OCR Text |
Show Midvale, Utah, Friday, December 27, 1935 THE UTE SENTINEL PAGE SIX FAT FRIED GOODIES HELPFUL HINTS A Page for Following are· some· recipes for cnmcby good things from the fat kettle. These crunchy delicacies ao ~ any time. Why not try WOM EN them. Chocolate Drop Douglmuts Fashions • Beauty - Cooking 2 tablespoons melted fat 2 eggs, well beaten, 1-3 cup sugar lh cup milk 1 ¥.a cups flour 1 ¥.a teaspoons baking powder 2 tablespoons cocoa ¥.a teaspoon cinnamon Dash of salt. Mix fat with eggs, sugar and milk. Sift flour with baking powder, cocoa, cinnamon and salt. Combine with :ttrst mixture and beat thoroughly. Drop by teaspoonfuls Into deep hot fat ( 365-370 degrees F.) and fry until brown. Drain on brown paper. Sprinkle with powdered sugar. Makes about two and one-half dozen balls. Overeating is 0. I. Ho6day Parties Will Carrots' Food Value If You Walk It Off Show New Dress Style Increases With Age Prune Fritters 1 cup flour 1% teaspoons baking powder Dash of cinnamon Dash of salt 1 tablespoon sugar 1 egg, well beaten % cpp milk % pound cooked and pitted prunes Sift flour with baking powder, cinnamon, salt and sugar. Mix egg with milk and add slowly to flour mixture. Beat until batter is smooth Drop prunes in batter and drop in deep hot tat (365- 375 degrees F.) Fry until golden-brown. Drain on brown paper. Serves six. Timbale Cases 1 cup flour % teaspoon salt Dash of sugar 2-3 cup milk. 1 egg, well beaten 1 tablespoon melted fat Sift together flour, salt and sugar. Mix milk with egg and fat and add gradually to flour mixture. Beat thoroughly. Fill a cup with the batter, or use a bowl which is deep enough to allow timbale iron to be immersed until it is threefourths covered with batter. Place Iron in melted fat and heat until fat reaches 365 to 375 degrees F. or until an inch cube of bread browns in sixty seconds. Remove iron from fat and dip in batter until three fourths covered. Plunge quickly into hot fat and fry until a delicate brown. Slip case from iron and drain on brown paper. Repeat process \)ith remaining batter. Makes about eighteen timbale cases. French Fried Chicken Play Of Pre-St:hool Chad Should Be Supervised Parents should supen :se, in a fashion, the play of the pre-scho >1 child. Following are some facts which might help the pare!lt in this planning: 1. The child is extremely active at 2 years of age and needs an opportunity to use all his lar,£e muscle':i. He needs a place where be can run and jump, an opportunity to r.alance and climb, and large fairly heavy objects of various kinds to pull and move about .. 2. He has a short span Of interest and requires m3.ny objects of vnriC'US kinds with whir:h to experiment. 3. His curiosity leadc:; r1m to in••estigate everything that comes within his reach. 4. He b beginning ioc the fir:Jt ti:ne t, . fee! that he is a real person, and consequently he resents lm.mpering and blocking of his independence and init.iatiw. When the invading hordes home for the holidays take our towns and cities and hold them for two weeks' time at the end of the year -how will the triumphant troops be dressed for their evening engagements ? What materials of war will prove most devastating? What colors will be waving when they move in and occupy the night spots? Have something that dates it definitely 1936, we counsel you. Good llnes can t-e new lines just as well as any year's lines. Draped spirt~ are new. Shirred fullness is new. Jewelled fabrics and jewe ed shoulder straps and jeweled belts; scarfs, hoods, long trailing panels and ends are new. Fullness in the front is new. FullnN:s in the center back is ever newer. Young dancers like black -it's usually first choice. And almost every girl with any repertoire of evening gowns has one in white. Otherwise, distinctive colors that set you off. Vivid ones are better than pastels, this year. Coral. Emerald green. Purply reds. Fabrics that cling or mold the figure, or float. IDatedp.roducts Fast Becoming Popular Dated products are ber.;r.ming the vogue. We have dated coffee. dated shirts for men. dated lingerie !or women and dated milk. Now a bread company in Dayton, Ohio, is dating its bread. Should this newest develop{aent tecome wide-spread, it will be a oistinct advantage to tl1e homeIuaker from several angles. She will no longer pay the price for fresh bread and find, after •.he gets home, that it is not so fresh and that it must be used for t:oq.st on the second day. She can :tlso check on€' baker's product against another for keeping qualities and for fine variations in flavor. Fresh bread is always more distinctive in flavor than day-old bread Ol:" st:::le Lread. Dating products will undoubtedJv increase, if only as another methnd of competili~n. It will be of value to the consumer because it will aid in better buying. We print Butterwrappers. Phone Mid 178 for your next supply. "Eat between meals if you like, but walk it off if you want to keep your weight down to health and beauty prescriptions," advises staff members of the New York College of Home Economics. Overeating brings overweight, and overweight is not recommended for the man or woman over thirty. Mort!ility goes up and life's expectncy goes down as weight increases beyond the normal range. At the age of fifty, every pound of overweight means one per cent less of lire expectancy. On occasions when between-meal eating seems to be necessary, two things can be done, the extra calories provided by this extr3. food can be walked off, or foods lf'W in caloric value be chosen fot: the next meal. A woman wltiking moderately fast can walk off in an hour about one and one-half calories for every pound she weighs. In other words, in an hour of fairly rapid wall mg a woman who weighs 140 pounds can walks off a fairly large extra piece of chocolate layer cake, and b-~ none the: faaer from it. A one ·inch cube of chocolate fudge, containing one hundred calo:ries, call for a shorter walk, about a mile and two-thirds, or about half an hour. -()-- Galoshes may be safely worn over suede shoes without marking them if stockings cut off at the ankles are first pulled over the shoes. -oDip your knife in cold water occasionally when cutting dates, figs, candied orange rind, citron, etc. It will help to eliminate the annoying stickiness. -()-- Keep a small piece of sandpape:in the drawer of your kitchen cabinet to help in loosening stubborn screw tops. I have found it very · useful. -oW hen going to the hairdresser's for a finger wave I slip a small tube of cleansing cream and two or three cleansing tissues in my purse. Before going under the dryer I apply a little cream to my face and thus protect my skin from the extreme heat. When my hair is dry I remove the excess cream with the tissues and apply fresh -o-powder. To drive a nail into plaster without breaking the plaster, put the nail in hot water for a few minutes or in melted paraffin. PROTECT C!l:.-ase of Static Static ls a natural atmosvherlc interference. It is caused by stray, natural electrical discharges, traveling through the same medium. It Is more prevalent by day than by nlitht and far more troublesome In summer than In winter. Birda and Animals Per Acre One bird per acre and about one deer per 20 acres are about the limit of th~se wlldllfe species that can be accommodated in various areas for the best welfare of the animals and birds themselves, Sci· ence Service states. Your Family, Your Home Your Future With RETmEMENT A LIFE Policy There is no better inve!itment. H.P.CANNO N 87 Jefferaon Street Phone Mid. 180 METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Comfort &·Economy With Arrowhead Insulation Firat to Play Juliet 1 young chicken In the ftrst Shake8JWai"Ntn pro· ductfons It was tlie cu8tom tn nse boy aetors for feminine role~. '.rh~ part of Romeo was played by Burbag9 and an unidentified boy played Juliet in the earliest perform· . ances. Between the time of Burbage's death and the Restoratlof'l there are no records of Romeo an~ Juliet on the stage. From 1642 to 1660 parliament prohibited publi<> stage lllays. After the lifting of this prohlbltlon, Sir William D'Avenant received from the klng exclu· slve stage rights for the play. Bla original Juliet was .Mary SounderBOD, afterward Mrs. Thomas Beterton, who ls apparently the ftrst woman ever to have played the part of Juliet. 2 cups flour 3 teaspoons baking powder lh teaspoon salt 2 eggs % cup milk Clean chicken and cut into pieces for serving. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Steam until tender. Cool. Wipe surface with a clean cloth until thoroughly dry. Otherwise the batter is apt to loosen or fall off during the frying process. Sift flour, baking powder and salt together. Beat eggs with milk. Stir liquid into dry ingredients, adding more milk if necessary to mak~ a thin batter. Dip each piece of chicken into batter. Drop into deep fat, heated to 365-375 degrees F. or bot enough to brown an inch cube of bread in sixty seconds. Fry until golden brown. Drain on paper towels or unglazed paper and dust UghUy with salt, pepper and paprika. Serve hot. Most Popular Hymas Many folks may not relish the idea of old age, but not so with one member of the vegetable kingdom. The older it becomes, tb~ better it is. The eating quality of old carrots, contrary to common belief, is et._Jual to, if not better than, that of young ca.,rrots, according to Dr. Hans Plateninus of the department of vegetable crops at Cornwell. Even the bright orange color, the Vitamin A value, and the sweetness of the vegetable increases with age, he pointed out after four years' study of the handling and storing of vegetables. Results also cast a doubt on whether young carrots actually are more tender than old ones. Members of the department of vegetable crops who compared the taste of young and old carrots agreed the older carrots at least were as tender as the young ones. Dr. Platinius said further that carrots can be stored safely without serious loss to quality for six months, if the temperature be lo:ept between 32 and 40 deg:ees. However he warned for storage purposes that the tops should be removed. Storing bunched cet.rrots for even a relatively short time cannot be recommended. When waxin§- floors, if you will wax the rockers and feet of your chairs they will not mar the flooF" when moved about. --o-If your sewing machine has been neglected and does not work well remove all the parts that you can' and wipe them all carefully wtth kerosene. Then oil the machine with a good oil especially recommended for sewing machines, not a heavy type as this will form a gummy substance. Let us insulate your home, your chicken coops, your hot air furnice - 1\ot water boiler or ' steam boiler. Somewhere Mineral wool - used in ceilings of ARROWHEAD INSULATION installations, has, according to U. S. Government figures : .•• in another city••• there is someone who 1 Yz times the heat resisting value of cork board 4 times the heat resisting value of wall board 5 times the heat resisting value of wood 10 times the would like to hear YOUR VOICE say ••• I I Ne'\V Year" I H.F.RASIUSSEN It's next best to being there l _--c--.. iI 111. : • Call us for free estimate- Midvale 40 ~ Arrowhead losulatioos, IDe. Buy Your Cothes The two most widely song hymnal -~remIll the English language, according to many pymnologlsts, writes M1'8. K. G. Carter, Knoxville, Tenn., ln Oolller's Weekly, are "Jesus, Lover I Merchallt T&Uor ot )fy Sout;• which was pub1lsbed Ill 1740 by Charles Wesley, and ~ CLEANING - PRESSING i ~ ..Rock of A.gel9, Cleft for Me," pub- f ~ ALTBRATIONS ltlhed tn 1775 by A. M. Toplady. 1 - -....... - -...........,.............. _..._.. ···--··-···-····-····-::Z...- ....--.:! il, resisting value of masonry· Therefore, it is unequalled as an insulator for heat. ARROWHEAD MINERAL WOOL INSULATION is clean-it is fire-proof-is vermin-repelling-is moisture-proof and is heatconserving. t~uappy For STYLE, QUA~"'l and LONG WEAR h~t ~ rML General offices and plant · r~·nrR·~-----,rr•., ~-R!IlfW:::::a:J@ Midvale, Utah |