The Brussels Post, 1961-05-18, Page 2TABLE TALKS
S
•Warlcia Ike Work VOCS dii
BAKED HALIBUT STEAKS topped with spears of freshly cook-
ed asparagus and splashed with a golden Hollandaise, sauce,
make a tasty and colourful spring treat-
y.
When Breakfasts
Were Breakfasts I
'The ether night, teem, my ver-
nal applications in the anger
bush, I came into the kitchen
prepared to make up for dinner
and supper, and a$ I washed at
the sink I heard from the front
room the soothing wands of a
professional protagonist who was
advocating breakfast. If you
would eit, down and eat the
breakfast he was presently ex-
pounding o n television, y 0 U
would rise a better man, and you
Would find that by some miracle
of modern wonderment it would
sustain and further you even
though it contained no appreci-
able nourishment.
The old-fashioned breakfast
thus seems to become ponder-
able, and with the great appetite
surrounding me as I listened to
his suggestions, I found his re-
marks revolting.
It is easy enough to hit the
right keys here and typewrite
that a good breakfast used to
start with a dish of prunes, con-
tinue with thick overnight oat-
meal slathered in Barbados mo-
lasses and bright cow's cream
that you dipped from a bowl
with a tablespoon; after which
you would have at least two fried
eggs, a palm of thick home- and
„sugar-cured ham lightly brown-
ed, a jorum of fried potatoes,
bread and butter, a piece of pie,
two-three glasses of unhomoge-
nized and unanything milk, and
two plain doughnuts to sop in a
nappie of warmed maple syrup.
This was the foundation for the
day, and while it might wear off
by 10:30 or 11:00 it would never-
theless keep you. reasonably sus-
tained until you could sit down
to a real meal.
Breakfast was never taken,
lightly. As the warriors of old,
girded their armor and strode
forth, so did the Mair e farmer
assume his breakfast and do
mighty deeds. I remember once
we were discussing favorite
foods, and while some held to
the roast of beef and others to
the lobster, with the chicken pie
also represented, one, old ,fellow
hove a sigh and said, "Break-
fast." We knew what lie meant.
It isn't important what goes with
it, but breakfast is the keystone
of well-being. Ingestion. was ap-
plied to affairs then, and affairs
were demanding.
The oatmeal, back then, was
oatmeal; a distinction lost on
moderns. The quick-cooking roll-
ed oats confuse us. At supper-
time, before the dishes were
"done," and while the wood-
burning stove was still hot,
they'd start the breakfast oat-
meal. An odd stick of wood
would be thrust in, to promote
simmering, and by bedtime
breakfast was thus started. This
carried today into tomorrow; it
was a salute to expectations, a
prudent preparation for continu-
ity. It gave you something to
look forward to. And in the
morning, after the fire had been
kindled and before the "kittle"
sang, the oatmeal would be
heated again and ready. It was
stirred now and then, to keep it
from catching on and skimming
over. It gave the family some-
thing to do while the eggs were
cooking.
Prunes operated on some the-
ory that fruit was good for us,
We had oranges at Thanksgiving
and. Christmas, but ate them be-
cause it was Thanksgiving and
Christmas—not because of ascor-
bic acid. And there was an ac-
cepted difference between pru-
nes at breakfast and preserved
fruit at other meals for dessert.
We always had all kinds of
home-packed plums and pears
and berries, but they were for
fun eating, arid prunes remained
a hard-working breakfast item,
pryieg was ,a stand-up 10 of
some duration, and the result
WAS a magnificent platter dom-
inated by the eggs, which $aaed
up at you in glad splendor, The
golden shafts of the rising sun,
for all this took place in an
easterly kitehen At al) early mos
enent, would thrust in et the cur-
tainless windows and become
Magnified in, the platter's shin-
ing glory,
The bread was homeabaked,
often of a size so each slice was
quartered and still bigger than
a slice of today's blown-up :fuzz,
and the butter was yellow as a
bower of blossoms and stilt
throbbing from its native spank-
ing. The ham, too, was manufac-
tured in the precinct, lovingly
encouraged in a brine of brown
sugar and salt, tidily sewn in
flannel for ripening in the oat
bin, and then lightly smoked
over corncobs and juniper tips
until all of us wondered what
the poor people ate.
The potatoes, may I add, were
judged by their pink skins 'and
the pop-open texture of their in-
nards, but their excellence for
other meals was always exceed-
ed by their breakfast preemin-
ence--we boiled them alive and
then diced them for frying in
ham fat, That an onion was per-
mitted to accompany them on
this last safari was fitting, and
a great honor to all.
Of course, all this had to do
with time and purpose, That we
had been up for two hours, and
had done the barn chores was a
factor of time, not counting that
the morning was to be long and
occupied. The purpose was plow-
ing and harrowing, lumbering
and cordwooding, moving rocks
and building wall, teaming and
tedding, and the joyous travail
of man against the reluctant
bounties of nature. The prospect
of finding yourself in the far lot,
"prising" rocks and stumps and
too feeble to lift the prize, was
to be guarded against. You did
this by eating a good breakfast.
Something that would stay by
you, and bring you to the dinner
table with strength enough to
eat. By John Gould in the Chris-
tian Science Monitor. •
LAST SALUTE TO
DEAD HEROES"
Australians are a tough, un-
sentimental people. But war
heroes "down under" are proper-
ly honoured and not ignored or
despised as happens far too often
in other countries, The Victorian
Dunkirk Veterans' Association
now intends to use sand from
the very beach of the immortal
last ditch withdrawal as a token
of respect at the passing of each
comrade.
After officials had collected
the sand recently. lVf. Paul Asses
man, Mayor of Dunkirk, sealed
it inside a hand-carved wooden
casket, which was then mailed to
Australia.
Whenever some sand from the
casket is used for sprinkling over
the grave of a Dunkirk veteran,
a disc bearing the soldier's name
and regiment will replace it,
When the last of the veterans
has received this act of homage,
the casket will be resealed and
returned, with discs as its filling,
to France. With it, the Associa-
tion intends to send a testament
certifying that the sand from
Dunkirk rests now and for ever
in the graves of those who fought
to defend its beaches.
Mr. Pastry, alias Richard
Hearn, tells us that there are
occasionally some snags about
having a dual identity, Apparent-
ly his wife is often addressed as
`Mrs. Pastry,' and his two daugh-
ters have been referred to as the
two •tartlets!
From now until summer, fresh
Pacific halibut will be appearing
in good supply on food markets.
In eastern Canada some fresh
halibut will also be available.
Firm, meaty halibut is one of
the most highly prized of the
white-fleshed fish and in fresh
form is notably a spring delicacy.
HALIBUT •
HOLLANDAISE
2 pounds fresh halibut steaks
y2 teaspoon salt
Dash pepper
2 tablespoons butter
1 pound asparagus
freshly cooked
Sauce:
3 egg yolks
IA teaspoon salt
tablepsoons lemon juice
ad cup butter, melted
Ve cup boiling water
Cut steaks, if necessary,' to
give 4 serving-size portions, Sea-
son with salt and pepper, Place
in. a shallow, greased baking
dish and dot with butter. Bake.
in a hot oven at 450°F. until the
flesh will easily separate into
flakes when tested with a fork.
Allow about 10 minutes cooking
time per inch thickness of the
steaks. Meanwhile cook aspa-
ragus and prepare sauce.
For convenience the sauce may
be prepared in, advance and then.
reheated over hot water before
serving time. Make it this way.
Beat egg yolks lightly. Add salt
and lemon juice. Stir in melted
butter and then boiling water.
Place mixture over hot, but not
boiling water. Cook and stir for
5 minutes, or until thickened,
When steaks are cooked, re-
move to a heated platter and top
each portion with a bundle of
hot, freshly cooked asparagus,
Ladle with a ribbon of Hollan-
daise sauce. Serve remaining
sauce at the table. Makes 4
servings. a „
Those who like onion with
their fish will enjoy this recipe
which again points up the tech-
nique of using high oven heat
for a short period to cook fish.
Marinating the halibut first,
seasons it delightfully.
HALIBUT ISLE ROYALE
2 pounds fresh halibut steaks
1 teaspoon salt
la teaspoon paprika
Few grains cayenne
Alice of 1 lemon
3"i cup finely chopped onion
2 tablespoons butter, melted
Green pepper strips
(optional)
If steaks are large, cut them
into serving-size portions. Place
in a single layer he a shallow
dish. Combine salt, paprika,
cayenne, and lemon juice. Pour
this mixture over steaks. Mar-
inate in refrigerator for 1 hour,
turning at half time to permit
seasonings to penetrate both
sides. Cook onion in butter until
limp but not browned, Place
marinated steaks in a shallow,
greased baking dish and spread
with onion. If desired, garnish
each portion with several thin
strips of green pepper. Spoon
remaining butter from frying
pan over steaks. sake in a hot
oven at 450'F. until flesh will
easily separate into flakes on
testing with a fork. Allow about
10 minutes coo,king time per
inch thickness of the steaks.
Serve piping hot. Makes 4 to 6
servings,
A quick, easy, and delightfuls
ly different way to prepare hali-
but steaks is to broil them and
setwe with a ripe olive sauce.
)311011E0 HALIOUT
ItiPt (AWE, SAIICV
2 One& fresh halibut eteake
1 teblestiodits better, Melted
1 teasmidii salt
1 teaspoon' paprika.
Hash Pepper'
:q tut) batter, inttiot
z tablesporms kitten Pike
1:4 cup pitted, chopped ripe
blivee
tithieseision chopped parsley
If Meeks are large, cut iiito
portions. Cointiltie
butter, salt, peprikeelland pepper,
Place steaks on a greased broiler
pan; brush with seasoned butter.
Broil about 3 inches from the
source heat for 4 to 8 minutes,
or until slightly browned. Turn
carefully, baste with remainder
of seasoned butter, and broil 5
to 8 minutes longer, or until fish
flakes easily when tested with a
fork, While fish is broiling, pre-
pare sauce by combining all in-
gredients and heating. Serve
over hot, broiled fish. Makes 4
to 6 servings,
* *
Many western cooks use sour
cream to advantage when they
cook halibut. The following re-
cipe is am excellent example. In
• it the sour cream does two nice
things for the ftih, It adds a
desirable tartness and the neces-
sary fat for baking.
HALIBUT COUNTRY STYLE
2 pounds fresh halibut steaks
54. teaspoon salt
1/6 teaspoon pepper
1/2 cup finely chopped green
anions and their tops
IA pint dairy sour cream
Season steaks with salt and
pepper. Place, single layer deep,
in a shallow greased baking dish,
Cover withfinely chopped green
onions and their tops. Spread
steaks and topping with sour
cream. Bake uncovered in a,
moderate oven at 360°F, for 30
minutes. Makes 4 to 6 servings.
+.0
Dog Lovers Of
Various Sorts
Rather than aban- don three of
her four ageing dogs, a forty-
one-year-old widow decided to
face the threat of eviction from
• her council house.
"I shall light. I cannot give up
my pets," declared the widow,
who was ordered by Woking-
ham, Berkshire, rural council to
quit her home and invited to
move to another nearby.
"Scores of people have offered
to look after them," saes the
widow, "but I know my pets
would only pine eor me and die."
Her devotion is typical of that
shown to their pets by many
owners to-day. Not long ago, a
fourteetieyear-old Leeds boy ran
away from home with his mon-
grel, Rusty, when he heard the
neighbours were organizing a
petition to have the dog destroy-
ed because it chases cats.
Ile told a fourteen-yea, -old
pal about the petition and they
decided to take Rusty into the
depths of Yorkshire instead of
going to school one day.
Taking with. them a few shil-
lings, some tinned fruit and jam,
a loaf of bread and a flask of
tea—and Rusty--the boys caught
a bus to Ilkley, leaving them
with very little money.
It started to rain and the run-
aways camped under a tree be-
side a river, They lit a fire and
drank some of the river water.
'gusty Was well wrapped up in a
blanket.
Their escapade ended forty-
eight hours later when a police-
Man spotted them, and they wete
taken hot. But, all ended hap-
pily, for the police ekplained to
the boys that a dog can be dee
stroyecl only on• a court'odder,
tar being otit of control.
Wet 2O Ott
.England's Scarcest
Prink4P1.a.ip WatOr
It has taken All act of Parlia.„
Ment to do it-,..but now it's .offi-
eiaL You can insist on a glass of
water in a British restaurant!
More accurately', the govern-
ment has accepted en amend.
ment to the LiCensine B U mats.
ing it a POIldition that drinking
water must be available equally
with intoxicating liquor in li-
censed restaurants in this: coun-
try,
meS:t1,4D
th
r!.D7oriojelsld"d%ttllsle.onaitn"eintcli..;
a restrictive practice of the
worst kind that when you pay
between le.2 ($5.60) and, '43
($8.40) for lunch you cannot get
a glass or waters"'
at aainny,_Bwriil tl knp,s4-0wa ai:x4Ye i tsllyt o rs t
whatBri
he .means. American tourists in
particular, when they stay here,
find they develop an insatiable
• thirst, It soon dawns on them
that the familiar tinkling glass.
of water beside their plate at
mealtimes simply isn't there.
Moreover, when they ask for
it, the water is not always forth;
coining with alacrity—except in.
those relatively few establish-
ments where the tourist and his
wants are well known and sties
cially catered to. What is so hard
to understand about the Tellies
tance to serve water is that they
have it on hand all right—but
they don't seem to want patrons
to have it!
I know Americans resident in
London who • battle with the
waiter for the right to a glass of
water every time they eat out,
And I know other Americans,
less stalwart, who long since
have given up the unequal fight
and, camellike, have learned to
• do without water at restaurants.
Moreover, the indoor drinking
fountain seems almost unknown
Dr, DR. CHARLES A. DOAN
Dean and Director of Medical
Research, 'Ohio State University
College of Medicine. (Written
for Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Scien-
tists can now prevent, control
and cure cancers in mice much
snore readily than in humans.
The reason: extensive experi-
ments can be done in mice; in
humans similar definitive studies
are not possible.
It has long been recognized in
medicine that selected patients
with diseases such as cancer may
themselves stand to benefit very
" materially from carefully con-
trolled studies by teams of high-
ly specialized clinical research
investigatoes.
In this spirit, studies have
been undertaken in carefully
chosen cancer patients and then
in healthy volunteer men in a
few pilot studies. They are be-
ginning to tell us things about
human cancer that animal stud-
ies never could have shown,
First, patients ill with far ad-
vanced cancer were tested for
their ability to, reject or receive
cancer cell transplants from
other patients, Scientists work-
ing in this field also permitted
themselves to be grafted with
living cancer tissue from human
patients.
Then normal healthy prison in-
mates were chosen for more ex-
tensive studies. The prisortees
freely volunteered as a sincere
gesture to society. -
Over the past four years, in-
vestigators a t New York's
Sloan-Kettering Institute and
Ohio State University, have col-
laborated in a series of care-
fully controlled Studies, involv-
ing the injection of almost 200,
healthy male volunteers at Ohio
State Penitentiary with a variety
of human cancer cells, some liv-
ing, some killed,
TWo Weeks after their injec-
tion, the healthy subjects de-
veloped a vigoroes local in-
flammatory reaction at the site
of the inoculation. In two more
weeks, all evidence of the in-
jections has disappeared.
Tissue (biopsy) samples were
examined at various intervals
tinder the microscope. The pri-
soners' "natural resistance" over-
came the transplanted cancer
cells oe first contact, Subsequent
inoculations in the same individ-
ual brought an even earlier and
more rapid conquest,
In advanced eaecer patients,
by contrast, the imnitme reaction
usually was slow in staseting and
Weak, Their systems did not
destroy the cancer cells AS rapid-
ly as healthy systems did
What slid the cancer patients
lack that healthy people have?
Specific antibodies against the
Injected miter cells? No, the
scientists found that both groups
peocluced atti-eancet antibodieS
at about the same rate,
Corriplenteet — the mixture of
blood proteins Which help anti-
bodies 'destroy itivading cells?
Net; there Was no do lilt
here. Naou won't st'c iht:TO in
railway stations, avhoola, orifices,
theaters, hotels, public buildings,
or any of the usual places, in-
stead there ere the ebigisitous
hetsbeverage wagons end. stacks
f cups, ilot water clearly is no
problem; it's plain cold water for
„drinking that is scarce, Why?
Ohyiously the British don't think
the 'stuff is worth imbibing ens
cooked.
The trouble is that, wines and
liquors aSide, alternatives to wa-
ter are limited here, One can
have ginger b.ecr, of course,
which despite its. name is not al-
coholic, This whitish liquid was
thrust upon me the day I arrived
in Britain, and.,1, thought at first
someone had forgotten to rinse
the soap out of the glass. I soon
became fond of ginger beer—bet
it is not to everyone's taste,
writes Henry H. Hayward in the
Christian Science Monitor. '
But welch out for pitfalls. For
example, cider, which, despite its
name, is, usually alcoholic, When
Americans see this listed on the
menu under drinks, they bright-
en tip at once and order it, They
have visions of statessicle
sweet cider. To .their surprise
what they get is sometimes closer
akin to. American applejack.
While there are nonalcoholic
ciders here, such as "Cydrax,”
you , have to ask for them under
the trade name, and they are not
generally available in restaur-
ants.
Among the carbonated. drinks,
ginger ale is usually on hand, al-
though the British variety is
stronger than its American
equivalent, Various American
bottled drinks also have made
an appearance in recent years.
While they are served cool, they
are seldom iced—except on firm
demand. The fact has to be
faced: iced drinks—or ice water
--just aren't in the British na-
tional tradition.
For the teetotaler, be he for-
quality or quantity of the can-
cer patients' complement.
Properidin — another natur-
ally occurring blood protein in-
volved in destroying infectious
agents? Yes — in the cancer
patients, properidin was weak or
absent altogether. In sharp con-
trast, properidin levels in healthy
blood samples were consistently
higher.
But more than properidin is
involved. Cancer patients, when
given properidin, showed little or
no improvement.
It was concluded from these
studies that the healthy human
body does indeed have a vigor-
ous resistance to cancer cells; in
cancer patients this evidence of
natural resistance is lacking.
A Chicago scientist has dem-
onstrated similar resistance to
leukemia in healthy humans. He
had found earlier that when cell-
free fluids from the brains Of
people who had died of leukemia
were injected into highly suscep-
tible mice, the mice developed
leukemia and died of it. But what
about humans?
Prisoners, in Illinois this time,
volunteered for highly signifi-
cant experiments. They allowed.
the Chicago scientist to inject
them with fluid from human leu-
kemic brains, The injections did
not make the prisoners leukemic.
On the contarary, these healthy
men developed antibodies which
destroyed the leukemic agent and
protected them against the dis-
ease. When their antibody-loeded
blood serum was injected into
mice, it protected most of the
mice against leukemic inocule-
Lions,
A few investigators have givens
vaccines and antisera to some
medically adjudged "terminal pa-
tients." The results have not been
clear cut as yet, because the time
has been too short, the patients
too few in number and some
clearly too far advanced in their
disease. Or the experiments have
been uncontrolled and the irri-
eign. ee dome: tic, the British res.
•taureiver .or host afro n •will fell
hack on what aae vaned
"squashes,"
This refreshment is formed by
pouring an inch or so of conceit-,
grated flamiDg—orange, lemon,
and grapefruit are the most,
frequent choices—in the bottom
of a glass .and diluting with plan
water, Some of the Most thought-
ful will, even offer carbonated
water,, if you prefer 131.1i; don't
try to get that plain water in e,
glass without the squash—that's
cheating.
UP WE GO — This stretcher,
shaped like a sled, helps Po-
lice Constable Harry Ward res-
cue victims of the white cliffs
near Eastbourne, England. Here
he ascends cliff with stretcher
drawn to top by winch.
provement too unpredictable and
transient.
'The preliminary published re-
sults, however, indicate that this
approach to cancer treatment
must be studied further with an
open mind.
. A Buffalo team has given ad-
vanced cancer patients a vaccine
made from their own excised tu-
mors, Killed tuberculosis organ-
isms and other substances design-
ed to stimulate the patients' de-
fense reactions, are in the vac-
cine, X-rays, which conceivably
could help the reaction, were
given with the vaccine le some
cases.
The Buffalo fesearchers found
that after one year of a con-
trolled experiment, about 40 per
cent of the patients given the vac-
cine or the vaccine plus X-rays,
were alive — and some of them
"well" — as compared with 24
per cent of those given only
radiotherapy and 17 per cent of
those given only anti-cancer
drugs.
Dallas scientists have' tried a,
modified version of the Buffalo
vaccine on 14 terminal cancer pa-
tients. All of the patients event-
ually died of their cancers but,
in 12, the turners became smaller
and ulcerative lesions healed
temporarily.
Most interesting perhaps was
the observation that those blood
proteins that are believed to as-
sist in destroying infectious•
agents, and perhaps cancer cells,
rose substantially in twelve pa-
tients.
A Canadian researcher has
treated a number of patients with
antiserum — produced by in-
jecting large animals with por-
tions of the patients' tumors and
then giving the patients the ani-
mal serum, rich in antibodies
against that specific cancer.
While a preliminary report in-
dicated that some of the patients
appeared to be doing Well, theta
is no real basis, as yet at least, •
that this will be the ainal answer
to cancer.
These preliminary published
reports indicate that this is a
field of substantial 'eternise.
PLAY'S TNE THING — Locking toys, these lgorot Childreri uses'
elitearded wooden bee as a playpen an Luzon it t the lahilips
pinesd I'M:Ste:aft are tilledrigiries, among- whom U.N.' agertelet bre
Working to ;nipHave health bed living conditions.
Testing Cancer Vaccines On Humans
Results Indicate A Promising Field