The Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-02-14, Page 20LL`
Page 6F -Crossroads --.=February ➢9, 19U—
Sour cream today
quite different
from grandma's
The reason modern recipes
specify "dairy" or "com-
mercial" sour cream is that there
is a significant difference be-
tween the sour cream grand-
mothheer cooked with and the kind
we y today.
When few people had refrigera-
tors or the weather was too
warm, fresh cream soured
quickly and naturally. The result
was a lumpy, watery product
with an odd flavor and an objke-
tionable odor -- real "sour"
cream, say food specialists at the
.Ontario Food Council, Ministry of
Agriculture and Food.
Today's dairy or commercial
sour cream has a sharp, fresh
flavor and a smooth, custard -like
consistency. It is made from
fresh pasteurized and homo-
genized cream to which is added
a harmless, pure lactic acid cul-
ture "grown" in laboratories
under very controlled conditions.
The lactic acid culture changes
the milk sugar of the cream to
lactic acid, and this "souring"
causes the proteins to become
thicker -- hence the - creamy
smooth product. The culture is
also responsible for the unique
flavor and pleasant tang of dairy
sour cream, quite different from
home -soured cream.
Because refrigerator tempera-
tures do vary, it is recommended
that dairy sour cream be used
within one week of purchase to
ensure fresh flavor.
Special Prices
ow
UPHOLSTERY
MATERIAL
For the Do-it-yourself
craftsman --we stock
o broad range of up-
holstery materials.
Vinyls, Velvets, Ny-
tons in a wide range of
colors and patterns as
well as a complete
selection of Cotton
and . Foam Padding,
Springs, Welting Cord
Burlap, Etc,
— CALL IN AT -
ILOESTER .
r it •.a<. ,..,, ._. ..'„' ` _...
Across from the new
Canadian Tire Store
Highway 23 North
LISTOWEL,
Phone 291-1320
New varieties
pare shown in
`catalogue
If you're planning garden reno-
vations or undertaking a new
garden in 1974, take a look at
some of the varieties being of-
fered in this year's garden cata-
logs, suggests Burke McNeil,
horticulturist with the Ministry of
Agriculture and Food. The All-
American roses have been an-
nounced and three beautiful ex-
amples will be available to On-
tario gardeners.
"Bahia” is a floribunda -type,
with a vividly colored golden -
orange blend bloom. "Perfume
Delight" is a pure pink tea rose;
the average size' bush produces
blooms with a rich spicy fra-
grance. Another floribunda -type,
"Bon Bon", has deep pink petals
with almost -white undersides.
Blooms are produced on a com-
pact bush that would be suitable
for small gardens. All three vari-
eties have been tested in our
growing conditions and look like
good additions for your rose
garden.
Gardens Canada, an affiliated
group of the Canadian . Nursery
Trades Association, is promoting
the beautiful "Maybride" crab-
apple. This white -flowered orna-
mental has been introduced from
the experimental farm in Ottawa.
Hardy all across Canada, it will
grow to a height of 15 to 20 feet,
Another fine Canadian intro-
duction is "Agincourt Beauty"
lilac. This French hybrid -type,.
developed by Leonard Slater of
Agincourt, has received' an
award of merit from the Inter-
national Lilac Society. It has
large, very fragrant trusses of
deep rich purple blooms; indi-
vidual florets can reach about 11/Z
inches in diameter.-
These
iameter.These are but a few of the many
new varieties available to gar-
deners this.year: Watch for more
in your catalogs and garden
centers: .
Air travelers face.
exotic disease peril
Prof. Ian 1VIa graith, of the
Liverpool School of Tropical
Medicine, said in Medical
News recently that travel
agents should warn the public
abaft the danger of contract-
ing tropical diieases if the
passenger is bound for an
area where diseases lik
malaria are endemic -
Diagnosis could be difficult,
he said, because air 1Tavel
means a malaria victim could
be Home 10 or 11 days before
symptoms appear and doctors
"do not always think to look
for the diseases."
ANNOUNCE
Special Evening
Appointments
in their
Bridal Departments
Downtown Kitchener
and
Milady of Gyelph
Completely new, . modern
Bridal Departments with
helpful. consultants \offer
everything for everyone in
the Bridal Party.
Call 745-9114 Kitchener
or 822-6241 Guelph
and ask for the Bridal Department for a
No Obligation Evening Appointment.
ZACKS FASHION CENTRE
137-143 King St. W
Kitchener
Open 6 Days 9 Week - Ample Free Parking
QUESTIONS WOMEN ASK
1
mate
LOW-COST DISH — Quick and Easy Muffinburgers require Tess than a half hour of baking
time. Unusual ingredients'are applesauce, pickle relish and stuffing mix.
COOKING CORNER
These recipes are easy
on buctget,
By SUSAN DELIGHT
After the holidays comes
the reckoning. The budget has
been strained by. holiday
merrymaking and gift giving,
bills are coming in; and in-
come tax time is in the offing.
It is now that the homemak-
er must use her most canny
knowledge to save on the food
dollar, and yet keep her fam-
ily well nourished and
pleased:
Recipes given today are the
easy -on -the -budget variety.
What's more, they are differ-
ent enough to interest family
members into partaking.
QUICK AND EASY
MUFFINBURGERS
1 pound ground beef
1/2 pound sausage meat �,
1 cup seasoned prepared
bread stuffing mix
1 cup canned apple sauce
1/4 cup sweet pidde relish ,
1 tablespoon instant minced
onion
1 teaspoon salt
teaspoon pepper
1 egg, beaten
Combine all ingredients in
large mixing bowl, mixing
well. Let stand 12 hour. Spoon
meat mixture into 12 lightly
greased muffin tins. • Bake at
350 degrees for 20 to 25 min-
utes. Serve hot with buttered
carrots and boiled potatoes.
Accompany. with a tossed
salad. Makes 6 servings. •
GOURMET CHICKEN
WRAP-UPS
4 boned and skinned half'
chicken breasts
1/4 cup butter or margarine
.1 can (8 oz.) refrigerated
quick crescent dinner rolls
1 can (21/4 oz.) or 1/4 cup
deviled ham
Milk
Sesame seed
Filling:
Two-thirds cup finely
SiM1, choppedtart. apples-
- 2 tablespoons chopped pig-
nolia nuts or almonds
2 tablespoon's raisins, if de-
sired
1 teaspoon instant minced
- onion
1 teaspoon chopped chives
y4 to / teaspoon sweet basil
Sauce:
1 package (% oz.) chicken
gravy mix
Yi cup water
1/2 cbp dairy sour cream
Oven 375 degrees. 4 sr -
Ings.
Place , chicken breasts,
bonect Bide . up, between two
pieces of plastic wrap. Start
ing at center, pound with a
smooth, heavy object until
pieces are about Y4 inch thick.
Peel off plastic wrap. Divide
filling equally among the 4
breasts. Fold up each so fill-
ing is enclosed and fasten with
wooden picks. Brown chicken
rolls in butter over medium
heat until golden brown and
meat is cooked. Cool enough
to handle; remove picks.
Separate crescents into 4
rectangles.., Press perfora-
tions of each to seal; spread
with deviled ham. Place 1'
chicken roll on each rectan-
gle; fold up dough to enclose
chicken and seal completely.
Place seam -side down on un -
greased cookie sheet. Brush
with milk and. sprinkle with
sesame seed. Bake at 375 de-
grees for 12 to 18 minutes or
• until golden brown. Serve hot
with sauce.
Filling: Combine all ingre-
• clients; mix well.
Sauce: In small sauce pan,
combine gravy mix and wa-
ter. Bring to a boil; boil' mint
ute: "-"Blend' "in ", "§off
M iream.
Heat through, but do not boil.
Serve hot.
Tip: Wrap -Ups may be pre-
pared, covered and refriger-
ated 2 to 3 hours befbre bak-
ing. Increase baking time 5,
minutes.
Generic Term:, 1 can (8 oz.)
refrigerated quick crescent
dinner rolls. ,
DILL PICKLE
BEEP STEW
11 lbs.' beef stew meat.
1 tablespoon fat
1 medium onion, chopped
1 carrot, diced
1. stalk celery, finely
'ehoPped
3/4 cup chili sauce.
1 cup water
VZ cup dill pickle liquid
3 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
% cup sliced dill pickles
1. Brown beef stew meat,
cut in 11/2 pieces,, in fat in
cooker.
2. Add remaining ingre-
dients except dill pickles.
3. Cover, Set control at 10
lbs. and cook 25 minutes (or at
15 lbs. and cook 20 minutes)
after control. .jiggles. Cool
cooker normally for 5 min-
utes, then place under faucet.
4. Stir in pickle Slices and
heat a few minutes uncov-
ered. To • thicken sauce, . add
one tablespoon flour mixed
with 114 cup water. Serve over
cooked • noodles. Yields 4-6
servings.
Milady of Guelph
30 Wyndham St. N.
Guelph
F'>ocnuc,o you v,cant your
:dopey , v✓r)r th
T 1 +vvhy.
VISIT
a
WALKERTON
HANOVER
A NEW CAMPAIGN to combat numerous rumors of gas shortage"S has been Instituted M
Florida Cypress• Gardens. Jack Alexander of Wingham is shdWn at the fanned Florida at-
traction, after informing officials there that they had no real difficulty purchasing fuel ilk ,-.
the sunshine state.
By SLUMS 1 B
R■EfR,,
Q. . hate been married for
ive'years and, have not been
Viable to become pregnant, The:.
doctors tell ;What my hum
bend anal are normal and the
tests• show nothing o n,g, .. f
have, heard that•a"wife might
be allergic to her husband. Is
this possible?
A Yes, such a thing is pos.,
Bible. One researcher inthis
geld has estimated that, in 20
per cent of infertile couples,
antibodies against the ' bus -
band's sperm Van be fond in
'the woman's blood. A certain
percentage of - prostitutes
have been found to have anti-
bodies in their bloodstreams.
Use of a condom by the hus-
band for awhile would theo-
retically remove the source of
the antigen that stimulates
the antibodies and would al-
loW the degree of sensitivity to
lessen. Some success has been
reported with this approach.
Q. You continually mention
tests being done for gonor-
rhea, Trichomonas Vaginalis,
and yeast. Exactly how are
these tests done? Do all doc-
tors do them? Can I tell if my
doctor does them?
A. When a woman is exam-
ined by a physician who does
a fair number of pelvics, he -
she usually gets an idea about
her partiqlar infection. A
tentative diagnosis is made
and then confirmed by the
tests. The woman's medical
history is coAidered, her past
and present illnesses, her
exposure •to venereal
diseases, the drugs she js
taking. All are important in
ruling out and ruling in vari-
ous bacteria and organism.
The advantage of routine
testing, that kind of testing
that is done even though there
are no complaints and very
few signs visible to the naked
eye, is that a certain number
of women who are symptom-
free and sign -free are in-
fected.
With the high incidence of
venereal disease in the United
States at the present. time,
most doctors are making rou-
tine gonorrheal cultures. If
you are not sure your doctor is
going to do a test, you can re-
quest it. Often it is done 'with-,
QECOR
Room
needs color
'scheme
By BARBARA HARTUNG
Q. I have a turquoise living
room suite. How would a dark
blue rug look or what color
would•you suggest? .What col-
or for walls, ceiling and drap-
eries? The woodwork is a nat-
ural finish. The room faces
south. I have a rocker to be
reupholstered also. B.J.R.
A. Turquoise and navy blue
look well together, but I'd
think twice about a dark bide
rug because it shows dirt and
lint tremendously. You really
need to establish a color
scheme for your room. If your
turquoise pieces are a print,
use the other colors for walls,
ceiling, draperies, rug and
use one plain color to do your
rocker in. Or if your suite is a
solid, choose a print for your
rocker and repeat its colors.
Perhaps, for example,, you
might choose a print that is
beige, brown, turquoise and
navy for your chair. You
could use beige walls, ceiling
and draperies and a brown
and turquoise fleck for the
carpeting, Use navy blue ac-
cents. Or use a pale turquoise
for walls, ceiling and drap-
eries. Or if your suite is solid
turquoise • ydu could choose a
solid brown for your chair and
a rug in interesting stripes of
turquoise, brown and navy,
having the rug as the pat-
terned°part of the room.
Beehive residue has
the 'taste of money'
English beekeepers are
profiting from the discovery
that •propolis, a gummy sub-
stance used by bees to
draught -proof their hives and
previously thrown away as
useless, is worth far more
than the honey.
They are being paid $3.65 an,
ounce for the residue which is
being exported to Scandinavia
for the treatment of respirato-
ry infections.
out your knowing,a simple.
part of the pelvic 'examines
ticn, just like the Pap. Doctors
who delete a teeit :do to int
interest • of economy when
they feel thereis nothing in
your history, .or physical ex-
amination, to;Indleate the teat
'nevessary.
How are the' tests done?
Cultures are made steres
ile cotton -tipped applicators
which are inserted into the
cervical canal and, the anal
canal, and.which.pick up .
se-
cretion from the urethra.
These applicators are then
rolled onto sterile media, fi
preparations upon which bac
teria can grow.
Smears are exactly what
the . name implies,- Cotton-
tipped applicators are wiped
into secretions in the cervix,
or vagina, and then smeared
onto a glass slide and allowed
to air dry, or dipped into a
drop of Iluid'on the glass slide.
This latter preparation is
covered with a coverglass
and, for awhile, the normal
shapes of cells remain and ac-
tive organisms remain active
for viewing under the micro-
scope.
1
is am* like another
" wives" SONS;book
to the �*tmeawrunang
'omit ruinedCr"'11ths
*bed
pleat* Would ai MOrs
trOM the lack of mitt than
from the physics/ sta,te of the
person 'doing tPo water -
PENWARDEN,
(GUARDIAN DRUGS
Mount Forest 0234780
CONVALESCENT AIDS
OFALt- TYPES
FOR SALE OR REIT
Wheel Chairs,' Walkers, 'Com-
om-modes,Quadruped , Canes,
modes, quadruped
Ped -rests, Etc,
•COMPREHENSIVE,
STOCK OF SURGICAL;
SUPPLIES
DPE N 9 TKA 9
SIX DAYS AWEEK ,
' PENWARDEN '
GUARDIAN DRUGS
Mount Forest .123-17,86.
VISIT US
Foran original Oil .Painting or a
Beautiful Grandfather Clock or
Wallp Clock
QNTARIO!S LARGEST .CLOCK GALLERY
DAVE A.USiIAA FINE CLOCKS}
-'Hwy. 6; '/z Mile North of Guelph
Phone 822-2485
o
MOBILE HOMES
DOUBLE -WIDE, HOMES
Glendale
Ma rlette
Pyramid
Bendix
HOMES.
ON
DISPLAY
LONG-TERM FINANCING
(10% DOWN)
MOBILIFE CENTRE
NO. 8 HWY. BETWEEN HWY. 401
AND KITCHENER 603-5788
Come in and see our large
selection of tropical fish,
over 100 varieties
SERGEANT'S DOG SUPPLIES
- large selection of dog sweaters
- books on every pet
CANARIES AND BUDGIES
• good selection
- complete line of medication, goods and cages
RODENTS
- guinea pigs, gerbils, white mice, hamsters
JOHN'S AQUARIA & PET SHOP
STRATFORD
44A Wellington St. Ph. 277 -3661
Cucipb
rasbscn Furs
FURS FOR ANY OCCASION
* HANDCRAFTED ON PREMISES.
* SPECIALIZING IN CUSTOM DESIGN.
* REPAIRS & RESTYLING.
* COLD STORAGE & CLEANING
RELIABLE FURRIER FOR
OVER 32 YEARS
QUALITY COLD STORAGE
VAULTS I 1 GUELPH
For Free Pickup & Delivery Call ... 824.8010
20 MACDONNELL
1
M
1
d