The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 36, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 January 1936 — Page 7

— THURSDAY, JANUARY 2. 1936.

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AYRACUSE JOURNAL

, A Little Lesson in the Art of Making Sauces I . * • ‘~~ • - •-' • • i ■ ■ ■

To Serve Purpose Mixture Must Enhance Flavor of Foods. A sauce must bring out the natural flavor of a savory or a sweet dish or may add flavor to a bland 1 food. Sauces must however, be used with discretion. The old proverb, “What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander” does not apply here. We have learned by the experience of famous chefs that certain flavors blend or contrast pleasingly, and we just naturally serve mint with lamb and lemon with fish. We put tomato or cheese, or both, with macaroni or rice. We use a rich butter with a vegetable or with a dry dish or with a plain cottage pudding. We combine a highly flavored sauce such as chocolate or caramel with vanilla Ice cream as vanilla has that bappy faculty of blending with almost any other flavor. For a plum pudding we find that a sauce with one of the non-alcoholic liquor flavorings such as sherry or rum, brings out the flavor of the fruit and nuts with which it Is stuffed. 1 have given the positive points for sauces, now for some-of the negative! Don't use two sauces together at the same course. For instance, if a cream sauce is used on the potatoes, don’t use a Hollandaise on a vegetable. In fact, I prefer to use no other sauce at the same meal when Hollandaise is present Do not serve a sauce with ice cream if a cake, heavy with frosting, is also served. And, finally, vary sauces and use Hie overworked white sauce so seldom that it will be really welcome. When you do use it he sure that it is smooth, of the right thickness and cooked long enough to blend the seasoning with the flour. 1 am going to venture to give you away which is easy, sure, and guaranteed lump less. There are some places where , a white sauce is most fitting but it ‘ usually needs at least the addition . of a little chopped parsley or a sprin- : kle of paprika over the finished dish | for the sake of flavor and even more , for color. From a collection of hundreds of , other sauces here are s few which i are easy to make and fit into any meal plan. , Medium White Sauce. 1 I S tablespoon* butter . 1 tablespoons flour 1 cup milk ‘ % teaspoon salt I Pepper j Melt the butter. Stir in the flour : and seasoning, add the milk, and atir | over*the-fire until smooth and thick. Boil one minute. For Morn ay sauce i add one-half cupful grated cheese i and atir until melted. For Sonbise

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- .*• I DCCTtof? M GIVE up i OH, ALL RIGHT,,. |M ■ SAD H aVING, S I^aELTHA-rJ I HAVE m Vou ’ il - * & Postum/ M COFFEE- a avING/ GM. ME THAT WASHES <8 ■ NERVES?» tiip TWI UP,TOO, ME OUT/PoSTUM 1 ■ what FIRST SMARTTHINfifI 1 AIWAVS PUTS ME 1 ”D© HE NOU\E SAID SINCE MM WARRY A I ,NTO A I ADWSE SOU SOLD TVAT QUITTER / TAILSPN/ J§ _ 4m K. doctor what } L_. . ■ _ ■ you thought J \ *-, wc '' ■ "v^ ; " m op him / wfmj ■■ m Hltrfchs p MBWBBBBHBBBBBWKaVn 1 (take a -np froaP —\ - - . ■■' ■: L ___ me.,..if vtou'vE ear \ Bgmmmmmmgmgamnm \ coffee nerves.,, ( . Mi hope > smTCH70 POSTUM I ) mm GEcmz ISIIIfTHE will..M J ■ AS GOCP BEEN Os course, children should ■ A HUSBAND THE never drink coffee. And many I AS HE (S Whm SWEETEST WSm grown-ups, too, find that the A PU.OT/ fHBB) man A LNB PMj caffein in coffee disagrees with —; J --S j Since he f j WjjEr them. If you are bothered by SWmaED Sprl rW headaches or indigestion, or PCSTOm! WM can’t sleep soundly, coffee may be to blame... why not try Pcstum for 30 days? It contains no caffein. Kir 'S It is simply whole wheat and bran roasted and . .jiw-fslightly sweetened. Easy to make... costs less than half a cent a cup. Delicious, t 00... and may prove a real help. A product of General Foods. wfPSBIr FREE I Let a* send you your first week's supply of wm -mKIhBE Poitum/ree' Simply mailempon. q r corr. l lmnt-, ~ - j | F'i"S in co nozixtt zx a" & a y-tic I , I (OScreootf m U obili rjnirri Tt ct 311935 \ ill— mm ■■■■■Jw. .laiwn.i.i.Mß—n-.m.ii m ', i

sauce add one-half cupful cooked and minced onion. Brown Sauce. H slice onion S tablespoons, butter S tablespoons flour 1 cup meat stock Salt Pepper Cook the onion in 'the butter until slightly brown. Remove the onion and cook until well browned. Add the flour and brown in the butter. Stir iu the stock gradually, add the seasoning Cook until thick. Tomato Sauce. S tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon chopped, onion 1 bay leaf c > tablespoons flotfr % cnp water 1 cup tomato (stewed and strained) Pepper 1 teaspoon salt Cook the onion and bay leaf In melted butter until golden brown. Remove from the five, add the flour and stir until smooth. Add the water, tomato and seasoning. Boil three minutes, stirring constantly. Strain and serve with cooked meats or fish. Hollandaise Sauce, u. li cup butter * egg yolks 1 tablespoon lemon juice 14 teaspoon salt Few grains cayenne Divide the butter into two pieces, put one piece in a saucepan with the yolks of eggs and lemon julc* plage the saucepan in a larger.one containing boiling water, stir constantly until the butter is melted, then add the second piece of butter and stir until it thickens. Remove from the fire, season with salt and cayenne and serve at once. If the mixture curdles from overcooking add two tablespoonfnls of heavy cream and beat well. e Bell Syndicate.—WJitJ Service. Big Tree Forests Once Stood Over Eastern U. S. Great forests of sequoia trees, related to the Big Trees of California and the coast redwoods of the Pacific slope, once stood ovef 5 most of what Is now the United States. New finds of their remains have recently been made, and are now in posse» sion of .the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, where they are being studied by Dr. R. W. Brown of the United States Geological Survey. One lot of specimens consists of an ancient driftwood deposit found in Maryland, near Washington, and the -other is of sequoia cones from the Cannonball river region in North Dakota. No cones were found In the Maryland deposit, but it is considered likely that 6ome of the logs are of redwood; sequoia cones have been found in other Maryland deposits. The trees in both collections are of Cretaceous geological age, about 120,000,000 years ago.—Science Service.

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IfousefioM % % QmfioN If ink is spilled on a hardwood floor, wipe it up immediately with wire wool moistened with wand water, then wax spot when dry. \ • • ' * Wrinkles may be easily removed from a chiffon dress if it is hung iu , a bathroom filled with steam. When thoroughly steamed hang in the air to dry. » • • * . After oiling a sewing’ machine, sew through a piece of blotting paper. This will prevent any surplus oii from soiling material l ** * / When sheets wear in the middle, rip hems and make sheets Into pillow cases out of each sheet. • • • One quart of boiling water, three tablespoonfuls of linseed oil and one tablespoonful of turpentine mixed together and applied to hardwood floors with a woolen cloth will remove all the dust and dfirt that has accumulated on than. • • • French chalk nibbed over a grease spot on wall paper and allowed to remain overnight will remove spot. # • Associated Newspapers.—WXC Service. ' A Three Days’ Cough Is Your Danger Signal • So matterhew many medidnee sou have tried far your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you «ui get relief now with Creomulskai. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creoomlston, which goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the Inflamed membranes as the germ-laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don't be discouraged, your druggist is authorised to guarantee Creomulskai and to refund your * money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulskai right now. (AdvJ gCojeouA/ im marc thorn shin deep AA your doctor. Atk the beauty espot. GARFIELD TEA—• cap nightly — often doe* mot* for Toot akin and complexion than •sriwE CAM KM C Pore* and evmtumily cause muddj. W«cfaT. atupted akin.Awcck warn pm d thia internal bttaay treupamc’* JMet W will axonish vou. Begin tonight. Plilta K.T. (At ootir drotg tooro) /SPVSV9Tt9nRVnFW A&aldiuflillatf A SplwmtMM EmxmOcm Mhrimit Skin Sufferersfind ready relief from itching of eo* zema, rashes and similar ilia, in the •■pm gentle medication of m Resinol