. He rolls under broiler un cheese melts. Saute onions 2 teaspoons butter; spre evenly over cheese. Coy with 2 slices of tomato. T each with 3 ounces slic pork. Close sandwich wi top of roll or bread. Garni with hot spiced peach ha and sprig•of parsley. DEVIL'S DELIGHT 2 slices enriched whi bread Softened butter or mar rine 'a lbs, (3 cups) diced full cooked ham 2 ozs. (3 cups) grated che dar cheese .+ cup salad dressing tbsp. prepared mustard tsp. Worcestershire sauce tsp. curry powder 3 drops hot pepper sauce aprika Toast bread and butter ombine ham, cheese, s -ala essing, prepared mustard orcestershire sauce, curr owder and hot pepper uce. Spread about 12 cu m and cheese mixture or ch slice of toast. Sprinkle th paprika. Broil 6 inches om heat until cheese melts, to 5 minutes.' Cut 6 sand- ches, diagonally, in half. rve open-faced on heated te with 2 halves along side posite sides of full sand- ches. Garnish with broiled peach half with hot chutney sauce. and and - to 2 set. and H. GORDOGREEN N When I culls was in the U.S. s of Army helping to make the world safe for democracy back in the 40s, I had the en- ine, lightening experience of being in the same barracks as a man who, in his home state of Tennessee, had been a Baptist preacher. "Back home I'm what h you'd call a 'hard shell' Baptist", he told us proudly. And since barrack w evenings were always a time h for . banter and argument, a John the Baptist and I got h very well acquainted. C "But tell me John," I tr asked one night, "how is it m that your churches are K 'forever raising money to send missionaries out to al Africa and yet you make no a bones about discriminating against the black man in ta your own neighborhood?" My question moved John cl to a fine state of righteous sh indignation. His church did fr not discriminate against pr black men, he said. (He am called them `negras').. "Why our churches are so th burdened for the souls of our his American .negras that we hi build -special churches for se them!" an And when I began to laugh, to John couldn't see the joke at op all. he I had occasion to remem- . A ber John's pious protest jus when my copy of Time came cor in the other day with the ne Reverend Jerry Falwell's Bib benign face beaming from err the front cover and much of It the contents within devoted law ella ns e 'a- ast ush er. er, alt kle of l om at til in ad er op ed th sh If te ga- y- d- Y P• e hin slices natural casin Jami -thirds cup cole slaw ces natural casing bolo - a in tomato slices ps (8 ozs,) shredde eddar cheese , beaten p mayonnaise bsps. pickle relish ined prepared mustard d S Mus coil a min are ner Toast bread; lightly butter r 0 s one side. On whole wheat rec toast, place 2 slices- top lices top with'acole slaw. Cover mor with white toast, buttered desc side up. On top of white toast yea place 1 slice bologna and 2 spec tomato slices. Top with dre pumpernickle toast, but- to th tered side down. Combine tion, cheese, egg, mayonnaise, topit pickle relish and mustard. for t Spread mixture on top of Dako sandwiches. Heat sand- licat wit -l- es-irr l00 F oval or .under MINERALS FOUND pecialists of the National eum of Natural Sciences ected eight specimens of previously unrecorded eral in the Rapid Creek a, the most northerly cor- of the Yukon. This min- , named Rapidcreekite, ne of four new minerals ently described by um minerologists. No e than 50 minerals are ribed world-wide each r. The three other ies, found among hun- ds of samples submitted e museum for identifica- were Ehrelite and Tip - e, phosphate -minerals he Tiptop Mines, South ta and Jeffreyite, a sir- e from the_JefJre__ivi_ne, to Falwell's five day sojourn in South Africa and that friendly chat he had with Prime Minister Botha which moved him to come home urging A.merica's true Christians to give Botha their sympathy and support. Bishop Tutu was a phony, e said, and as he stepped off his plane he declared that his Moral Majority organization ould campaign mightily to ead off U.S. sanctions gainst South Africa. He said e would also urge hristians to reinvest in that oubled country by buying illions of their gold_ rugerrands. "There is only one ternative to Mr.. Botha's partheid. system," he said, and that is a communist keover." Jerry Falwell does not assify himself as a hard ell Baptist as my army iend John did. Falwell efers the term 'New Fund- entalist'. Seems to me however that ere, is nothing new about attitude on race. Early in s ministry he defended gregation as 'God's plan', d while he no longer dares voice such an opinion enly, he is I think still at arta racist: fter all the Bible even 'titles slavery, and ac - ding to Falwell and his w fundamentalists, the le is absolutely without or. was the great American.. yer Clarence Darrow A weekly news commentary from one of dada's _ outstanding news personalities BEST OF PETER who once told fundamental- ist William Jennings Bryan that he could not believe that any experience, religious or otherwise, can really give one •a new personality and attitude. "If you can show me a man who is truly changed," he told Bryan, "I will go a mile on my knees to meet him!" If Darrow were still alive, 1 don't think he would be •interested in wearing out his knees to meet Jerry Falwell. Cathy Walker is a King- ston mother who has secretly always dreamed of being a policewoman. Cathy had her. Thrill of a Lifetime when she spent a tough day as a police constable on the Metro To- ronto Police Force. On CTV Thursday, Nov. 21, 7:30 p.m. An armistice was signed on Dec. 3, 1912, between Tur- key, Bulgaria, Serbia and Montenegro. warranty 1111111111.1111. or *Ihome)roodel 22 Church St. W. Elmira - 669-1281 Mon. -Tues. -Wed. -Sat. - 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Thurs. & Fri. - 8:30 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Stay4 lJ.iys in Fioritia 0,, Us! WITH EVERY NEW � 12:1012] JD D OR USED CAR PURCHASED BETWEEN NOV. 1/85' & Dec. 16/85 Waterloo Honda 427 Gage Ave. at Westmount Rd. Kitchener 744-6226 TRIP CAN BE TAKEN ANYTIME UP TILL Doc. 16186 - +•ilrs ANCHORM/!:N FOR GLOBAL NEWS 41 Those who remain farmers in this country quite ob- viously have priorities which go beyond' either income or long term security. Other- wise we wouldn't have any farmers, and we'd have to import everything we eat: I heard a farmer on the radio the other day suggest, not without justification, that Canadians expect to 'be able to buy their food with what's • left over after they pay for their housing, buy a cottage, service the car, go to Flor- ' ida, get a new suit and a new television,'go to the movies, and buy a snowmobile. And You could also make the case that if food remains cheap, it is largely at the ex- pense of the producer. Pre- cious few wholesalers and supermarkets are going out of business, but far ,ers have -been going -b nkrup at Quebec. record rates for several years. ' Bob Hurst for highest achievement in new and used vehicle sales for the month of October Hwy, 23 N. Wallace Ave. Listowel Phone 291-3791 Sales Hours: 9 - 9 Mon. - Fri. ' Saturday 9 - 5, Service Hours,: 8 - 5 Mon. - Fri. .rr•rr-r. - - As if that weren't enough to discourage farmers, there is a case in New Brunswick which ought to do the trick. A group of cottagers in the N6Ff1j astern part of the province have taken a pig farmer to court because he, or, at least his 'porkers, of- fended their sense of smell. Somehow, they won, and the farmer had to pay' some $200,000 in fines and legal fees and olfactory improve- ments to his operation. The part-time reoccupa- tion of rural areas by city dwellers is not a new phen- omenon. In this country, "Ilarrowsmith" magazine, a slick publication which deals with various homely aspects of country life, owes its suc- - cess to the cities-. Fifty -five - per cent of its readership is urban, and only 45 per cent is rural. But what city dwellers who want to weekend and vacation or even live in the country had better undue stand in a hurry is that at least in areas where the soil is good, they are moving into light industrial zones. And the people who operate the light industry in those areas, the farmers got there first. If city dwellers have sensitive nose. it is up to them not to The Great ;North American Vacation Giveaway® • Includes Four Days and Three Nights of... * Deluxe Oceanfront View Accommo- dations at Ramada@ Inn Surfside or Pirate's Cove for two'Adults and two Children' under 18 -;t Split of Champagne Upon Arrival * Welcome Continental Breakfast for two * Discount Coupons for Shows. .Restaurants and Attractions * 2 buy a piece of land downwind •of a manure heap. In addition to air pollution, an attribute of any industry, there is also noise pollution. Modern farming means heavy machinery and the. roar of engines. So don't move to the country and expect to find the place the way that nature left it. What the farmers of this country need from city swelters is not law suits but a little under- standing. •• Walt Disney World 1 -Day Passports (Ch'oice of Magic Kingdom or EPCOT) The World's most famous beach is the home of The Daytona 500, Jai Alai, Dog Racing. Only 70 minutes from Disney World, enjoy exciting • night life, sparkling clear water: a beautiful white sandy beach, and a vacation you'll long remember.. p-- :• . • • • SAL E ENDS NOV. 16th SPECIAL PRICING on hundreds of Summer, All Season & Snow Tires in stock. Assorted Bremish Tires while quantities last. Canada Inc. • • CAVALIER,., 2I/DGESTOIE EXIDE BATTERY 8 month warranty on most cars 6999 inst. SNOW TIRE Change Over Passenger & Light Trucks Installation & Balance 4.10NT WHEEL ALIGNMENT Cars & Light Trucks LUBE, OIL & FILTER Cars & Light Trucks (most cars) MEULENSTE • 1 E AND AUTO SERVICE 220 MITCHELL RD. S., LISTOWEL, ONT. Phone 2 91-18 41 291-2309sor a887-6729 (Sale subject to change) • • • •: • s ••