The Brussels Post, 1960-07-14, Page 6TA LE, TALKS
Y 2Jai Amitzwsa
SAD JOURNEY — A somber Princess Grace of Monaco and her
husband, Prince Rainier, arrive at the Kelly home in Philadel-
phia. They came from Europe to attend the funeral of Grace's
father, John B. Kelly Sr., who died of cancer.
Haw the Ice Cream
busine4s Grew
lice cream may have been, the
invention of the Roman emperor
Nero, who sent his slaves to get
mow from the Alps and flavor
to his taste, Or again, Marco
polo may have been right when
be claimed, that the recipe he
;Drought back from the Far Beat
had been in use in Asia for
thousands of years. Historians
disagree about the origin of ice
cream, but certainly the devel-
opment of the industry is char-
acteristically American,
It began in the mid-nineteenth
century when a Baltimore dairy-
man found the answer to the
regular summer problem of all
city dairymen — an excess of
milk during the summer season
when the cows give the most
milk and the customers go away
on vacations. Jacob Fussell, long
before the era, of commercial
give-aways and opinion sampling,
had several gallons of milk
fr,ozen and delivered to his
friends, Backed up by some news-
paper advertising, this local pub-
licity campaign brought in so
many orders that the dairy end
of the business was soon aban-
doned, and the original ice-cream
Industry established.
The trek westward of that era
and the development of cities in-
creased the demand for ice
cream. But at that time it was
frozen by the hand-cranking
method. One of the early manu-
facturers wrote from Iowa that
"on the Fourth of July we ship-
ped out 300 gallons of ice cream
— all frozen by hand." A weary
task even for rugged individual-
ists! And so for the first fifty
years most of the "boughten" ice
cream was made on a small scale
by local manufacturers.
With the turn of the century
people in all lines of work be-
came invention-minded. An ice-
cream manufacturer noticed that
at a nearby oil refinery wax
was being chilled with brine
cooled by an ammonia compres-
cor. So when he had an argu-
ment with the man who deliver-
ed his ice, he bought a similar
unit and adapted it to ice cream.
This was the first brine freezer.
Soon afterward came electric
power and all its adaptations.
Mrs. Joseph E. Davies unwit-
tingly started a new and import-
ant angle to the ice-cream indus-
try when her husband was ap-
pointed ambassador to the Soviet
Union. Although there were 1,000
bottles of wine and mineral
waters stored in the cellar of
Spasso House in Moscow, she
knew they would never take the
place of ice cream. The equip-
ment for making it could easily
be shipped and installed. But
what about the cream?
The president of the Certified
Milk Producers' Association
heard of the predicament and
came forth with the answer. A
"quick-freezing" method had
been discovered which prevented
the harmful bursting of food cells
and had preserved meat, fish,
and vegetables for several years.
tome laboratory research had
been done on milk, but had never
been put to use. Now 2,000 pints
of cream were frozen and made
ready for shipment to Russia.
News of the project spread to
the Soviet Consulate.
"Contrary to popular belief,
there are cows in Russia," came
a huffy retort from one of the
secretaries.
The State Department in. Wash-
ington brought some diplomacy
to bear upon the situation, and
explained that it was not unusual
for diplomats to take their na-
tional- delicacies to their new
posts, Russians, for example,
brought their caviar and vodka.
So it was agreed that the electric
freezers and frozen cream should
precede the Davies to their new
residence.
According to the trade journal,
Certified Milk, this was the first
commercial attempt to preserve
milk by freezing, It is new an
important economy in the ice-
cream industry, and a boon to
the farmer and dairyman, who
can dispose of the overflow at
the most productive season,
writes Natalie Force in the Chris-
tian Science Monitor.
Painting the lily had added
greatly to the commercial suc-
cess of ice cream. It began in
1874 when ice cream first met
soda water at a Philadelphia
fair. Soda water, the most popu-
lar drink of that era, was com-
posed of cream, syrup, and car-
bonated water. When a dispen-
ser of soft drinks ran out of
cream he sent an order to a
nearby confectioner f o x ice
cream. Then because the custo-
mers kept rushing him, he figer-
ed he had to push the stuff in
whale, Ice-cream sodas became
the sensation of the fair.
The sundae was the product of
our Sabbath day "blue laws."
When the city fathers of Evans-
ton, Illinois, turned their atten-
tion to the soda fountain, a new
delicacy was improvised for Sun-
day consumption, Many of the
customers preferred their ice
cream and syrup minus the car-
bonated water, and the demand
continued throughout the week,
The sundae has always given the
creative customer the added thrill
of self-expression.
But it was the ice-cream cone
and, the World's Fair in 1904
which really turned the stream
of business ingenuity into a gush-
ing tide. Since the ice-cream
cone, novelties for the soda foun-
tain, street hawking, and the
home have been appearing in
endless variety, Altogether they
account for about half of the ice
cream sold.
Can't Sneeze At
This World's Record
Seven men sat down at a long
table in Bavaria recently with
boxes of snuff between them.
At a given signal they began
to take the snuff steadily—pinch
by pinch. Every time a man
sneezed he dropped out of the
contest.
The winner of this strange
competition was a middle-aged
German who sniffed up about
an ounce and a half of snuff
without sneezing once, a world
record — one not to be sneezed
at!
Snuff, which is simply a pow-
dered preparation of tobacco,
is sold today in about thirty
varieties, and a moderate snuff
taker uses about an ounce of it
a week.
More women are said to be
taking to snuff, and it is also
alleged to be getting popular
with many teenagers — whom
some people are always quick to
associate with any new "addic-
tion!"
There's a shop in London that
sells snuff from the same jars
and shelves that were there in
the days of .the Regency dandy,
Beau Brummel. It's known that
Queen Victoria disapproved of
snuff-taking and would frown
it she saw anyone produce a
snuff-box, however tiny, at a.
Court social function.
Imagine being buried in snuff.
It happened to a Mrs. Margaret
Thompson, whose funeral in 1776
was the strangest ever seen in
London. In accordance with her
will she was laid in her coffin
on a bed of handkerchiefs and
her body was covered with
snuff.
Instead of black, her bearers,
all snuff-takers, wore snuff-
coloured hats.
Mrs. Thompson's elderly ser-
vant, Sarah, who, like her mis-
tress, loved snuff, walked in
front of the funeral procession,
distributing large handfuls of
snuff to spectators and sprinkl-
ing snuff on the ground every
twenty yards.
ISSUE 29 -- 1960
latest News
From Outer Space
This may seem a. little acad-
emie, but when you're beadle&
toward Jupiter in some space
ship, leek out for the radiation
belt — it's a hundred times
stronger' than the belt surround-
ing Earth, This is according to
recent reports from the radio
astronomers, who find out. such
things by listening to the static
from the planets.
Jupiter emits about three bil-
lion watts of radio noise on the
100 megacycle band. The radia,
tion is thought to come from
electrons trapped by Jupiter's
magnetic field — similar to that
of the Earth but about ten times
stronger. The same big planet
also broadcasts in the 20 mega-.
cycle band! this is supposed to.
be caused by electric storms in
the Jovian atmosphere,
Radio telescopes have also
penetrated the atmosphere of
Venus, but the news is not too
good for future immigrants. The
surface temperature is thought
to be about 585° F. and the
nights aren't much cooler, At
this temperature there won't be
any water on the surface; it's all
in the atmosphere, superheated
steam,
Latest thought on the Moon is
that our prime satellite has the
trace of an atmosphere — a few
molecules of hydrogen and ar-
gon, produced when - protons
from the sun bombard the rocks.
Clearly the thing to do is move
part of the atmosphere on Venus
(which has too much) to Mars
and to the Moon (which have
very little). Until this is done,
the prospects for building sub-
divisions on the closer planets
seem doubtful. — Fr.om Imperial
Oilways.
JUST FOR FUN — The reinforced
concrete gadget was cal led
"Circles and Shapes" by the
sculptor, but it's just for fun
to these lads in Bad Godes-
berg, Germany.
This Lie Made Him
A World Champion
Keeping a perfectly straight
face, the bronzed young Texan
calmly told the tall story which
was to win him the title:
"World's Champion Liar for
1960."
"You may remember, gentle-
men, that it was very hot and
close last summer," he told a
panel of judges, members of the
Burlington Liars' Club, Wiscon-
sin,
"Well, there was so little wind
en my ranch that I had to take
down two windmills in order
to leave enough breeze to oper-
ate the third," he added, quietly,
His judges gasped — with ad-
miration. The Texan's big lie had
left them, like the windmills,
breathless! It had beaten the tall
stories of all the other competi-
tors. He was "lying" first in the
club's annual competition!
The Burlington Liars' Club
was founded in 1929 — that is a
fact! Its enthusiastic members
are devoted to "the perpetua-
tion, encouragement and honour-
able recognition of the tall
story,"
The man who supervises the
panel that selects the champion
liars every year is 0, C. Hulett.
He boasts proudly that he's a
connoisseur of good lies.
Mr, Hulett admits that there's
no foundation for any of his
favourite Whoppers, but he en-
joys recounting them. There"s
1116 elle about a fernier who
planted an acre of watermelons.
There was a good market for
melons and he thought he was
going to get rich quick, but, It
didn't work out that way.
"Ile had such good sell and
the vines grew so fast that they
wore the melons out dragging
them along the ground," added
the story-teller,
More than a hundre years ago,
a group of colonists sighted
what they took to be the omin-
ous sign of Indians on the war-
path — a red flag flying from
the top of a tall dead tree, Ap-
proaching cautiously they dis-
covered the supposed , flag to be
a huge split salmon. Further
investigation revealed that it
had been fastened to the tree to
advertise fresh fish for sale. The
story does not tell whether or
not they bought a fish, but if
they did, chances are that they
cooked and served it in this old-
fashioned way.
A whole 10- to 20-pound dress-
ed salmon was frequently rub-
bed with salt, pepper, and a
little powdered thyme, wrapped
in several thicknesses of wrap-
ping paper, and baked in a slow
oven for 3 to 4 hours. The paper
was then cut open and pulled
back, skin coming off along with
it. Comnionly it was served hot
with an egg sauce and accom-
panied by boiled new potatoes
and baby peas.
Over the years methods of fish
merchandising and fish cookery
have changed somewhat. How-
ever, the baked salmon-green
pea-new potato combination is
still a popular one for an early
summer meal. If you would like
to try it, here are up-to-date
directions for cooking the fish,
together with a recipe for a
delicious egg sauce.
Oven-Steamed Fresh Salmon
Wipe a whole dressed salmon
or a piece , of salmon with a
damp cloth and measure its
thickness at the: thickest part.
Sprinkle the cavity with salt
and pepper, then wrap the fish
in an envelope of heavy duty
aluminum foil which has been
.greased on the inside. Secure
each seam with a double fold
and pinch to make the package
steam tight. Place package on
a baking sheet and bake in a hot
oven at 450°F. Allov' 10 min-
utes cooking time for. each inch
of thickness of the fish, plus an
extra 5 minutes for the period it
takes heat to penetrate. foil. You
will know • that the salmon is
Cooked when the flesh down to
the back bone has lost its, watery
look and, has taken on a paler
Opaque hue, At this time it will
flake easily if tested with a fork,
Egg-Caper Sauce
2 tablespoons butter
1 1/2 tablespoon flour
1 cup milk
H. teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons capers
1 hard-cooked egg, chopped
2 teaspeons lemon juice
Dash white pepper
Melt butter. Blend in, flour
turd stir until smooth. Gradually
STRIPPED Teweririg rriaas
of Japanese training ship Nip-
pon Maru are d bare as a
dead ChristMat tree, The four-
masted barque furled sails as
if docked' in New Yorki
stir in milk. Cook and stir over
medium heat until mixture
thickens, Add remaining ingre-
dients. Serve hot, Makes 11/2
cups sauce.
Easterners and Westerners vie
as to the merits of their salmon.
However, whether your salmon
comes from the Atlantic or Pa-
cific area, the following is a de-
licious way to prepare it.
Salmon, Fisherman's Style
1 pound fresh salmon
11,4 cups cold water
1 teaspoon salt
ys teaspoon pepper
1 stalk celery, chopped
1 slice onion
6 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour
medium potatoes
2 medium onions
Remove skin and bone from
salmon and place in a saucepan.
Cut salmon into 1-inch squares
and set aside while preparing a
sauce. Add water,' salt, pepper,
celery and slice of 'onion to the
salmon trimmings. Heat to sim-
mering temperature and simmer
uncovered 15 to 20 minutes.
Strain stock. Melt 2 tablespoons
of butter over hot water, blend
in flour, and gradually stir in
stock. Cook, stirring constantly,
until sauce thickens. Set aside
to keep hot.
Peel and dice potatoes and
slice onions thinly. Heat. 2
tablespoons of butter. Add vege-
tables and cook gently until
tender. In .another pan heat the
remaining 2 tablespoons of but-
ter. Add the salmon chunks and.
,fry-until cooked, i.e., until fish
has lost its watery look becom-
ing opaque, and will flake easily
on testing with a fork. Combine
cooked salmon with potato and
onion. Place mixture around
edge of a heated serving dish
and pour sauce in centre. Gar-
nish with parsley, if desired:
Makes 2 to 3 servings. •
Any warm summer day is
reason enough for a new theme
in lunching—perhaps a cool
seafood salad. Most varieties of
fish and shellfish make delicious
cold plates, and incidentally
menu possibilities are not limit-
ed to canned fish such as sal-
mon, tuna, and sardines. Perhaps
it will be news to you that fil-
lets Of cod, haddock, sole, pick-
erel, and the like make very
tasty salads when cooked, -chill-
ed, and combined with garden
ingredients.
Good ways to cook fillets for
use in salads are by baking en-
cased in a covering of alumin-
um foil, and by steaming. For
best results cook and cool the
fish as shortly before serving
time as is convenient, and bring
out its good flavour by liberal
use of salt, lemon juice, and
fresh garden herbs. If flaking it
and mixing it with' other ingre-
dients, take care not to break it
up excessively. It is more at-
tractive left in fork-size chunks.
Minted Fish Salad
I pound fish fillets cooked'
and flaked (2 cups flaked)
teaspoon salt
l/ teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons lemon ,Mice
2 tablespoons chopped fresh.
IhtalthiletanoonS chopped parsley
Lettuce
ettp Mayonnaise
Client-Ober slices
Ton-tato Wedges
Season fish With, salt and pep-
per and sprinkle with lemon
juice, Add herbs, reserving 2
teaspoons of Mixed parsley and
mint for a garnish. Conibitie
mixture gently, Chili. Divide
fish mixture into four equal por-
tions and mound portions ill let-
tuce Cups on. four serving plates,
Coat each, mound with ineyon,
nape and sprinkle with remain-
ing mixed parsley arid mint,
Gentian each plate with crisp,
cucumber slices and wedges of
tomato, Makes 4 servings,
Semmes Seagerden
1 pound fish fillets, cooked
teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon lemon juice
chopped eelery
2 tablespoons chepped pickle
tablespoons chopped onion
2 hard-cooked eggs, chopped
cup salad dressing
2 tomatoes ctit in, wedges
Drain fish well and break into
good-sized chunks. Sprinkle with
salt and lemon juice; chill.
Combine all ingredients except
the lettuce and tomato wedges,
taking care not to break the fish
into small pieces, Serve on let-
tuce and garnish with tomato,
Makes 4 servings,
Tuna Towers For Two
Because of its delicious flav-
our and modest price, canned
tuna is a popular salad ingredi-
ent, Some summer day when
_minutes fly and it's meal time in
no time, serve a quick and easy
main dish like Tuna Towers.
Just zip open a can of tuna,
slice some salad vegetables,
stack, garnish, and it's ready!
Tuna Towers
1can (7 ounces) tuna
2 tablespoons chopped celery
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
2 cups shredded lettuce
2 large thick slices tomato
2 stuffed olives
Drain and flake tuna. Add
celery and 2 tablespoons of may-
onnaise; combine well. Arrange
a cup of shredded lettuce in a
round on each' of two serving
plates, Top each round with a
thick slice from a large tomato.
Divide the tuna mixture into
two equal portions and mould
each portion by pressing it into
a measuring cup (1/2 cup size)
or a tea cup. Unmould on tom-
ato slices. Garnish each "tow-
er" with a dab of mayonnaise
and a stuffed olive. Makes 2
servings.
Those Maritimers
Know Their Stuff
As everybody knows, Mari-
timers are very fond of munch-
ing on, seaweed, which they call
"dulse". A couple of Japanese
scientists may have found the
reason: mix seaweed• with water
and you have a good substitute
for whole blood.
Doctors Tomoda and Inokuchi
of Kyushu University Medical
School extract a gelatinous sub-
stance called alginon 'from the
cells of the giant brown seaweed.
It seems that alginon is com-
posed of large protein molecules,
which stay inside the body cells,
keeping up the blood pressure;
it has had no harmful effects.
A Little Boy
• In .014 Jerusolem
Oblast its. -crumbling nine-
teenth-century walls, the district
of Mee...811(1'110M Jau rr d r e 4
gates), in the northeast section,.
of Jerusalem, stubbornly clings
to the past. through its maze of'
cobbled streets shuffle hundreds
of long-bearded, side-curled men
in black eaftans and fur-trim*
med hats which date back to
the Middle Ages, These are the
members of "Naturei. Karts"
(Aramaie. for "guardians of the
city"), by far the most extreme,
and fanatical of all Jewish
Orthodox sects. While awaiting
the Messiah, they dedicate their
lives to studying the Torah all&
the Talmud, and endlessly re-,
peating the litanies of despair
that their people have chanted
throughout the long ages.:
A ghetto itself, pungent with,
decaying street garbage and
noisy with the braying of don-
keys, the bleating of goats, Mea-
She'arim is an embarrassment to
the Socialist leaders of modern
Israel and an abiding nuisance
to the police. For Mea,-She'arim.
Protects its own, Take the case
of G-year-old Yosef .Schulimae
cher, who was taken into the
district three years ago by his
grandfather, Nehmen Shtarkes.
The son of Alter and I d
Schulunacher, whO had just ar-
rived from. Russia, the boy was
given into his grandfather's care
until the penniless parents could
establish a home for him.
Grandfather put him into a che-
der, a school where he was
taught only religious subjects..
But when the boy's father was
finally making money, grandpa
refused to give him up, He said
Schuhmacher's job as a wom-
en's • tailor was religiously ob-
jectionable and he refused to
allow little Yosef to go to a
state school because there he
would be taught subjects other
than .religion.
The parents got a supreme
court or der demanding the.
child's release. But Zvi Pessah
Frank, Jerusalem's chief rabbi,
countered, with • a proclamation
that anyone helping hide the
boy from his secular parents
was performing a mitzvah, or
meritorious service. Grandfather
Shtarkes was arrested for ignor-
ing the court's order but still he
steadfastly refused to say where
he had hidden Yosef.
Last month, after making 300
separate raids on hide-outs in
Mea-Shearim, the police gave
it up as 'hopeless. Yosef's par-
ents asked that the search be
ended and meekly agreed to let
Yosef stay with his grandfather,
if.they could only visit him from
time to , . time
Grandfather Shtarkes agreed,
produced the child and sent him
back to the cheder, The case was
closed. Sel ah •
t;S. A BALL.— Traditiarial phone booth wrapped up in a plastid
Ai in Stockholm, Sweden, 'all& tarisund leans Inia ilia. bubble
triti make' a call.
Trio For Travel
A Trtib OP TOPS to MIX and switch are a fashion gold thine for
the Well-planned travel Wardrobe, Cool, bright, easy-to-sew, they
go Irani suitcase to sight-seeing without pressing, thanks to a
fabric of "bacron" polYester fiber and cotten. Printed Pattern
4993 comes Half Sites 141/2 to 241/2 , Send Fifty Cents (stamps
cannot bd accepted, use. postal note for' safety)' for each pettett.
Send to Alma Adams, Box t, 12:1 Eighteenth St., New Toronto,
Ont. Please print plainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS, SITY.,t
'bind SJZ1i