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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1953-8-19, Page 2flow 'Possom Trot' Giot Its Name "Where did yen get that name ,--Possum. Trot?" low .often the eirestion is asked is something we've never tried to keep track Ort, but Ws plenty often. And after an experience we had this week rm going to be able to answer it with a flourish, The /lame' itself is a eood and time- honored place -name of the ;mountain people who started from the eastern seaboard, along about the time they'd won the 'war that made America a na- tion; and trickled westward through Cumberland Gap, In the years that followed they settled the mountains of Ken - 'lucky and Tennessee and the hills of north Georgia and sett - thorn Indiana. Then they came to "tit' purtiest hills Of all" and drove their roots deep down in- to the rocky crevices of the Ozarks, Wherever these folks stopped and wherever they pas- sed, you'll find the names they carried with them. All you heed do is take out over Thorny Low Gap and drop down into Foot Holler: then cross Chilly Branch and head up Turkey Run and that'll bring you right to possom Trot. If the path runs into a squirrel track which heads 'up a big den -tree and peters out en a knothole, use the technique Bob Burns made famous and 'swing in on a grapevine!" Just take my word for it and follow those directions and you'll come safely to Possum Trot. Four autumns ago, when we had bought our bit of land but hadn't cleared the woods away enough to set up housekeeping, we used to drive out evenings in every kind of weather. I guess we wanted to see whether Vie 'view stood up as well under a driving rain or a gray and threatening sky as it did when the sun dropped into the river through a bank of blazing clouds, It did and it still does! On a certain clear, crisp even - :bag in early December, we saw our hills and bit of valley under Their first light fall of snow and el was beautiful, We left the ear at the hilltop and walked Build Porch Suppers Around . Fried Chicken BY 10011,01111V MADDO L NOW is the season for informal but eubetantia1'porch or back yard suppers, They can be pleasant'affeirs and need not take top much preparation time. Base thertl on crispy erJed chicken tor beat re1ults. Remember, it you.are serving the ebieken cold and want to cook it the day before 9r early in the day, lee certain to refrigerate it well, For safety's sake, that is Vitally Important, Also, when taking chicken to the beach or to 'e plank spot, refrigerate it thoroughly Ant Arrange to keep Jt cold and eat it within 4 hours. ButtgrrCripp Chicken One 2-3 pound Myles Waken, salt, )pepper, 1 cup dour, l tea- spoon paprika, to pound butter, shortening, thyme, if desired, thin onion rings, if desired. Have chicken drawn and cut into serving pieces. 'Rinse in cold water and drain. Put salt, pepper, flour and paprika in paper bag. Shake 3 to 4 pieces of chicken in the bag at a time to coat thor- ouglwly. Heat enough butter and shortening in a heavy skillet t0 make. , layer of fat ria inch deep. With kitchen tongs place chicken In hot at. Brown on both sides, Place thickets one layer deep, in shallow baking pan. For added flavor sprinkle with tbyme and onion. Pour melted butter over chicken pieces. Bake In moderate oven (350 degrees R) until tender, about 25 to 30 minutes. Baste with melted butter after 15 minutes of baking. • r • Here's another suggestion for a porch supper menu! Misouit Beef Roil^ (4 generous servings). Two tablespoons tat, 1 cup finely diced onion, 1 small clove garlic, minced; Si pound chopped beef, 1 teaspoon kitchen bouquet, 6 -ounce can tomato paste, 1 cup finely diced green pepper, 1 tea- spoon salt, 2 teaspoons sugar, 1 teaspoon pepper, 1/4 teaspoon chill powder, i% teaspoon powdered oregano, 1 cup biscuit mix, about b cup milk. Melt fat in frying pan oyer tow heat. Add onion and garlic and cook about 1 minute. Add chopped beef pulled into small bits and Fried chicken, fresh vegetables end good bread makes sirbetanilal • • porch supper. ' , - sprinkle m kitchen bouquet. Cook, stirring frequently, until meat is slightly browned. Add tomato paste, green pepper, salt, sugar, pepper, chili powder.and oregano. Mix well and let cook over low heat aboet 10 minutes. Then remove from heat and cool slightly, Meanwhile combine biscuit mix end milk to make small ball of dough. Roll out on lightly, floured board to make a rectangle about 8 x 12 inches, Spread meat and tomato mixture on dough almost to edges. Roll. up like Jelly roll. Place on greased shallow baking pan. Bake in moderately hot oven (375 degrees R.) uhtll roll is lightly browned and done, about 25 minutes. Remove to serving platter, Cut in 1 -inch slices to serve and accompany with whipped potatoes and a freshly cooked vegetable, down to the ancient persimmon tree' which vias to overhang our house, although we didn't know It then. Suddenly, in the gather- ing dusk, Mania pointed t0 an indistinct small form, scurrying through the snow for the safety of the woods. "Rabbit," she said, excitedly, since even then we felt a pro- priety interest in our wildlife. "Rabbit nothing," I said, with the saperior air of an average husband or a woodsman sure of his quarry. "That's a POS- SOM—and Mama, if you haven't set your heart on some such soupy name as Drip -honey Acres, let's call the place Possum Trot," —From "Possom Trot Farm," by Leonard Hall. TABLE TALKS clam Anclzew Quinces seem to have fallen ie popularity of recent years— which seems a pity to those of vs lucky enough to recall the Quince Honey and other good - .les of a bygone day. So. here are some recipes making delightful use of the low- ly quince—also one for a blue- berry cake which I'm sure you'll Bind will call for encores a- plenty. QUINCEV HONEY tl quinces Sugar Pare the quinces and drop them in cold water. Cover the skins with boiling water and boil rapidly for 30 minutes. Drain. Grate the quinces and add to liquor drained from skins. Cook mixture for 20 minutes. Skim end add an equal amount of su- gar. Simmer for 10 minutes, then pour into hot sterilized jars and seal. Makes about three pints. • * BAKED QUINCES 1 quart peeled, quartered quinces 1 cup liquor in which quinces are cooked sA cup sugar Cover quince quarters with water and cook until tender. Drain, place in a baking dish, add sugar and liquid, and bake until the syrup is thick and the fruit a rich red. Serve cold, with plain or whipped cream., Four servings. QUINCE GINGER 6 pounds ripe quinces 2 enps water 4 pounds sugar 4lemons, cut in paper -thin slices 1 ounce ginger root, green or dried Pare and core the quinces and cut in thin slicesilor in small pieces. Boil water and sugar to- gether for five minutes, thhen add quinces, ginger root, and lemons. Simmer for about two hours or until the fruit is transparent and a deep ruby red. Seal at once in hot sterilized jars. Makes five to six pints. * 4 QUINCE PRESERVES 5 pounds quinces 4 pounds sugar 1 lemon, quartered 3 cups water Peel, core, and quarter the quinces, removing any hard or bruised spots Cover the peelings with water, add the lemon, and boil slowly for about 30 minutes, covered. Remove from heat and strain. Combine suger and water and boil slowly until sugar is dissolved. Add the water hs which the peelings were boiled to the syrup, also the quartered q u in c e s. Boil slowly until quinces are tender. Place the fruit in hot sterilized jars, add syrup and seal. Makes five to six pints. m * BLUEBEILRY CAKE 1 cup sugar neokie With a hook -A bookie reads his book, but it's a work' on philosophy. Colin Leslie Pox, 32•year-old licensed bookmaker from England, reads by kerosene light abroard his 23,foot yawl Which took him on 7000 -mile Atlantic voyage. Anchored in New York's East River, he now plans on selling his sailboat and buying a car to tour America, "STOPPED TOO EARLY" "1i is now more than ten years since some very definite con- clusions were reached by the Committee on Artificial Respiration of the Health League of Canada as to the possibilities and limita- tions of artificial respiration, especially in cases of drowning," writes Dr. Gordon Bates, general director of the Health League. "it is surprising that the lessons `learned at that time seem too frequently to have been forgotten and that, time after time, one reads newspaper reports of artificial respiration having been stopped too early," • Dr, Bates summarizes some of the chief points which should be generally known as follows: (1) There is hope of reviving persons apparently drowned even though the duration of immersion has been up to half an hour. Persons have been revived after up to this period under water. (2) The fact that most of the usual signs of life are often entirely absent in an apparently drowned person is not a final indication of death. Persons have been revived by artificial respiration after hours of apparent death from various causes. Until some indication of life appar- ent to everyone appeared, there was no pulse, no heart sound audible by stethoscope examination, no reflex of any kind. ' (3) Artificial respiration should be commenced immediately in all cases under water for less than half an hour and should be continued without an instant intermission until all hope is lost, (4) The rule laid down by the Health League of Canada's committee was that it should be continued for a minimum of four hours or until rigor mortis has set in; and there should be no exception to this rule, (5) Additional rules have to do With keeping the patient warm by all means possible and seeing to it that the air passages are clear. "This last suggestion is very important," the Health League director emphasizes, "In many cases it has been found that a laryngeal spasm exists. This condition, while it effectively prevents water from getting into the lungs, also prevents the entry of air. At the moment, no more effective means of opening the larynx is known other than seeing that the tongue is pulled out during artificial respiration," butter size of an egg 1 egg 1 cup milk 2 cups flour 3 teaspoons baking powder little salt 1 teaspoon vanilla About three-quarters cup of blueberries. First take a little of the flour measured for the cake and mix it with the blueberries. Cream sugar, butter, and egg together. Add milk. . Add flour, baking powder, and salt, sifted together, then the vanilla. Last, add the floured berries, Mix well, and bake in moderate oven. Cut in squares, and eat hot with plenty of butter, * • c OLD-FASHIONED CATSUP 1 gallon (34 peck) ripe tomatoes 4 pods hot red peppers 2 tablespoons salt 34 tablespoon ground allspice 3 tablespoons grained black pepper 3 tablespoons grained black pepper 1 pint vinegar Cook tomatoes and pods of hot red peppers together until ten- der, Put through a coarse sieve. Stir in all remaining ingredients. Simmer from 3-4 hours, watching carefully that it does not stick, Bottle and cork while hot. This catsup improves with age, al- though it turns dark brown. Casey Jones Was Real Casey Jones was a good engineer, Tot' his firemen to have no fear, "All I want's a ill' water an' coal, Peep out de cab and see de drivers reit.... Who knows when and it Paul Bunyan ever lived? (All we know is he dredged Puget Sound.) Mike Fink may have been a keelboatman on the 0-hl•o a hundred years ago, but we can never know, Big John Henry was either the Black River Giant—a roustabout —who lived only in legend or to real champion `steel driver" on the C,10 whose "ten -pound maul" helped put through the Big Bend Tunnel in the early 1870's. But "Cayce" (Casey) Jones was a real engineer. He did drive the Illinois Central's Cannon Ball Express from Memphis, Tennes- see, to Canton, Mississippi. ("A car roller, and in my estimation the prince of them all," said one of his conductors,) He did mount "to the cabin with his orders in his hand," and then, when "Old number four stared us right in the face," shout to his fireman, "Boy, you'd better jump," before taking "his farewell trip to the promised land" with one hand on the throttle and the other on the whistle cord, They've put up a granite monu- ment to the engineer from Cayce, Kentucky, at Vaughan, Missis- sippi, the hamlet where his "six - eight wheeler" plowed into the rear box cars of a freight that hadn't cleared the siding, That was near midnight of April 29, 1900. His Negro .fireman, Sim Webb, who jumped at his order, was on hand at the dedication last month. So was his widow, bright-eyed Mrs. John Luther Jones. And they rang the bell from old No, 638 (which has long been calling good people to worship at the Black Jack Me- thodist Church). And they blew the whistle Casey could "moan like a lonesome turtle dove," Hurry up, engine, and hurry up, train, Mfssie gwine ride over the road again, Swift as lightnin' and smooth as glass, Darty, take yo' hat off when the train gees past... Whoop-oe-00-o, wh000-o0-o0-o, whoo, whoo•600-o-o-e-0, Consider. The Lilies From the dawn of civilization, lilies appear to have been asso- ciated with man, They were an easily available source of food and a conspicuous one by virtue of brilliantly colored flowers. Apparently, as soon as man set- tled down long enough to garden, he cherished lilies. - At the same time, even in these early civilizations, lilies must•have had an aesthetic appeal, for remark- ably clear pictures of them ap- pear on Cretan pottery made some two thousand years before Christ: An early Egyptian relief, now preserved in Paris, shows women gathering lilies, others pressing them to obtain the es- sential oil , - . From Greece, the Madonna lily traveled to Rome.... The women Of Rome used the sap, pressed tram the same lilies, as a sirin- cleansing preparation, and they or Roman soldiers carried bulbs cn expeditions Of conquest throughout Europe, In this way, at the beginning Of the Christian era, the Madonna lily came 10 the countries that are now Ger- many, hlolland and England. It was then also that this lily be- came a symbol of purity and im- portant in religion. Lilies are often mentioned in the Bible, al- though the "lilies of the field" may actually have been iris.. , Leonardo da Vinci drew a de- tailed pencil sketch of the Ma- donna lily, a flower stock identi- cal with the old-fashioned type still grown in, gardens. Later, in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, lilies were a favorite. subject of famous flower paint- ers, With the passing of the ,Middle Ages, lilies were valued in gar- dens of the Northern' Hernisp'here, .As new worlds' were discovered, ' they 'too contributed lilies, plants eagerly sought by amateur gar- deners, Thus soon after the dis- covery of Canada by Jacques Cartier, L, eanadonse was brought to Paris and London. When trade with Japan and China became • possible, lilies were among .the first plants im- ported from those countries. With the discovery and develop- ment of the West Coast of North America, the fine lilies growing there were soon ,collected, named and distributed to growers in other parts of the world. Lilium candiaum, the Madonna lily, and several European species were grown in English gardens as early as 1600. We find L. can- adense described in John Par- kinson's The Garden of Pleasant Flowers, which appeared in 1629. Other lilies grown at that time were L. bulbiferum and L. chal- cedonicum, the Red Martagon of Constantinople. Two hundred years later, in 1832 to be exact, L. speciosum rubrum arrived from Japan,, and, after another thirty years, L. auratum, the famous gold -banded lily, Lilium henry,, which exerted • such a great influence in our modern garden lilies, .did not arrive until 1889, and L. regale 'was not dis- covered until 1903, -From "The New Book of Lilies," by Jan de Graaf.' ..Plain Horse Sense.. by BOB ELLIS Timiskaming, Aug. 8, 1953. In this rugged country studded with shaft heads and piles of tailing, people are rugged too. For them it is not North and South, for them it still is "new" Ontario as compared to the "old" down around Oshawa and Toronto. You can meet many a pioneer who came in here fifty and more years ago when there were no roads or railways and they had to portage all theiir belong- ings. - In those times to carry a hun- dred pound bag of seed potatoes through twenty miles of bush to a neightbour was considered "just a friendly gesture". Even Money They are tough, they are friendly, they are hospitable, and above all they are outspo- ken. If asked for their opinion, there is no reluctance, no hesi- tancy; you will get it whether you like it or not. Any 'subject is welcome for discussion, be it economic, religi- ous or political, presently, of course, the political having the upper hand. Everybody is watching with interest the battle being waged by "Ann" Shipley, rumbustious reevess of Teck and Liberal candidate, against "Doc" Ames, the amiable standard bearer of the CCF. At present it is even money on the two; by the time this re- port appears, we will knoww who won. Ye Bad Otde Times. In this Northland with its long hard winters, a man has to be on the move, he has to be pro- gressive and aggressive to sur- vive. He has to have' a good memory and remember a mis- take, not to repeat it, That is why the Conservatives have nothing to hope for in a district where' the 'people have not forgotten •the •times when the young folks were.riding the rods and the older then were working on the roads, getting paid with cheques marked 'relief,' at the rate Of 98 cents per day, Gold, Gold, Gold, 11 is gold that makes them eat and the bit Of land that they work oh the side, Dewrr there in 'Old' Ontario we always hear of the 'depressed' state of the gold, mining industry is in, Coming up here a man ex- pects to find ghost towns, and derelict ramshackle buildings, Nothing of the sort. rhe plants and the administrative buildings look just as rich and prosperous as the headquarters of any bank or insurance company in Toronto or Montreal. And they are paying good dividends. Broulan-Reef, the company struck by the miners for a 10 cent increase on .their hourly rate of $L02,• last year paid out $650,000 on a capitali- zation of less than $900,000. Last Season. There are some good farms in the South end of the district. It is mixed farming with the ac- cent on milk, which is highly valued at $5.20 per hundred- weight. Some good Holsteins and Ayr - shires are roaming the country, with hardly any Jerseys or Guernseys in sight, although there is open quota for high test milk. The season is much later than in 'old' Ontario, of course. The spring grain is still green and a lot of hay has to be brought in yet. Much of it is being put up in the old fashion on stakes which makes for wonderful hay, This column welcomes sug- gestions, wise er foolish, and all criticism, whether constructive or destructive and will try to answer any question. Address your letters'ito Bob Ellis, Box 1, 123 - 18th Street, New Toronto, Ont. aotlo ll Jokers The meanest practical ,*kers in the world are the ones who con- spire to put a blight on the weds ding ceremonies of their best friends. Pbrhaps you read in the papers recently about the collec— tion of goons who masqueraded as masked, bearded desperadoes, and charged into a bride's home 'with guns waving, The bride suf- fered a' nervous collapse, and. the memory of her wedding day has been marred forever, The goons probably are still convinced that they demonstrated their capacity for friendship and a! keen sense of hdmor` at the .same tirne, An-. .<other'bridal epuple arrived., at the Chicago - airport with a fifteen - pound. ball and chain attached to the bridegroom's'right ankle. Fel- 10w-workers in his railroad main- tenance -,gang had shackled it to his leg' just before he escorted his bride to the plane in Minne- sota.' he bride was sti11 sobbing when she reached Chicago, and a motley assortment of morons stood simpering while the groom sought a hacksaw t0 cut himself free. One of the dirtiest tricks ever played on a bridegroom, we think, was perpetrated at the bachelor dinner of a well-known socialite, Too much champagne had done him in completely. When he re- covered consciousness, his right ermlwas in a sling. He had bro- ken , it,, ,his friends told him mournfully, executing a Highland Fling on top, of a table. There was not a word of truth in the •story. The poor fish spent his s.entire honeymoon with a per- fectly sound right arm bound up in a,plaster-of-Paris `cast, The greatest predilection for pradtical jokes is displayed 'by a group of medical students. May- be the. very nature of their cho- sen profession makes these gen- tlemen, snore callous and unfeel- ing than the general rim.' Hu- man'fi eletons, of 'course, are just everyday routine to an embryo physician, but what jolly fun it is to pop one suddenly into the face oe somebody who never has seeri one before in his life A group of students who drove up one afternoon to the toll gate of the Triborough Bridge added a newtouch tp the old act The officer in charge saw the usual arni extended from the car, but when be clutched for the quar- ter, the whole arm (stolen from a stiff..n .the .dissecting labora- tory,), came off with it. The stu- dents drove away whooping with joy; The officer collapsed. Banned Pants — Targets of an anti -immodesty campaign by West Berlin leachers, these German schoolgirls were sent home to change their pedal - pushers and shorts for skirts. Loud protests were raised by bi- cycle icycle riders when tight -fitting slacks, pedal -pushers and shorts were banned from classrooms, eareet n Shore Service - An improvement on curb service keeps French actresses Rosemary Crowell, left, and Simone Bath, right, cool White dining at this seaside rettourani cis the Freneh Riviera, •a_