Show IMPROVES IMPROVE SALL ALL KINDS OP OF PIES home without a mother la Is hardly sadder than a homo home without pie mince amplo peach pumpkin cus tards plain and gorgeous every sort of df pie indeed that it haa entered into the human mind to concoct andt he store joam rap rp to f forth each and several those these can be baked in paper bags to their great Improve mient the improvement Is particularly marked in the case of 0 tartlets tart lets and turnover of which the paste Is SQ so essential a part doubt it who will the fact remains that pie crust Is better tl fl akler of richer flavor and more digestible when cooked in a bag than when cooked naked I 1 along with the pies do not forget dump dumplings dum lings the open faced sort my special delight for a while seemed to me taboo paper bag cooked but love finds a way in cookery as in other things I 1 have found that by cutting rounds of paper out of a paper bag pix elx inches across folding them V fashion around the edges and cl clipping I 1 P the folds I 1 have cup shaped paper molds to line with my paste fill with fruit sugar and seasoning and cook inside another bag both the molds and the containing bag must be well greased M soyers paste which I 1 have described several times in this series of articles is very fine but here Is one that will ansi answer as well tor for many things and it Is less trouble to make and also less expensive sift a quart of flour add a pinch of salt then cut into the flour with a very sharp linkie a lump of very cold lard as big as wet with ice water barely enough to make it astle stick k together roll out spread over the top half a cup more of lard sliced very thin old fold over a square and roll out again spread with halt half its as much lard as was used the first time fold roll out and dredge lightly over the top with fl flocy 0 Y begin at one edge and roll up t ana a paste lay it in a clean pan and set on ice an hour at least much longer wll alp not hurt in jle pie making cut off across the rolled dough an inch or halt inch section copyright 1911 by the associated literary press |