Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1936 — Page 35
GIVES NATION TWO. RECIPES
' Boston Brown Bread and Vermont Johnnycake Are Favorites.
By NEA Service
A combination more thoroughly American than Boston baked beans
and steamed brown bread would be
difficult to name. A New England specialty, it ranks with those other national favorites—Maryland fried chicken, Virginia baked ham, New Orleans creole dishes and Texas barbecued beef. Most housewives have their own favorite way of preparing baked beans—some liking them sweectened with molasses or maple syrup, others preferring to add tomato sauce. On brown bread, opinions are less arbitrary. Here is a recipe that has been carefully
tested. Steamed Brown Bread
1 9-0z. package dry mince meat 12 cup water 1 cup flour 1 teaspoon soda 2 cups cornmeal 152 cup molasses 1 pint milk Break mince meat into. pieces. Add cold water. Place over heat and stir until all lymps are thoroughly broken up: Bring to brisk boil. Continue boiling for, three minutes, or until mixture is practically dry. Allow to cool. Sift flour once, measure, add salt and soda and-sift again. Add corn-
meal and mix thoroughly. Add mo-.
lasses and milk gradually to dry ingredients. Blend thoroughly. Fold in prepared mince meat. Pour into greased molds or baking powder cans, filling 2-3 full. Cover tightly and steam 2 hours, having boiling water halfway up on molds. If additional water is needed during steaming, it must be boiling when added. Vermont Johnnycake is another New England recipe worth copying. It is light, moist, crumbly and rich —ideal as a hot bread with any simple dinner. New Englanders always make it with the yellow corn meal, The recipe follows:
Vermont Johnnycake for Six
% cup flour 3 cup yellow cornmeal 2 tablespoons sugar Ya teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 egg 1 eup sour cream or thick sour milk 2 tablespoons melted butter If you can't buy sour cream, sour your own. It's easy enough. Simply leave it on the-top of the stove for a day or two until it gets nice, and thick. Sift the flour ,once, measure, and sift again. Then add thewsalf, sugar, soda and baking powder to the flour and sift again. Add the cornmeal and mix well. Add the well-beaten egg and sour milk or cream. Mix until smooth and add the melted butter. Pour’into a well-greased pie plate and bake in a moderate oven- (350 degrees) 30 minutes. Serve ping hot directly from the dish, cut in pie-shaped wedges.
CHEESE LIMA BEANS
1 pound lima beans (fresh or dry) 1 quart of milk : 1 pound Roquefort cheese Bread crumbs Butter Parboil beans, drain into an oven dish that has been greased with butter. First put a layer of beans, then a layer of cheese in dish until filled. Salt, pepper and paprika to taste. Add milk, then bread crumbs with butter.. Bake 35 to 45 minutes. This i§ & delicious casserole dish for cutdoor affairs.
PREVENTING SUGARING
If a pinch of salt is added to the sugar when making cooked icing, it will ‘prevent the icing from suFRESH
(Fics 22
CRACKED DOZEN
HOOSIER
POULTRY CO.
107 N. Alabama (Across from Market). LI-1881
~ Capitol Pouliry Co.
FREE Dressing—Delivery
DREXEL 3030 1018 S. MERIDIAN S. MERIDIAN
a= 15¢
HENS FRYERS We have reduced our prices but not our quality.
OUR DRESSED DEPARTMENT OFFERS THESE VALUES!
i’ 250 ie tor.
FRYERS and SPRINGERS
Mase oi. To
sme Tie
ht, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.
MAY BE MADE FROM CRUMBS
| Substitute for Flour Used in
Preparation of Torten.
: Have you ever made a torte? Perhaps you don’t know what it is. Well, it’s simply a cake made without flour. This may sound somewhat odd, but there's a catch. A substitute, such as éracker érumbs, bread crumbs, etc., is used in place
: jof flour, making a cake that is of | lighter and more delicate texture.
“Torten usually are made’ in spring-forms; the kind of cake from which the side “peels” off, leaving a tin under the cake. Another
| characteristic of most torten is that
they are baked in one layer. You'll find this recipe for Rye Bread Torte a delightful change from customary layer ‘cake. Rye Bread Torte for Six 4 eggs 1 cup sugar 1 cup rye bread crumbs 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon cinnamon % teaspoon ground cloves _ Separate the yolks and whites. “To the well-beaten yolks, add the sugar and beat until very light. Add the rest of the ingredients, the stiffly beaten whites last. Combine the two mixtures gently. Place in a lightly buttered nineinch spring form and bake in a
moderate (350 degree) oven about :
40 minutes. ' Easy, isn't it? This torte will rise nicely and should be ahout 4 inches high when
done.
Cover the top with a generous
‘| amount. of whipped cream if you
the fact that their new fall bonnets
“Aren't thesé hats just dandy!” Annette, left: and Cecile seem to be chorusing, not at all’ put out—as grownup ladies so often "are—by
are just alike.
Who needs a coat when there's sutichine?
Not Emilie, apparently,
for she's discarding hers with childish finality to enjoy the Indian summer sun—and to give you a peek at her new dress.
Puts Auto Horn He Can Blast
WASHINGTON, oct, 16.—This
Marinacei, with many a highway juggernaut in his native Syracuse, N. ¥Y. When
4 a motorist whanged into him and
sent him: skidding on the asphalt; he had legal recourse. He’ could force his attacker to buy the iodine and the bandages. But when one of his mechanized enemies sneaked up softly behind him on balloon tires and sent a ter-
rific blast from its horn into Mr.
Marinacci's ears, scaring hfm out of
his 1ife; almost, there wash't a thing |
that he could do, except Sitter. Mutterer for Years
For many years, like millions of other pedestrians, Mr. Marinadci was a mutterer. Under his breath hie consigned untold thousands of horn tooters to a place of untold hotness. That was some satisfaction, of | eourse, but it’ wasn’t enough. i: id Mutter or not, Mr. Marinacel af ways Telt a little silly ‘after one of these titanic horns made him jump, sometimes almost out of his skin| and sometimes — literally — almost out of “his: trousers. After feeling
even as you: and me—felt mad. He'd stand on the curb, trembling
cane. °: One historic day Mr. Marinacei leaned too heavily on his stick after one of these horn-tooting episodes. His cane, a stout malacca, skidded on the slick sidewalk and in so doing, emitted a shriek which almost gave the public enemy who had tooted his horn angina pectoris. It was that kind of a shriek, a militant, merciless s-h-r-i-e-e-e-e-k.
STURDY and STRONG
A Yyeical
We ls0n 4 Mile
FEED Your BABY
llth Nourishment of . Fresh'Cow's Milk
. Easier to Digest: BS Evadisted="for Extra’ | 8 Sunshine Vitamin D Magy Dosis eredotl
and Promiuth Book...
a LYON"S LIRR
EEE
silly for ‘a While, Mr. Marinacci—.
with rage and leaning wearily on his
Mr, Marinacci picked himself up,
’ yon Re WILSON S$: Mik | 1 S tsusnds of hen join this helps pack e on . the pounds, adds inches to height, For hard-work-
on Cane So
Back at Honkers
Pedestrian, Tired of Being Scared by Fools of Motorists, Invents- Device to Blare at Them in Reply.
BY FREDERICK C. OTHMAN nited Press Staft Correspondent
nation’s Jaent suffering pedestrians
today received, as if in answer Lo their prayers, a device enabling them: to hong back, insolently, at limousines, to®toot defiantly at trucks, to match .b-e-e-e-e-p for b-e-e-e~e-p the horns of predatory motorists. This godsend to curbstone jumpers is the: invention of Pasquale‘ who bears with honor the bruises of many an encounter
looked: at; - the' nerve-shattered: motorist who had honked, and immediately felt better than at -any time during his. years of pedestrianism. The rest, for a man of Mr. Marinacci’s mettle, was simple, «He. repaired ‘to his laboratory and there he installed a horn upon his cane. The harder he'd lean, the harder his ‘horn would toot. He: tested this” original madel ‘under all ting conditio yracuse ‘found that it™ ‘ “his puron well. He placed an even lounder horn in the ‘handle of his stick, finally.
As the months went by, the honk-
they'd better not honk at Mr. Marinacei, or he'd give ’em a honk in
{return that really was a honk. This
made the streets of Syracuse Elysfan pastures insofar as Mr. Marinacci was concerned. His fellow pedestrians, he observed, still were being honked at.
This situation saddened Mr. Marinacci because he was a kindly man. Then he had an inspiration. He'd have the cane - which - talks - back patented. Today he received his papers. Hereafter all mankind, or at least the part thereof which walks, ‘may share with Mr. Marinacci for a nominal sum the satisfaction and ithe pleasure of ‘honking back at honkers.
1937 CROP PROGRAM OPENED BY FARMERS
By United Press . LAFAYETTE, Ind, Oct. 16.— Commuhity meetings now being held throughout the state mark the first step toward a general coerative. plan among farmers to formia. Joan ‘erop: program, according to L. BE. Hoffman, Purdue University agricultural extension staff member. A state meeting is. to be held in gram for farmers by the first of
the year, Mr. Hoffman said.
ers of Syracuse 2 Jigrog that
Bo thon hs
ew “Yor Ty
(EL ICELEQIEIR
For & sweet disposithon like Marie’s
children myst get plenty of Vit: min B to brace upand nourish the. nerves. Nature supplies it richly
er Qats. All Photos World Copyright 1936, N. B. A. Service, Inc.
YYZ YY Goafert Oats,
IR we 2 _fo know"
feeling, because never was a cereal
{picked for children with greater care . {than doctors showed for the Dionne . | Quins. That's why Quaker Oats is
an ideal cereal for the family.
Yor svertutie, st eves] SEF, Seeds ~ «* / Vitamin B 80 richly
ing E grownups it sustains the hady wonderful food-energy. i for. En. ups alike, Vicamis Bin Quaker Oats is Nature's way to brace up. -digestion, nerves and a Follow the example set for. you by the Dionne Quins’ specialists and serve the entire family Quaker Oats every morning. Order by.name fiom your grocer
today. Either 2)4 minute quick 3
‘cooking or regular.
le co wh por como dsc of Vitamin 3.
pe
uF]
gram form" farmers by the first of.
CONVICT MOTHER, 18,
OF KILLING CHILD |
By United Press
NEW YORK, Oct. 16.—Elizabeth | Smith, 18-year-old unwed mother, |
was convicted today of killing her new-born babe. : A jury found her guilty of sec-ond-degree manslaughter, without recommendation of mercy. She faces a possible 15-year maximum sentence. Her punishment will be fixed Oct. 22. The state had not asked the electric chair for the frail girl who, in shame and terror, bore her child alone, and’ then stumbled, half fainting, to the roof of her fourstory tenement where her parents live, and dropped the child JW the ground.
CLAIMS. SUIVIDE AT SEA By United Press NEW YORK, bat. 16.—Capt. Harry Le Wald of the 8. S. Dorothy Luckenbach today called the disapappearance at sea of. ss Marion Babbitt, 387 of: College" rove, Cal, ‘‘a suicide.” gn
CHOICE COLORED
FRIES
LEGHORN
20¢ FRIES
G. & G. POULTRY CO.
1042 S. Meridian DR-3431 Free Dressing
MARION Poultry Co.
1022 S. Merid. St. DR-3441 FREE DRESSING . Before They're Dressed” | Fancy Colored > : 2 0 E Lb. * All : Sizes LEGHO CHICKENS ___16¢e Ib. HENS ENS Announcing New Delivery Service—All Orders Must
“See Your Chickens FRYERS —---16¢ Ib, LARGE HENS 20c Ib. Be Placed by 11 A. M.
ieany ancy: as h
NE un, noth
Treat the cake gently when you
It is usually best to serve torten
remove it Irom thie oven ahd don't | with the bottom of the spring-form ; still under the cake and placed die
jar it.
24-LB. SACK
RICE PLUMS OAT
Blue
Gold Medal or Pilisbury’s
99
Fancy Choice in Syrup
Country Club Quick Cook
~ Remember, - torten- ate delicate, | rectly on the cake platter.
Rose
4~19¢ 2 29¢ 15¢
large pkg.
CLAPPS . BABY FOOD
ALL VARIETIES
SALADA
Brown % 1b, 18c 4
GRAPEFRUIT BROWN SUGAR PANCAKE FLOUR
3-25
Ri 17¢
10¢ Ib. Be 2 =x 15¢
Jap an iN pan
No.2 can
Juice. Flavorite
Country Club
TOKAY GR
APPLES
POTATOES =x.
Box Jonathan
4-25.
APES 2+ 15¢ 10 25¢
COUNTRY CLUB BREAKFAST
SLICED, LB. 35¢ 3 LB. END CUTS
CLEA LE
BACON
LB.
UR
HERES A GRAND MEAL TO PLAN ON WHEN YOURE GOING OUT FOR THE AFTERNOON .. YOU CAN FIX IT IN 10 MINUTES -AND MAKE A BIG HIT WITH YOUR FAMILY, TOO!"
00 P.M. REFER
to the movies. W expected.
550 P. M. hcp we gut he Jiwas 10. :
Bejgestin Si eT Eo a er! Yet we sat down to a delightSiaried dims 6:10. ee
“AND HERES THE RECIPE [ USED!" Armour’s Star Bacon with Fluffed Eggs
fluffy. Put the yolks into nests of with Cloverbloom Cheese, and bake until slightly brown.
serve with Ships crunchy slices of Amc’ Star Bacon wn
SERVE (RMOUR'S ST \R BACON:
®Try the T
Meal of the Month Folder.
lunches and. dinners, Armour’s Star Bacon is a real find. Use it a8 the main ingredient
npting Rodipin 5: Hi New
For delicious
everywhere insist on Armour’s Star. The - new Armour’s Meal of the Month Recipe Folder is crammed full of fascinating sug. - gestions for easy-to-fix meals. Get your free copy from your dealer, or write to
Marie Gifford, care of
‘Armour and Compan;
~~ ARMOUR... | AN ASSET TO 4. INDIANAPOLIS
bi Indianapolis plant is a Sefinite asset
