HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1952-08-07, Page 7Macaroni Salad and Iced Coffee for Hot Weather Supper
IN DOROTHY MADDOX
iEliE'S a line supper for
outdoor eating --porch,
'terrace or garden. It is sat-
�isfying and can be almost en-
lirely prepared in the morn -
ling hours and kept in the re-
:frigerator until supper time.
The whole, family will en -
!joy it.
Vegetable juice, macaroni
chef's salad, relishes, garlic
Bread, coffee' jelly with ba:.
nanas, iced coffee.
' The hot coffee, which you
,'evill convert into iced coffee,
can be made several hours
before serving, and cooled hi
,a non-metallic container, If
,iyou prefer, slake it double -
:strength al the last minute
and pour into ice -filled
'}glasses. Ile sure the coffee
1s fresh and strong, and that.
Neu serve it with. plenty of
ice in the tallest, frostiest
glasses you can ni a n a g e.
iServe with cream and a
(pitcher of simple syrup or
sugar,
Macaroni Chet's Salad
(6 generous servings)
One 9 -ounce package elbow mac-
ron', 12 stuffed olives, sliced; '/4
Macaroni salad, coffee Jelly and iced coffee pet, up summer -wilted
appetites and can be prepared beforehand,
pound American cheddar cheese,
cubed; 1/4 pound bologna, cubed; 3
tomatoes, quartered; 1 cucumber,
sliced; salad greens, Russian dress-
ing.
salad bowl with salad greens. Tow
with Russian dressing.
Coffee Jelly With Bananas
(6 servings)
One and one -halt tablespoons
Cook macaroni in boiling, salted 'unfavored gelatin, 3 cups strong,
water until tender; drain, rinse hot coffee, 3 tablespoons sherry, 'A
with hot water; chill. Combine cup strong, cold coffee; yz cup
macaroni, olives, cheese, bglpgna, sugar, 2 bananas cut In. /s -inch
tomatoes and cucumber Place In slices.
Soften gelatin in cold coffee., die -
solve in hot coffee. Add sugar,
stirring until dissolved; add sherry.
Chill until set. Place sliced ba-
nanas in serving dishes, cover
with coffee jelly. Serve with light
cream.
Looking for substantial but ensY
'to get luncheon dishes? Well, try
these. They're good.
Fluffy Tomato Rabbit
(4 servings)
One can (lt/4 cups) condensed
tomato scup, 2 cups shredded
American cheese, n/z teaspoon dry
mustard, t6a teaspoon Worcester-
shire sauce, 2 eggs, separated; toast
or crackers.'
Heat soup slowly; add cheese
and heat until melted, stirring
constantly. Add mustard and
Worcestershire sauce to beaten egg
yolks; stir into hot mixture Gently
fold in beaten egg whites and
horouServe on hot
toasteat orthcrackersghly..
Baked Eggs in Tomato Sauce
(4 servings)
One can (PA cups) condensed
tomato soup, 4 eggs, 2 tablespoons
butter, black pepper to taste,
parsley.
Pour 1/4 can tomato soup into
each of four buttered baking cups
or muffin tins, Break an egg into
each; dot each with rh tablespoon
of butter and sprinkle with pep-
per. Bake in a moderate oven
(350 degrees F ) for 20 minutes
Garnish with parsley.
TABLE TAU(S
eictu Ancit.s.
Even during the thirstiest days
04 the years youngsters -and lots
of grownups too -wilt pass up
less nourishing drinks for good,
cool milk, so long as you have
alongside a jar of delicious choc-
olate Syrup for flavoring. And
there's how to stake that syrup
with a minimum of trouble.
* * *
CHOCOLATE SYRUP
1 package semi -sweet chocolate
chips
cup sugar
cup corn syrup
'A cup boiling water
Melt chocolate chips in top of
4ouble boiler, Remove from heat
and stir until blended. Add sugar
and mix well, then add corn syrup
and stir until smooth. Add boiling
water gradually, stirring constant-
ly. Cook over boiling water 2
minutes. Makes 1-1/3 cups sauce.
* •t *
For CHOCOLATE MIL K -
measure 2 tablespoons syrup into
tall glass. Add chilled milk slowly
to fill glass, stirring well. Or shake
together in bottle or shaker. Serve
with chocolate chip macaroons, if
you like.
* Y *
For CHOCOLATE EGGNOG
-prepare chocolate milk and add
it to well beaten egg. Mix well,
* * *
CHOCOLATE FLOAT - is
prepared chocolate milk with about
3 tablespoons of ice cream, vanilla
or chocolate flavour, added. With
coffee ice cream, it becomes CHOC-
OLATE MOCHA FLOAT ..
* * *
MINTED CHOCOLATE
A summer thirst quencher for
grown-ups and youngsters alike,
is MINTED CHOCOLATE. For
•this you add one cup of milk to 2
tablespoons chocolate syrup, stir-
ring constantly. Add 2 to 3 drops
of pepermint extract beat or shake
well, .Pour into tall glass. Top
with 2 tablespoons whipped cream
and serve with a sprig of mint.
If poured over cracked ice, serve at
once. Or, if the ice is to be left
to melt, add more chocolate syrup
to the milk to start with.
• * *
Here is a very quick recipe .. .
giving deep, swirling folds of frost-
ing fit for a banquet cake. And it
makes something very special even
your quickest and easiest cake.
mix cakes!
BROWN VELVET FROSTING
1 package semi -sweet chocolate
chips.
sA cup evaporated milk (undi-
luted.)
Combine ingredients in small
Brazilian Sago -Looping like a
bewhiskered Wiseman, "Mus-
tachio," a rare Imperial mar-
moset, stales his views at the
Bronx Zoo. This species of mar-
moset, rarely seen in captivity
and the first owned by the xoo,
is native to western Brazil.
saucepan. Cook and stir over low
heat until chocolate is melted and
mixture is blended. Bring to a boil
and boil gently 5 minutes, or until
thickened, stirring constantly, Re-
move from heat. Cool, stirring oce
casionally. Makes enough frosting
to cover tops of two 8 -inch layers
or top of 8x8x2-inch cake gener-
ously,
* * w
Ice cream, summer's staple treat,
turns into a super -dessert when
covered with rich chocolate sauce.
For time saving and luxurious fla-
vour combined, it's hard to beat
this quick variation.
* * *
QUICK CHOCOLATE SAUCE
4 squares semi -sweet "candy -
making" chocolate.
4 tablespoons butter.
Melt the chocolate over boiling
water. Add butter, blend. Serve
hot. Sauce may be kept hot over
boiling water. Makes 3' cup sauce.
• * *
For a really "deluxe" dessert,
yet one that's not too hard to make,
just try this.
CREAM SPONGE
•
1 cup sifted cake flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
sA teaspoon salt
2 eggs, separated
3/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
.1 teaspoon lemon juke
2 tablespoons sugar
Sift flour, baking powder and
salt together 3 titres. Add water
and lepton rind to egg yolks and
beat until light and foamy. Add
sugar gradually, beating well after
each addition, then add flour mix-
ture in small amounts, beating to
blend. Beat egg whites until
foamy, then add lemon juice and
sugar and beat until it stands in
peaks. Fold into flour mixture.
Turn into 2 ungreased 8 -inch lay-
er pans and bake 25 minutes at
350° F. invert on cake rack until
cake is cold. Spread lemon cream
filling between layers and sprin-
kle powdered sugar over top.
Serve with lemon cream sauce.
▪ * *
LEMON CREAM SAUCE
AND FILLING
1 cup sugar
5 tablespoons cake flour
1 egg, slightly beaten
t/s cup lemon juice
2/3 cup water
2 teaspoons butter
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
cup whipped cream
Combine sugar and flour; add
egg, then all other ingredients ex-
cept lemon rind and whipped
cream in top of double boiler and
cook 10 minutes, stirring constant-
ly. Chill and add lemon rind and
34 cup whipped cream. Use half
for cake filling. To remaining half,
add the other / cup whipped cream
and use as sauce.
KEEP IT CLOUDY
Beaming with happiness over the
enthusiastic reception his campaign
address had received, the veteran
politician bowed himself off the
stage and into the midst of Isis
faithful co-workers who awaited
him in the wings.
"That speech was great," cried
one starry-eyed supporter. "You
certainly made yourself clear on
the provincial rights question."
"My gosh," muttered the old
campaigner, "what a blunder!"
An embittered acquaintance de-
fines genius as a man who eau earn
money more quickly than hie fam-
ily spends
Parrots Aplenty
With the bald dome of El Viejo
as our guide, we made our way up
the steep and desolate hillside be-
yond the sullen, lifeless lake..". .
It took us four hours to reach the
crest of the ridge beyond. The
view was spectacular; it was heav-
en itself. Twist lakes, iris -blue,
nestled in a field of green, spread-
ing their bays like white -edged
petals of a freshly opened flower.
Against jade green of the jungle
were clusters of scarlet, of flam-
ingo pink, purple, and opalcscept
yellow. There were showers of
gold blossoms, and some that in
the distance looked like falls of
snow.
From the saddle of the crest
where we stood we counted four
more lakes beyond the gems at our
feet. The hot tropic sun burnish-
ed them until each stood forth
like an individual jewel,
Ginger sighed and then said in
almost a whisper, "Whatever else
this unknown jungle holds, there
won't be anything more beautiful
than this."
"Right now," I said, "I can al-
most taste that water. Let's go
get it."
We started forward, machete
blades flashing as they bit through
the growth which clung to the
mountainside.
When we cut through the last
barrier of jungle and stepped onto
the curving shore of a glorious
blue cove, We unshouldered our
packs and sat down at the water's
edge. Both of us were a little
weak in the knees. I felt an emo-
tion so intense it resembled physi-
cal pain, and glanced at Ginger.
She said, "It's no use trying to
say what we're feeling."
I shook my head. "This is one
thing we've planned on, and worked
for, and earned, and hasn't let , us
down a bit."
We stopped talking anis stared at
the unbelievable lowliness around
While we swam lazily, we real-
ized that, whatever else our Para-
dise might offer, it would not be
silence. Continually, it seemed,
there were shrieking flights of par-
rots over us, but it never palled.
We had such a variety: yard -long
red macaws, bright green parro-
kets, not much larger than spar-
rows; moon-faced, graceful con -
tures, and stocky, yellow -shoulder-
ed parrots, so much like the "Pol-
lys" we'd known back home. Gin-
ger and I promised each other that
never would we keep a parrot in
a cage, nor a macaw chained to a
perch -not after seeing them fly
free, with the bright sttn giving
brilliance to their plumage.. .
On the shore of Dana Lake,
we found a high, conical structure
made of huge limestone blocks. The
flats of each terrace were filled with
black earth. At the base of the
cone was what appeared to be a
landing for canoes, and upon its
crest was a small temple of sorts.
The fact that its base and its flat
top were almost perfect circles in
shape, made us wonder if we had
not stumbled upon a Mayan as-
tronomical observatory, For though
they never developed telescopes,
astrolobes, or such, and must have
depended only upon -what the
human eye could see, they had been
amazing astronomers..
By our campfire that night, with
the new moon a tilted crescent over
the slanting silhouette of the pyra-
mid, 1 said to Ginger, "I don't be-
lieve the Mayas ever built with-
out an eye for beauty." --From
"Quest for the Lost City." by Dana
and Ginger Lamb.
MONEY QUIZ ANSWERS
1. (j); 2• (g)1 3. (n); 4. (le); 5.
(a); 6. (a); 7. (b); 8. (o); 9. (c);
10. (41); 11. (e); 12. (t); 13. (p);
14. (d); 15. (r); 16, (I); 17. (1);
It On); 19. (h); 20. (1)•
Mincl The Paint
Take care of your woodwork.
Don't use coarse scouring pow-
der or strong cleaners to clean it.
They may remove or roughen
the smooth outer surfaces of the
paint so that it soils faster and
is more difficult to clean.
Strong alkali can weaken and
also discolor paint. Test any new
cleaning preparation in an incon-'
spicuous place first, and whatever
you use, follow directions carefully,
A mild, neutral soap is satisfac-
tory for washing paint, but if it is
necessary to scour, finely powdered
whiting is one of the best abrasives,
and i -s inexpensive to buy by the
pound at paint or hardware store.
Wash only a small area at a
time, and rinse carefully. Even a
mild soap contains some alkali that
will eventually injure paint if left
on it.
GOOD OLS SUMMERTIME
--From Countryman's Year, by Hoydn 6. Pearson
WHEN a countryman takes a little nooning in the shade of the tree
at the house corner on a July day and looks out over the heat -blanketed
fields, meadows, and pastures he's apt to recall the familiar phrase,
"the good old summertime." In spite of certain discomforts it is a goo4
season of the year.
There's a spirit of tranquility and brooding fulfillment over the
land. The sun hangs like a molten golden ball in the blue sky, Barn
swallows swoop and wheel over the fields; catbirds scold from the hedge
around the garden, and deep in the woods a crow sends forth hie
melancholy, halfhearted call. In the heat of noontime, the cows gather
ander a clump of trees and wait for the sun to lower before grazing
again, The hens congregate beneath the tangle of blackberry vines and
,lust themselves in cool holes in the earth.
One can almost see the corn push higher slay by clay, and the
kitchen garden is lush with greenery. Along the brushy lines of walls
and rail fences the quail rest in the shade and wait for the cool of
evening. The plump, philosophical toads burrow in the moist earth
beneath the tomato and melon vines.
And then in the evening, after a day's work in the )tot sun, the
countryman sits in his favorite rocker on the porch and watches day
turn into night, The swallows dart through the air; the robins carol
their evening song. And as dusk gradually turns into darkness, fireflies
dot the night with red gleams while frogs chant their r enotone sym-
phony. It's a good time of year, a part of Nature's cycle when the
promises of spring are finding fruition in plant and animal life.
MONEY QUIZ
Suppose you were going. to visit all of the countries listed below.
You should know the monetary unit in each case so you could intelligent-
ly convert some of your travelers' checks. Score: 18 or more correctly
matched --very solvent; Id 'to 17 ---you'll get by; 14 or less -better call
in your loans 1
1. Netherlands ( )
2. Finland ( )
3. Germany ( )
4. Japan ( )
5. Spain ( )
6. Russia ( )
7. France ( )
8. Brazil ( )
9. Argentina ( )
10. Austria (
11. Britain ( )
12. Czechoslovakia (
13. Greece ( )
14. Italy ( )
15. Norway ( )
16. Poland ( )
17. Iran ( )
18. Yugoslavia (
19. China ( )
20. India ( )
(Answers
a. Peseta
b. Franc
c. Peso
d. Lira
e. Pound
f, Rial
g. Markka
h. Yuan
1. Zloty
j. Guilder
lt. Yen
1. Rupee
m. Dinar
n. Mark
o. Cruzeiro
p. Drachma
q. Schilling
r. Krone
s. Ruble
t. Koruna
elswhere on this page.)
Famous Home Of Sherlock Holmes
On This Side Of The Atlantic Now
Sherlock Holmes, the famed
detective in the deerstalker hat,
arrived in Manhattan the other
evening from London.
With his friend and companion,
Dr. John Watson, he went straight
to his lodgings at 221-B Baker
Street, and wouldn't say whether
he was there on a case, He just
said his Baker Street rooms look-
ed exactly as he had left them.
This, of coarse, is a bit of fiction,
just as Holrrtes himself is fictional
-.and probably the most famous
character of all time in the world
of detective stories.
On closer inspection, 221-B
Baker Street turned out to be the
Plaza Galleries on 59th Street, but
that, as Holmes would say, is ele-
mental, my dear Watson, Baker
Street is inside, and it's a com-
pletely faithful and authentic re-
production of the room where it
is always 1897.
*• * *
The room has been brought to
America by Adrian Conan Doyle,
son of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle,
the writer who created Holmes
and finally had to kill ]nim off so
lie could return to his other pur-
suits.
To a great many people all over
the world, Sherlock Hobnee is an.
actual person, not just a character
in fiction. Each year, Adrian Conan
Doyle gets frantic and pathetic
pleas for help, all of them address-
ed to Holmes.
When the exhibit here opened,
an elderly lady stopped in an asked
for the great detective. Conan
Doyle explained that -Holmes just
wasn't around, whereupon the lady
grew indignant and red-faced. She
knew quite well he was there, she
said; she'd seen his picture some-
where recently.
As you stand at the railing, look
into the Baker Street study, you
can't help feeling that Holmes and
Watson have just quit the room -
bound, perhaps, for Paddington
Station in a hansom cab,
* * *
It's a room of Victorian charm
and clutter, with Holmes' arm-
chair on one side of the fireplace
and Watson's on the other.
On a long deal table stands a
tray with half -empty teacups, half -
eaten crumpets and napkins just
tossed down. In the silver butter
dish are the bullets Holmes has
carelessly flung there (they were
taken from the body of a man
murdered in 1895), an on the back
of the door, hangs Holmes' deer-
stalker and Inverness, together
with Dr. Watson's tall silk hat and
respectable black coat,
Beside the fireplace k the coal
scuttle where Holmes kept his
cigars; in 000 corner the acid -
stained table at which he worked
out his experiments in chemistry
and next to it, the wax bust of
Holmes, draped about with his
mouse -colored dressing -gown. (The
latter items figured heavily in "The
Empty House,")
There is also the big desk at
which Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
wrote the Holmes stories. On it,
is Holmes' famous magnifying
glass.
* * *
There are various and sundry
other wonderful things in this
cosy root.-: the Persian slipper
holding Holmes' shag tobacco; a
harpoon like the one that killed
Black Peter; cigarettes from the
year 1897; the "agony columns" of
the London newspapers ready and
waiting for Holmes' perusal.
The red velvet curtains are drawn
against the raw and inclement
weather of Baker Street; off-
stage, there are sound' effects of
horses' hooves clip -clopping across
the cobbles.
The game is afoot.
As you leave the lodgings and
find yourself back on 59th Street
again, you'll see a rest car at the
curb, its sides lettered "Holmes
Electric Protection. Burglary Ser-
vice,"
A little modern for Sherlock,
perhaps, but you know alt goes
well in Baker Street,