HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1953-12-10, Page 2Today, instead of recipes, a
little talk about the Christmas
turkey -- how to prepare it,
cook it and, finally, to carve it.
Perhaps it might be an idea to
show the latter part of it to the
one who actually does the carv-
ing.
To deal with pesky p i n
feathers, a strawberry huller
does a commendable job, but st
pair of tweezers is even better
For really "a11 -out" coverage.
however, try coating the bred
with hot paraffin. When hard-
ened, peel off this coating and
most of the pin -feathers, even
the little ones, will come right
off!
If ycu have that sneaking sus-
picion that your bird is a bit
tough; rub it with lemon juice,
inside and out, -before stuffing
Tender treatment, this!
When it comes to stuffing the
bird, use a funnel for a neater,
faster job.
Generally speaking, it is best
to spoon in lightly about 1 cup
of stuffing per pound of the
weight of the turkey. Dressing
.expands during roasting, you
know.
For varied texture and taste
interest, try adding a few crush-
ed potato or corn chips to the
stuffing, along with the bread
crumbs.
Tie a few sprigs of celery un
der the turkey's wings before
roasting. This adds moisture to
the meat, and flavor to both the
meat and the gravy.
4
If roasting the girdin an open
pan, wrap the leg bones and
wing tips with strips of bacon.
so that they won't become char-
red. Bacon adds flavor, too.
If you prefer turkey roasted
in a covered pan, but lack a suit-
ably large container, try this
trick: Beene your gobbler in a
Flag of Hope — Nato's new blue -
and -silver flag rises for the first
time during the recent Atlantic
Exposition in Paris, France. A
blue field, symbolizing the At-
lantic Ocean, forms the back-
ground f or a silver compass,
rose, symbol of the common aims
of NATO member nations, In the
background is the French na-
tional flag,
large cloth bag which has been
saturated in melted shortening;
Place the "bagged turkey" in an
open roaster, and baste through
the bag now and then during the
roasting period.
Another roasting aid. Loose
ly cover the top of the turkey
with a double layer of chem.
cloth, well saturated with melt-
ed shortning. Roast the turkey
slowly, keeping this cloth cover-
ing well saturated with shorten-
ing at all • times. Automatically,
the bird is basted as it roasts.
Later, use this same fat-im
pregnated cloth to wrap about
leftover slices of turkey. It keeps
them far more moist and
palatable.
For a professional look, glaze
the turkey with tart jelly about
le hour before it is completely
done.
When serving the turkey give
the carver a fair break. Place
one of those lacy looking, large,
transparent doilies under and
around the platter to protect the
cloth. Also provide sharp tools,
a finger bowl. and a spare nap-
kin.
Place a side table or teacart
beside the carver to relieve some
of the on -table congestion. Re-
member, too, when placing the
turkey on the table, to have the,
bird fiat on its back with the legs
extending to the carver's right,
and the neck, to the carver's left.
Provide an extra plate to re-
ceive the drum sticks, thighs
and wings, which are cut off
before the body meat is sliced.
,x .
What to do with turkey and
dressing leftovers is a, subject
which has been hashed and re-
hashed — literally as well as
figuratively, Plain sliced turkey
sandwiches are hard to beat,
and broth - moistened dressing,
reheated and served with gravy
is top-flight fare. However, here
are new ideas, for good measure:
Make balls of dressing and
place them around a roast dur-
ing the last 3.e hour of cooking
time.
If some of the family bbjeets
to giblets in the dressing or
gravy, save them out for sand-
wich treats for those who really
appreciate them. For these, com-
bine 1 cup ground, cooked gib-
lets; 1 tablespoon each of finely
chopped onions, green peppers
and pimientos; Ye cup chopped
celery; Ve cup mayonnaise; and
salt and pepper to taste.
k *
Buis Conductor's Find
On Boxing Day ninety-five
years ago Charles Dickens sat in
his study in Tavistock Square,
London, and wrote a letter to a
publisher friend. In it he record-
ed that he had just finished his
"Child's History," having closed
it "because its romantic charac-
ter could not be easily preserv-
ed."
That yellowing letter has just
turned up—in a scrapbook which
bus conductor William R. Hais-
man, of Maidstone, found while
going through the effects of his
mother-in-law who died some
months ago.
"We nearly burned the scrap-
book with a lot. of other old
papers," he said. "What a good
job I decided to dip into it!"
He also found a letter written
by explorer David Livingstone to
a friend before he left for his
famous trip to Africa, where he
was ultimately found by H. M.
Stanley. Nobody knows how the
letters got into the scrapbook.
Gale Manitor--lf you have Tong -winded clients and are pressed
far time, this invention by Harold A. Strand ought to be right up
your alley. Simply place the receiver in the pickup unit and let
phone rest in the cradle. Plunger' in rest automatically switches
on an amplifier, permitting two-way conversation. At the same
time the hands are free to carry on business or to cup over the
oars when the conversation drags.
Taking Manhattan Back?-NeW::Yorkers must have thought the
ofd gag about giving Manhattan back to the Indians had come
true when they saw Chief Pauf'iiorn riding his horse amid Park
Avenue traffic. The chief, a leader of the Mohawk tribe, was just
on his way to the International Children's Bazaar.
A World `" ora
in ?"arb8es
•
To -day trade is , booming in
the marbles business. Almost
overwhelmed by world orders,
British manufacturers are ex ii
porting to 60 countries at the
rate of 100,000,000 marbles •' ,a
year. It's an all -tune record!
When cash is tight there is ex-
tra scope for simple, inexpensive.
pursuits --like marbles playing
That's one reason why the
game his leaped in popularity-- ' )
from China to Peru—in the last
few years. Manufacturers add to
the demand by buying marbles
for industrial uses.
Curiously, people ' who live in
warm climates are the keenest.,',
marbles players. Approaching
the Arctic Circle, it's almost im-
possible to make a sale. But'3
South America—one of the big -:i
gest buyers — and Malaya and
Fiji go for British marbles in a
big way.
There's one difference in the
trade now compared with earlier.
iri the century, when a few clay
marbles were found in .ever";i;
schoolboy's pocket and glass mar-
bles were "luxury goods." Clay
marbles, it seems, had their last
fling during the war, Nowadays,
the manufacturers sell 8 or 9
glass marbles to every clay one.
Just Push a Button,
take Your wn Snow
It's going to be a white Christ-
mas this year whether the
weatherman co-operates or not.
Instead of counting on the fickle
forecaster to provide a Christ-
masy atmosphere, homemakers
are planning to create wintry
settings indoors :with handy
decorating aids that spray syn-
thetic snow at the touch of a
finger. Some are even outdoing
nature by ordering their Christ-
mas snow in bright shades of.
red, green, pink or blue.
Packed in pressure -powered
metal containers, these push-
button aerosols can be used
with striking results on Christ-
mas trees, holly wreaths, par-
cels, table decorations, window
panes and mirrors, And there is
no danger from fire.
A Christmas tree can be gaily
decorated or completely blan-
keted
lanketed with the snowy material.
The ingenious will quickly dis-
cover that a few squirts will
transform such a simple mater-
ials as pine cones and boughs,
sprigs of holly or short lengths
of birch log into attractive table
and mantle decorations.
With a little more patience
anyone can "paint" a Christ-
mas scene or "write" a season's
greeting on a window pane or
mirror, To "paint" a scene, just
prepaye a simple cut-out card-
board mask for each color area
and spray around it. Deep the
design simple by using broad
areas rather than fine lines, be-
cause the fluffiness of the resin-
ous snow doesn't have quite
enough adhesion fe hold in fine
lines when the mask is removed
after spraying.
To "write," spray. within an
inch of the surface. To duplicate
closely Nature's downy flakes,
stand at least 24 inches from the
object being decorated, The
greater the distance, the fluffier
the deposit, Allow five minutes
to dry before handling in all
cases,
Although these Indoor snow
falls are easily removed with a`
whisk, broom or vacuum eleanX
or, areas around items to be
sprayed should, be protected
With newspapers or other cov-
erings. Any stubborn flaks
clinging to surfaces ireperVious
to water can he dislodgeo with
a hot, damp cloth. ,
Canned snow storms are just
one of a long list of recently de-
veloped self -dispensing products
that spray on everything from
paint to perfume. "Freon," a
noir-flammable, virtually non-
toxic and odorless compound
which acts as the eoldmaking
agent in many mechanical ref-
rigerators, provides the propel-
lent pressure in most of these
squirt bombs. The liquified gas
propellant takes the place of
bulky, expensive air compres-
sors to force the contents out of
the can in liquid or foam form.
Shortly to appear are a num-
ber of different preparations for
restoring the lustre and color to
certain types of faded furs.
Some actually dye the fur,
others are specifically designed
for restoring the sheen to older
furs. All, however, require, the
know-how of a professional fur-
rier, for best results in shading.
Art idea That Other
Maces 8 ht Copy
We've ever been among those
who resent the sometime prac-
tice of police authoritity to over-
step its bounds in putting the
pinch on private citizens,
But the combination of Depu-
ty Sheriffs and Highway Patrol-
men who early Sunday' checked
outlying whisky joints and nab-
bed the drunks before they got
behind the wheels of their auto-
mobiles, pis deserving of endorse-
ment. It bears explanation, pos-
sibly, that the officers were not
after whisky, per se,;, but after
those who swill it until all hours
and then try fo drive through a
drunken fog to their homes.
The drive was successful, even
if somewhat embarrassing to
those who were caught indulg-
ing in a little private fun. By
dawn three were jailed for
drunken-driving, eleven for pub-
lic drunkenness, two for having
no drivers' license and another
for maintaining a public nui-
sance. But the important part of
the success was that not a single
traffic accident was reported in
the city and environs between 3
a.m. and 3 p.m. Sunday.
All of which goes to show that
prevention is still the bigger
part of the cure. -- Tulsa World.
Boy Ploughed Up
Fortune In Gold
By el. J. Forrest
In Rome, one day this sum-
mer, lovely, dark -eyed Teresa
Francini was sobbing violently
as her nineteen -year-old fiance
drew away from her. "So you're
leaving me for good!" she cried
&''ter him. White-faced, Ciro
Maragliano hurried to the street
below her flat.
Suddenly, a piercing shriek
rang out, And to his horror he
saw Teresa plummeting down on
to the pavement from an upper
window. Like lightning, he
stepped forward and rook the
full shock of her body. .Both
had minor injuries, bur their'
agonies turned to laughter as
they made up their quarrel in
the old, old way, as in many of
those cases mentioned in the re-
cent Tit -Bits article "Suicide
Leap Lands Girl in Lover's
Arms."
Suicidal intentions, twisted by
fate into a swirl of happiness.
How often joy leaps at us un-
expectedly. You never can tell
how, when or where happiness
may hit you. An ear-splitting
thunderstorm can bring you a
wife; a frisking rabbit lead you
to treasure trove; a smack in the
eye from your partner's tennis
racket can reward you with
romance.
If Fate's exploits are in-
scrutable, so no less baffling is
the sudden way in which the
minx bestows her favours" and
graces.
Manfred Stuehrer, a refugee
from Silesia, lived for a year in
a Bavarian camp, but hard as
he tried he failed to get per-
manent work. He fell in love
with Annerl, a local girl, but
without money or means his
idyll seemed but a mocking
dream. So, a few weeks ago, he
decided to emigrate. Canada ap-
peared a land of golden prom-
ise.
Loose Pools Coupon
Bidding his girl farewell, per-
haps for ever, he hitch -hiked to
Pforzheim, a popular halting
place for cars travelling along
the autobahn to Frankfurt. For
hours he waited. No one offered
him a lift. Then a glamorous
and pretty, though hardfaced
girl motored towards him, But
when he "thumbed" her, she
laughed scornfully, and tossed
him a newspaper, saying:
"Something for you to read."
Infuriated, he settled down to
wait again,.'•
For want of something better
to do, he scanned the news-
paper. A loose football pool
coupon fluttered out of it. He'd
once won a small sum in the
pools, and he casually filled in
a line. Then along swept a very
elegant car, whose driver, a
wealthy factory owner, offered
him a lift. Manfred scrambled in-
side, clutching the football pool
coupon. As they travelled, he
told the other of his ambitions
and disappointments.
At Mannheim, were they
stopped for petrol, the factory
owner noticed a lorry which was
just about to leave for Bremen,
"Quick," he said, "take it and
get to your port for Canada." So
Manfred scuttled off. Finding
himself left with a completed
football pool coupon, the factory
owner posted it after first
writing his name and address
on the bottom. Then miracles
began to happen. Manfred had
filled in a winning line!
Policeman's Good News
The factory owner traced the
lorry which took Manfred to
Bremen, found out it had dump-
ed him at a shipping office, and
'phoned that . office. Then as
Manfred, still waiting for a
boat, lay huddled in his day
clothes on a rough bed in one
.f the city's homes for the desti-
tute, a policeman shook him
vigorously. "Wake up, cheer up
and get up," said the law.
"You've won 17,300 marks
(about £1,500) in a football
pool!"
Stunned by the good luck fate
nad bestowed on him, Manfred
tried to persuade the factory
owner to accept a half share.
No, he must keep it all, And
imagine Anneri's joy when, out
of the blue, he returned to her,
feeling like a millionaire -- and
rich enough, indeed, to lead her
to the altar.
When Great Yarmouth came
in for bombing by the Luft-
waffe, four-year-old Arthur
Rice was evacuated to Woking,
Like any youngster .suddenly
uprooted, he felt unhappy at
first. But he was befriended,
quite by accident, by an Abys-
sinian lady. She took him to
her home on several occasions,
gave him tea, and played with
him in her garden.
His Fairy Godmother
Now seventeen years old, a
machinist assistant employed by
a local timber firm, Arthur had
a shock when, the other day, a
Yarmouth official handed him a
savings bank book. Yes, all the
money in it was for him, put
aside diligently in his name by
his Woking benefactress, a real
princess, though he never guess-
ed it. Though she is dead now,
Princess Asfa Yilma will live for
ever in Arthur's memory as a
real-life fairy godmother.
Fate also smiled kindly cn an-
other Norfolk lad, Ray William-
son of Heacham. Employed by
Sir Stephen Green as a tractor
driver, he was ploughing a field
beside Ken Wood one Novem-
ber day five years ago, when he
suddenly turned up some scraps
of old metal, "bits of derelict
brass bedstead" he supposed
them to be. The farm's foreman,
raking then over, thought dif-
ferently. He asked an archaeolo-
gist from King's Lynn to exam-
ine them,
Then, as experts pored over
these pieces, their eyes glinted.
Here, they saw, were sectors of
tubular gold necklets, beauti-
fully fashioned chieftain's wear
in the Iron Age, 2,000 years ago.
rare treasures indeed. .
Happiness in Disguise
Thoughhis chance find was
declared "treasure trove,"' and
as such the Crown's property,
the British Museum rewarded
Ray with cheque for £400.
Two years later, another of
Sir Stephen's 'ploughmen,
twenty - two - year - old Tommy
Rout, turned up in the same
treasure "seam" an even finer
hoard of gold necklets. And his
reward from the British Muse-
. urn was a cheque for £1,850!
Happiness often assumes a
craftily masked, even painful
disguise. Sybil Thorndike, as a
young girl, had set her mind on
becoming a professional pianist.
But a broken wrist cut short
her ambition. "I must now
study for the stage," she told
herself. And so, a magnificent
career was launched,- one hold-
ing all lovers of classic act-
ing in its debt to -day.
A woman told her doctor she
was sure she had an obscure ill-
ness, He advised her not to be
foolish, that she couldn't possib-
ly know whether she had it. The
disease, said he, carried with it
no discomfort whatever.
"But, doctor," she protested,
"that's exactly how I feel."
Old Names Revived -- Here is an artist's impression of the first of two new 22,000 -ton luxury ves-
sels now under construction at Clydebank, Scotland, and designed for the service of The Cunard
Steamship Company limited between the United Kingdom and Quebec and Montreal. The Cunard
Line announced today that for the two new ships it has been decided to revive the names of two
former Cunarders that were famous during the early, part of this century, the "SAXONIA" and
the "IVERNIA."