HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1956-06-14, Page 2A BLE T
cJane A.ndmws.
So you don't know a thing
about herbs.
You know violets, don't you?
-and nasturtiums and holly-
hocks? And you certainly don't
:need an introduction to onions
and celery-
These are all herbs. An herb
is any plant whose stem dies en-
tirely down to the ground each
year, as contrasted With shrubs
and trees. In. fact, the distinc-
tion we commonly make today
between herbs and vegetables,
or between herbs and flowers,
is a development of only the past
200 years or so.
To most of us, however, herbs
mean that relatively small group
of fragrant plants which, fresh
or dried, add delicious flavors
to food.
Whether a person waxes rhap-
sodic at the pinch of a bit of
thyme, or is inclined to declaim
defiantly, "I want just good,
plain food,.. no herbs!" seems to
depend largely on the food hab-
its of the family he grew up in.
We often choose the familiar
in food, even if it's dull, and thus
deprive ourselves of pleasing
dishes:
If you have a family which
would consider porkchops
rather flat without sage - and
yet won't try sage on veal be-
cause • it's new to them - go
slowly and tactfully along the
.road of introducing them to
herbs. Educating others to ac-
- sept new -food flavors isn't al-
ways easy, and the wise cook
never forgets that there should
always be room for individual
preferences in food just as in
everything else. A judicious use
of herbs can accomplish Men-
ders, however, adding variety to
menus • and making even the
most economical dishes not only
palatable but delightful,
The trick is not to use too
much. It can't ho• said too often
that a very light touch is neces-
sary in using herbs. Any of these
seasonings shi'uld simply bring
out the full flavor of the food,
and should never stand out
prominently enough to be recog-
nized as any specific herb.
Think of thyme as you do salt
and pepper, if you will: just the
right amount makes a dish,
whereas too much may ruin it.
And ' it's a good idea not to wear
out your family by putting herbs
in eveeythin; . perhaps arousing
resistance that will be hard to
overcome.
Herbs like spaces, go back to
the earliest history of mankind,
and the Oldest books reveal that
wherever gardens have been
tended, someone has loved their
serrated; gray - green leaves.
Tidy, tiny herb gardens have
graved England for generations,
and set the pattern for herb cul-
ture in .he early American ccl-
DADDY-OH - Lawyer Joseph H.
Welch receives congratulations
after being named ''Father of
the Year" by the National Fa-
ther's Day committee.
onies, Yet 20 years ago, there
were practically no herbs avail-
able in the United States which
had not been imported from
overseas.
Probably a good measure of
today's enthusiasm for growing
and using herbs derives its im-
petus from an organization which
had modest beginnings in Bos-
ton, Mass., a little over 20 years
ago - the Herb Society of Am-
erica, Its seven original mem-
bers have seen their organiza-
tion expand not only across all
of the United States but in other
countries as well. Thanks in
part to their early efforts, library
shelves now cart' an astonish-
ing number of excellent books
on herbs - their history, horti-
culture, marketing, and use.
Although you can easily grow
your own - even in a window
box, the dried herbs which can
be found in such profusion in
most grocery stores are the most
convenient for many of tis. Just
remember to notice whether a
recipe calls for fresh or cried
herbs, and use this guide e.
half teaspoonful of dried herbs
is about equal to a tablespoon-
ful of fresh or green herbs for
flavor.
HERB SOUP
3 tablespoons butter
1 Read garden lettuce
shredded
1 small bunch watercress cut
fine
1 teaspoon chopped chervil
(fresh)
6 cups chicken or other stock
}: cup cream
1 egg yolk
Salt and pepper to taste
Cook lettuce and cress in the
butter for five minutes, being
careful not to let them brown.
Add stock and chervil, pepper,
and salt, Cook ea hour, then add
cream mixed with egg yolk.
Stir until heated but do not
boil.
* * *
New potatoes don't need em-
bellishment, but they can stand
variety. Try this herb butter
sometime.
HERB BUTTER
2 tablespoons butter
le teaspoon crumbled basil
leaves
t teaspoon caraway seed •
ee teaspoon dry mustard or
onion powder
Aieit butter and add seasonings.
Pour over cooked new potatoes,
AV * ,
Even the familiar hamburger,
good at 11 is with just salt and
pepper, can have a new dress
occasionally.
MEAT BALLS
2 pounds ground beef
3 eggs
5 slices bread.
2 tablespoons milk
112 teaspoons marjoram
oregano
3 teaspoons parsley
1 cup finely cut chives
?4 teaspoon thyme •
1 teaspoon salt
1M teaspoon pepper
Butter
Break eggs into the milk,
crumble and soak the bread; add
beef, herbs, salt, and pepper, and
mix well. Roll into balls about
the size oe golf balls, Preheat a
heavy iron skillet, add but-
ter for frying. When fat
sizzles, nearly cover the bottom
of the pan with meat balls. Do
not crowd. Saute over a hot fire,
shaking the pan and touching
lightly now and then with a fork
so that the meat balls keep
turnit e. Fry until meat balls are
brew".
*
HERB TIPS
Add dried herbs to scups and
stews during the last hour of
cooking. and if you don't want
to see the little herb specks in
the liquid. make eheesemeth bags
for t :ern. Dcn...se the bag but
MONKEY BUSINESS - Hamming it up for his shutter -bugging
cell mate is Julius, left, a monkey at the Detroit Zoo, Tartan,
the photog, meanwhile, displays good form but poor aim.
After the charm of the camera wore off, Julius and Tarzon went
through acrobatics on the chromium bar of the tripod.
KO'ED FOR LOVE SCENES - Two -ton Tony Galento, barrel -bellied
former heavyweight boxer, Is mugging for the movies now.
Starring in "The Best Things in Life Are Free," Tony, who also
claims to be q lover at heart, plays it up with co-star Roxanne
Arlen. Tony says "Lovin' I can do all the time, but my face
don't call for it."
once, and remember that long
cooking of herbs tends to make
them bitter,
Add a pinch of savory or
thyme to canned soups while
they are heating,
Add 1 teaspoon of rosemary
to your regular recipe for bak-
ing powder biscuits, and you
have rosemary biscuits.
Aux fines herbes means finely
chopped fresh or dried herbs
that are added directly to the
food an d remain scattered
through the finished dish. They
are used most often with egg
and cheese dishes. If added to
melted butter before an omlet
goes into the pan, they will give
a more lasting flavor.
"Treasures" Only
Cannon Balls
Four American frogmen are
diving daily into the waters of
Vigo Bay, in north-west Spain,
in search of sunken treasure
estimated to be worth more
than 375,000,000.
Hot water pumped down 'to
them through plastic tubes ie
helping the frogmen to fight off
the numbing cold as they probe
thick layers of mud to locate
the greatest single treasure
known to exist in any one place
in the world - that of the
Spanish Plate fleet which was
attacked and sunk by the Bri-
tish Navy in 1702.
It is known that the seven-
teen galleons were carrying at
least 3,400 tons of precious
metals from .the mines of Peru
and Mexico when they reached
Vigo Bay. Hundreds of tons of •
thick mud have silted down on
to the wrecks through the cen-
turies. so' the task of salvage is
formidable.
Five-foot suction tubes are
being used to open a shaft
through the mud. If the trea-
sure is raised, it will go to the
Spanish government: but the
leaders of the salvage expedi-
tion, Mr. J. S. Potter, a 31 -
year -old Harvard graduate, and
his comrades, will receive an
agreed proportion of the amount
realized by the sale.
At least fifty previous at-
tempts to raise the treasure have
failed. Therst recorded at-
tempt wasby- an
Englishman,
' Mr. W. S. Brown, in 1225. Only
a few guns, sr'me a.-rmttnition
and a box of coins were raised
during those early atternpte.
Later. another Englishman,
tiring a new kind of divine ap-
paratus, reached one of the
surw+er evrecktiand sed some
silver plates tethe surface.
Later a Se an brought up
qua -.hies of do •bl i.r^s and
alden ingots under the watch-
ful eyes of the Spanish trea-
sury. He made a fortune and
sailed ..orae to Scotland where
he built a great reanelan • and
lived he luxury for the rest of
- his life.
• The present Amsrimeo expe-
d;<h " had so far brought only
pieces of charred wood and six
rusty cannon bales to the sur-
face. The charred wood tallies
with contemporary. reports that
some of the galleons were on
fire when they sank.
Ever wonder haw the word "dol.
tar" came into being? It originated
some four hundred years ago in
the Saint Joachim Valley in Bir
benta, Central Europe. A. huge
silver coin was minted, and was
known as the Joaehimthaler. Later
this was sht+r:ened to Thaler and
then to Dater. Early settlers
brought the term to America, and
it gradually worked its way into
general "sage. but the epe11!ng
cbanged until it became Dollar.
CAPS ARE SET - Fashion sets
her cap for summer with an
"Ivy League" sports model in
striped madras, top, and a
French -inspired sailor beret, bot-
tom, of white pique set off with
a red pompom.
Conscience Fund
The Treasury has a file known
as the Conscience Fund, a huge
folder labeled: 'Monies and Let-
ters received from Persons Un-
known." The fund had its be-
ginning in 1812 when a letter
addressed to the Treasury con-
tained a five -dollar bill and a
statement that the sender had
once cheated the government
government and wished to make
restitution, Since then the Fund
has grown to over a million dol-
lars. Some of the letters are
touching, and some are amusing:
"Please accept this dollar from
a poor widow who has received
gifts from a gentleman who
works for the government. I
don't say he would take any-
thing he shouldn't, but to re-
lieve my =science, I am send-
ing what I can spare." Num-
bers of them are trivial: "Here-
with I send you a stamp for
duty on a cake of soap I bought
in Buffalo from a Canadian "
One man used a three -cent
stamp which the Post Office
had neglected to cancel, and
wrote that he couldn't sleep
nights until he paid for it.
Servicemen and women, tempt-
ed by easy accees to govern-
ment property, rften send pay-
ment for articles they have
taken. One boy sent two dollars
"for pies snitched while on
kitchen police duty." Most of
the contributions are small, but
occasionally a biz one comes
through. A man from Philadel-
phia sent 030.000. explaining
that he hsd "stoled" 810.000
from Uncle Sam - the interest
would square things, he said.
The most astonishing contri-
bution ever received was a
check for a million dollars from
Russian -born James Picker,
founder of X-rav cnnnratinns,
who loves his adopted land
and refuses to make money act-
ing business with the United
States Armee Mr, PP'ker sent
his first million -donor cheek to
the Treasury in 1047 and ens
sent several more since The
checks total. I think. o'*»"» rive
million dMlars -F-^'" "n'-e',-
ington Holiday," by Fneer.,ir
Early.
"Stepping On Gas"
Is Worst Culprit
The Travelers Insurance Cone
pauy has issued its latest annual
analysts of street and highway as-
eideut data. An analysis of this
analysis points an accusing finger
in the true cool, inexorable, statis-
tical manner at the major culprit.
Is it the weather? No; 84.7 Der
cent of the fatal and 81.3 of the
nonfatal accidents in 1955 occur-
red in dry weather, 78.6 per cent
and 72.5, respectively, on dry roads.
Is it negotiation of curves or
skidding, perhaps? No; care driv-
ing on straightaways accounted tor
78,4 per cent of persons killed, 01.6
per cent of those injured.
Is it the mechanically defective
vehicle? No; 90.3 per cent of the
vehicles involved in fatal and 97.3
in nonfatal accidents were in ap-
parently good condition.
Is it inexperience on the part
of the -driver? No; well over 07
'per Cent of drivers involved in ac-
cidents causing death or injury had
been operating cars for a year or
more,
Is it "those tremendous trucks
and. busses"? No! they may make
drivers of smaller cars "Jittery" ns
they roar by, but the giants them-
selves are involved In less than 12
percent of personal-injury accid-
ents.
Is it the passenger -car driver?
Yes - at least one variety of hint.
To attempt a composite: He is
probably exceeding the speed limit
(in over 40 per cent of fatal and
nonfatal accidents), anti possibly
driving on the wrong side of the
road (in 12 per cent). And it is
not unlikely that he is under 25
years old. (Persons 18-24, compris-
ing only one -Muth of those likely
to be driving cars, were involved
in 27.1 per cent of the fatal accid-
ents. And their record is getting
worse.)
Mr. James du Pont, of the Dela-
ware Safety Council, recently told
the President's Committee on Tref-
fie Safety that Americans are play-
ing "Russian roulette . . . We
sometimes go the reckless Itussiaas
one better by piecing two death -
dealing Cartridges in the chamber
of our gun - alcohol and poor
Judgment. Then we pull the trig-
ger -- only we call it 'stepping on
the gas'1"-from The Christian
Science Monitor.
The Green -Eyed
Monster
A Short Story
By 11IARSIL I 51011E
Have you ever noticed how Jeal-
ousy -- the green-eyed monster,
as Shakespeare so aptly calls it -
seeuts to strike the most unlikely
people? Take Rosalie, for instance.
If anyone had told me she could
poesibly be jealous of Lillian, I
would have laughed at the idea.
Rosalie 'and Lillian bad been
friends from kindergarten days,
though they are quite unlike encu
other. Lil is a clever girl and very
sweet. Roz, though, is the most
beautiful girl in the class. When
It was decided we would put on
The Sleeping Belutty as our school
play, it was inevitable that Roselle
would be the "Beauty" - and just
as inevitable that Lillian would
give a wonderful performance es
the Witch
The girls were good friends until
Lillian's outstanding scholarship
began to be recognized, and she
won a few prizes. Shortly after
this, some very misty stories began
going around about her, but no-
bndy seemed to know who was
putting them about.
Lillian was really ttpset abort
this whispering campaign, and she
talked to Rosalie about it. One day,
in the course of conversntion,Ros-
alie made a remark that suddenly
opened Lillian's eyes, and with a
shock she realized that Roz might
be the guilty party, Perplexed and
bewildered, she told me about It.
"But why?" I asked in astonish-
ment. "Why should Rosalie do this
to you?"
"I don't know," saki Lillian,
"and I just don't lmow what to do
about it either. I would like to get
the advice of our Bible Class lead-
er, Mrs, Black, She is very under-
standing, maybe she can tell me
what to do."
Mrs. Black listened carefully co
the whole story, then she said,
sadly, "Poor Rosalie!"
"Poor Rosalie, indeed1" exclaim-
ed Lillian. "What about poor mel*
"Rosalie 1s far more unhappy
than you are," said Mrs. Black.
"The green - eyed monster, Jeal-
ousy, has her in his clul.cbes, and
unless she teams how to get rid of
him, she will lead a very unlecrable
life. She has s0 much in the way of
personal beauty and ;womanish -
meant, t, yet, incredible as it seems,
she bas become so Jealous of you
that she has even lied about you,
and nn so doing she has destroyed
her own happiness,"
This proved to be all too true.
Rosalie admitted the whole thing
when Mrs. Black talked to her.
She had been very unhappy about
it, and she asked Lillian to forgive
her and rennin friends with her.
I suppose we all may feel a little
twinge of Jealousy or envy some-
times. In an odd sort of way we
forget bow much we have our-
selves, and begin to get resentful
when it scents that others may have
more than we have. Yet, how fool-
ish that kind of thinking really is.
Imagine how stupid it would be if
a beautful red rose envied a lovely
pure white lily! There is jnsl no
basis of comparison, yet the one
is no less beautiful or important
than the other. Or look ata be.auti-
fui flashing aliautoud, and then
glance at the soft h'ridescent sheen
of a lovely pearl. Which 1s more
beautiful? Whocan answer that
qucstl0n?
So it is all through 11ft, The gine
of beauty and cleverness are not
• equally bestowed, itis true, yet
there is a strange basic anality In
the amount of happiness that comes
into our lives. If we stmt to envy
niche who umnn is have more than
ourselves, we ninth never enjoy the
gifts that we have, I'Isontettt and
malice bring nettling but unhapid-
118s0, and an envious persu will al-
ways find something to envy and
nothing at all to love. As the gentle
Apostle Janes tells ns, "Where
envying and strife is, there Is eou-
fusion and every evil wank."
Jealousy is the nicht cruel of all
temptations. Because er jealousy
Cain killed his brother Abel, and
Jealousy is the root bemuse of a
great many crimes today. We must
be on giuu'tl against it all the time,
or it will surely destroy us. To give
the whole quotation from Shakes-
peare, "0, beware of Jealousy; !t le
the green - eyed moister which
doth the meat it feeds mho
Two years ago an pair of tamer
league hockey teams in Northern
Ontario were battling out a hotly
contested game. Midway through
the seeped Period one of the goalie*
balled away a shut for goal. '1'ht
peek skidded 110100 the the right
into the opposing teams net, Upon
the resumption of play, tete other
goalies fatale a similar save, wbere-
upon the peek repeated the man•
oeuvre, trickling learn the lee and
into the opposite net. This is prob.
ably the only cweastan in hnckel
where two opp"sintg goalies stewed
for their respective teams.
SALLY'S SALLIES
'When do you think you'll rate'
another chair for your executive
secretary?"
GRADUATION DAY Graduation ceremonies in Fort Scott, find.
the distaff side of the Wilcher family in cap and gown. Barba -a
left, is a senior at the local high school; Joan, center, graduutes
f om junior college, and Mrs. Ruth Wilcher, a: first -grade teacher .
in town, get her Bachelor of Science degree in education.