Loading...
The Seaforth News, 1941-11-06, Page 3THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1941 TIIE SEAFORTH NEWS THE FIXING BOWL ay ANNE ALLAN Hydro Homo Emta-r,4(a4a( BPDGET DESSERTS Bello llonl(Ilakersl Ito you know how to make plenty of delectable tilssel'ta^gild so keep your family ".sweet Ietupered" In this age of coon - ting calories. some people turn down every (1 (1't but fruit. A tart, tangy fruit salad --or fruit moulded in gel• mine, nukes a popular ending to any m eni. 'With milk desserts you can Mee that your (children( get their four glasses of milk, daily. Puddings of the cornstarch type, home-made or prepared, auul rice mills desserts will solve your problem. . * .( There's a whole army of breach pudding from which to choose-(Ilf- fering only in Savor and seasonings. The perferl bread pudding is really a custard with a little bread or cake added. Some cooks make the mistake of trying to use up all the ")eft -overs" in the bread box. Far variation try: bread pudding with Australian rais- ins. maple syrup, with a drop of mol. assos and a smooth blon(ling of spices, r•aranlel bread pudding, lir hocolaie. topped with jam and fluffy meringue, r v M Serve every dessert attractively. Use the right dishes. Garnish ries• S(•rt. lib , t, nm Pudding- with rhae• .Late : aue, lir ermbed fruit. RECiPES GELATINI'. purl)r nS 0(r( -et. 1,1113» ..pnaf_'S.. erealn5 Ind t4111401 tem tars: the fo(r(`11)5505 of g(•la1ine 1'ndditit;<, sweet. Jelly: 2 ti(, granulated gelatine. to 1 ens sugar clip cold water (:ups .hailing liquid twater. fruit :dice el t01fer•l. Soak the gelatine in cold water for five minutes,. Your half of the boiling inlaid on the gelathle and stir until dissolved. Acid the sugar. stir to dis- solve it, then add the r('mainder of the liquid either hat or eol(1. If (mid - inlaid is used. the mixture will set earner quickly. four into a odd. wet mould and chill. Serves 6. Variation: Fruit gelatine: Make lemon or or“ mote jelly and add 1 e. prepared -fresh ((r canned fruit when the, jelly is be- ginning to set, BREAD PVDDTNG (113.5 bread crumb- 1 qt.scalded Intik 2-2 cogs <•up sugar tsp. salt • +, tsp. vatilla. cup melted butter Prepare- 1 b ern:obs. omitting the rrnmtw, Vowel.. with scaleled milt and ,laths I ri 101011te-s. Iceat 111(' eggs, add the sugar. salt. bunter and vanilla Suri Life Assurance Co. of Canada Assures Security for over One Million Partners H. R. LONG, GODERICH District Agent 0. H. McINNES CHIROPRACTOR Office - Commercial Hotel Electro Therapist - Massage Hours -Mon. and Thurs. after- noons and by appointment. FOOT CORRECTION by manipulation -Sun -ray treatment. Phone 227. { BUS TIME TABLE Leaves Sedfortl( for Stratford: Daily 8.55 a.m. and 5.16 5.m. Leaven Seafront for Coderich: Daily except Sunday and h11., 1.0E p.m. and 1.40 pro. 83in. and hal., 1,06 p.m, and 9.3n p.n'. Connection 01 Stratford for Toronto, Hamilton, 0(1010, London Detroit, Tavistork, Woodstock, Brantford Agents: Raeen'4, Commercial, Diek nano Entrance to Point Pelee National Park, Ontario PAGE THREE and combine with crumbs and milk. Bake 1 hr. in a butter pudding dish in a moderate electric oven (825 de. 10.1 Serves 8. Variations: ('a'amel:Caraulelizo the sugar of the recipe and dissolve In the intik. More sugar may be added if sweeter pudding Is desired, ('Ilocalate: Melt 2 nzs. of choco- late. add to the milk. The whites of eggs may be used for malting 0 ner- inane, which should be spread over the top of the pudding about 1a min- a! os before itis removed from th(' avnu. This pudding /nay be ItavOl•ed with 1 tsp. cinnamon. Orange Marmalade: Add 1r. of mouse 1u.u'tna lathe 10 the mixt m'.' x11(1 omit the sugar of the recipe, y t a m PLAIN 3'ANlt MIXTURE F(1I7 PUDDING tint' shortening. :'3 cup 'agar 1 egg r_ tsp. halting powder 1 cup milk 1 tspr, vanilla ('ream the shortening and sugar and add the beaten egg. Sift together the flour, salt. and baking powder and odd to the first mixture alternately with the milk. Add vanilla. Turn into gret(5(51 individual 1(141nhls and steam for one hour, Serve with a sauce. The padding may also be baked at 350 degree; P. for about. 411 minutes is electric oven. Serves 8-10. Variations: ('ottage: When this pudding is baked. it is (tailed a cottage pudding. Nerve with lemoli, fruit, caramel. maple. chocolate or but t(•(•; c•nte1) sa11('('. Cherry: Add 1 cup of fresh or canm'd ('berries. !fake or sic -ant 111 individual m0111(1s. Nerve with c11er- ry sauce. ('ol(hlers: Pout• the batter over fresh (r V411111011 fruit which is f0lnl 1 to 1 inches deep in a buttered bak- ing pan. Bale" in moderate 017011 3311511. ('alt(• fs done. Peace's. plums. apples or berries 101,10' a. delicious cobbler. i'0 nmhe mincemeat collider, p11t. mincemeat 1 inch deep in a. greased bolting dish and cover with 1 inch of batter. Bake and serve with hard :slice or credal. I115('l'i'i' 1)01'(111 1l'111)INGS 2 traps pastry flour 1 tsp. baking p(nviler tsps salt 9--1 tbs. fat About 2 3 cup milk 2 tbs. s11511r if desbcd Sift dry ingredients. Bub ill t1((' fat with the tips lit the lochs or use two knives or a pastry mixer, Add the liquid and stir .lust enough i((. combine ingredients. Serves 0 to 8. '1' 'o'ia tions: 11114('11 Apple' rake: Spread tea his• <•uit dough about _ 1 inch 11110: in a greased baking pan, Arrange wedge shaped apples (dose together over the top in Win's. Sprinkle tbic'kly with sugar and cinnamon and bake. Moiled Dumplings: Drop the dough in sweetened boiling fruit. Corer closely and boil gently 20 minutes. Prones, t'hcrries or berries are most d(.sirade fruits to use. Serve with hard sauce. Crew'S Nest: Put quartered tart apples in a greased pile till. 804 in a moderate electric oven to heat the apples. Malts soft slough. and spread over the top. Bake in quick Oven. When done, rem010 from the oven. turn bottom side lip and spread over tlu' top a. 1111010r•e of brown sugar 511(1 lrut.t('1', Sprinkle with nutmeg and serve hot with cream. TAIKE A TIP: 1. Bread 1110110 of 11(1115 or part milk instead of water will have a browner and tenderer crust. 2. When measuring Molasses, grease the cup first. The syrup will riot easily and there will be no waste, 3. To prevent pies from bailing ov- er, ver, remember the instruction given at the cooking school, using strips of wet butter paper or parchment paper around the edge of the pie plate, the strips should be an inch and a Half wide. 4. The quantity of meringue for pies and puddings can be almost. doubled, by adding a teaspoonful of cold water to the egg whites. The Question Box Miss S.M, asks: How can 1 cook a meringue and he sure it will be light' Answer: The quality of all merin- gues should be light as 1110 down no a ilalll(din1 ste.ut. Tiako in 010(1rlc (133(1 ,it. 321 deg. for seven minutes. It is 1110 hal. (1niclt ('001(Tllg that makes a good white meringue dough, Mrs. i,.!). sends in this suggestion: '.'Today. homemakers are slaking mikes without fat in oder that the 101tl('I' may In• setlt. ,ye('nei15. loll many stud (11f/featly in making this+ 1713.• et' cake, 1'nl1(') 105de without 1;,t (10)0111 1112517 upon :;1ili'ly.hoalen egg whites for their lightness. Ilo not skimp on eggs 1(1 the fatless cake. THERMOS FLASKS FOR TANK CORPS PENCILS To Protect Them from the Heat of Libya Special smells timed 13y the fall( Corps in Libya have to he kept in thermos flasks else the heat would melt 1110111. Clifn((graph is their 1111(8(1 they are (((di10 of a sift, waxy substance and used for tracings ou transparent material like glass or cellopbaule, and also for Marking 111e silk of bar- Iage 'balloons. They are supplied 10 11.A.P. pilots at operational Headquarters t(s well as to the tank corps anti other artily units and the war demand for them is so big that overseas orders are lint refused. A cheque front India for £li(o for a (consignment of 1110111 bad. with regrets. to he re( 11111(74 front 1,0114(111 a few weeks ago. The war is eating up British pen- - oils nI 11 colossal have. Apartfrom the services and government depart- ments. they are essential to the mak- tug of aeroplanes. tanks. ships and munitions. last year the British Goverum'•ut bought 14.480,n 0 of 311011: 1831,521.50; -more went to the neat 01' the country 101111117 1'0 (ael- <m•i('•s producing war requirements :(11E1 .11.529,;64.4 Were shipped over- seas. Placed end to (end they would go altu(>st. 1'o11nd the Equator-2.33,ti2'l, miles. 214 yawls ail 101d, '('h(' British pencil industry has therefore had to put its0lf on a. War footing, redneing sumo 125 va'ietie• to little over 243 for certain (1f which the demand leas gull) up 1,11(11) poi• cent. slnee 1989. JAM FROM POWDER Empire countries with crops of fruit held up by lack of shipping will be interested in the new storage pro - ('(.15(s ofchemistsat Bristol Univer- sity Research Station, The work was originally designed to (00ot the problem of Britain's own surplus fruit, hut, with the ces- sation of imports, the results are now available: for Empire producers. Surplus apples arc economically stored with great saving in space, in the form of apple juice and apple treacle. Natural sugar makes this product extremely sweet and it is a valuahle substitute for sugar in ail for1110 of household cooking. Soft fruit, plums and apples are reduced to a dry fine powder, useful for food processing. Plum powder can lo' made into jam at any time. of the year: In their work on black currant syrups. the experts have found that, after a long' period of storage, there was present, in some cases, (1001110 the amount of Vitamin C to preven- tative against scurvy) as in fresh citrus juices. The shortage of Vita- min A has also drawn attention to the need for using all surplus car- rots, and a powder is now being ex- tracteia commercially in plant nor- mally used for the spray drying of ntilk, ARGENTINOS TO GO TO "THE DOGS" Britain Sells Her Greyhounds Over- seas For 500 Guineas Inquiries received by British dog breeding, agents indicate that, as loan 11S war conditions allow,. South America will have greyhound rating. Tho first tracks will probably be in Buenos Aires. (Following its su('ress in Great Britain, where it was established in 111'5, the sport has been introduced into smoky countries abroad, notably the 1'(1150)! States, India, South A1'- I'riea anri Australia. In Britain it has become quite an inlp(3('(10.1 industry. with .11 invested ('apital til• 513)1105. 000 and 25,000,1100 attentione- yearly at the country's. one Lundr'41 and nfty racing tracks. The greyhounds required for rac- ing 0r breeding overseas are usuahi) supplied by Great Britain, Althoseh 51)(1 does not partWith o11tStnm1Sn_' dogs like the famous ' Mick the 41111 e 1'" --she-.• are more valu 11114: at home for stud wont when their nae. ins days are ftni.Sh(•d._-((5 much is: 51)0 go mers his frequently helm paid by 01'01'14('1(24 . ountries front British tracks, Ther average price, however, is m'arer 75 to 1 0 guineas. 1100e0t15', a large shipment of greyhounds was :cut to \ass',u. Ba- hama5, to preserve some lit Britain' best faring blood from the hazards of whir, The only reason why Willie le. Inclined always at 1he bo4t0111 of the class tva1 because be 15,1116 701 tic, The March o, ` Science LONG DISTANCE DIALING SPEEDS UP SERVICE Dialing a telephone number in a distant city directly is the let - est method introduced to speed up long distance service. • In the early days of the tele- phone. when it was not possible to speak to a person more than a hundred utiles away -except when "atmospheric conditions" were extraordinarily good -'a call from Montreal to Toronto was a lengthy undertaking. Ot sante -oceasion5. the message Na' re- layed from operator to operator in the VarietiS towns and ci11e.5 along the roittl• until it 1'eache,i Toronto. and the vol l5' Coeur. !=a<'k by the -:one in . -1 hod The. relay s4. -tem ..as 5(4(1(1 mads trin(< scary t 7• the 134021 adrat'cr of the telepli n 1 etart. there was ;tiil thee; 0i t'ficnIt y,,f elq;(ininr.' the eons -4(0.10n. h:._ Many years 125(1 a caller ls;ml tiro to go ou1 anti pbls a 1":12tm of golf in between asking to 1., (nq- ne0)(0d with a subscrit,er `n a dis- tant city and actuall li1:111 to him Gradurlit year by im- proved method. and 513+1 -Is est have reduced that waiting ti .if.. ]ENo. 1? =.f . • i ,; of Tin 13,91 FJ, Last year, 911per-cent of all long distance calls handled by The Bell Telephone Company of Canada were completed while the calling subscriber remained at .the tele- phone. The average time for mak- ing. the et.nnectfon was h7 sec- onds: ExperimentsExperintems are still under way to cut a few more seconds -from the connection time, Special circuits have been provided to cn: b](' a M 1 rca,1 ((e rator to dial a Tor,nt (0111 ,et 11 •ret'lf, in- stead of asking an operator in Tomnrn to d( se f<,r !i,•1'. She pletr. 10 on a '1''ue03.4, circuit. li=t(4s 1',1'i1°'''(4 lone In dila 11,1 ,Ia4, (' ('1 . and 49,1;!7 the tot 1',13 -i t'", tlre,i, 111-1 +.. one. w,r.el_ r lake 1I cull' ` Aitibi,ugil for ,. • 31.ve i'It 15if; .5.t« -to is st 1 :t1 , troch.. 1 , t ;:tr.Fi .110 , c,1. ;Ind ..0-•.-, to thi, 4 •et . ...r. rR. fir;, . , rte=•i, ,'t u, :•. ,:r a t,.11e" itc Eidetic •. L, ( ». lower: ''Ob. Willie." cried tl:e teach- er one day. after ten minutes of useless 405(1(18141i0n, "whatever do you think your head 10 for?" "Please, miss," was t11E- reply: "to keep my mile' on." Another Song Everyone Will Be Whistling and Singing Soon I''REE .. , in The ('otitic• !Vero -k1' with th1F. eomil(5-Sunday's !:!.•troll Times , . ,trill I .r ., n. v. W. lily 1003' Hit. "Flan(y- Bunch," selected by Sanooy Kaye. Sing'ai'le! Dance- able.' liommten•abie! . , . a heart throb firing . , COMPLETE with scorchs and naasic . ready for you to 5fng and play. Get The Detroit Sunday Tim, a this weelt and every we, k Inn 22 SONO MT ael0eted by a noted bandmaster. Want ..'t t: 1'::r S:.1- '+.;11. ."+ tt't•ck A agrowing savings account reinforces effort toward victory. We've got to pay for the war and a savings account helps to do that because it enables you to accumulate funds for taxes, for Victory Bonds and for War Savings Certificates. Et also provides for emergencies for yourself and your family. Open a Savings Account. it's not only wise to be thrifty -it's urgent. your country's (