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Echoes of Southern Kitchens

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ECHOES OF

SOUTHERN
KITCHENS
4
THE LIBRARY
OF
THE UNIVERSITY
OF CALIFORNIA
LOS ANGELES
COMPILED AND PUBLISHED BY THE
ROBERT E. LEE CHAPTER
UNITED
DAUGHTERS
OFTHE
CONFEDERACY
No. 278
Los ANGELES. CAL.
OCTOBER. 1916
-:- OFFICERS -:-
Miss Exa
Kerns, President,
Mrs. P. H.
Brady,
1st V.
Pres.,
Mrs. W. C.
Tyler,
2nd V.
Pres.,
Mrs.
Betty
S.
Hughes, Treas.,
Miss
Georgia
C.
Oldham, Recording Secy.,
Mrs. Arther
Farnsworth, Corresponding Secy.,
Mrs. C. A.
Semple; Registerar.
INDEX IN BACK OF BOOK
Demand the Genuine
BY FULL NAME
Nicknames
Encourage
Substitution
DRINK
Delicious and
Refreshing
COIVTVEI.1.
UNDERTAKERS
1OS1 S. GRAMO AV3E.
An
elegantly appointed
residence establishment
No
charge
for use of Funeral Parlors
MRS.
CONNELL, Manager
EVERYTHINGin MUSIC
Few
people
realize the
completeness
of Southern California Music Co.'s
store. Here
you
will find
practically
every
known musical instrument.
The Sheet Music
department
is the
largest
on the Coast. Small Instru-
ments,
such as
Ukuleles, Violins,
Ban-
jos, Mandolins,
etc. Write for cata-
logs. Easy
terms
arranged.
PIANOS
Chickering
Kranich & Bach
ApolloPlayerPianos
R. S. Howard & Co.
Hobart M. Cable
Armstrong,
Etc.
Phonographs
Edison Diamond
Disc
Edison Amberola
Victrolas
Grafonolas
332-33* SOUTH BROADWAY, LOS
ANGELES.
Branches, Pasadena, Riverside,
San
Diego
5
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
l,ong Way
PIES
PUMPKIN PIE
"What moistens the
lips,
what
brightens
the
eye,
What calls back the
past
like the rich
pumpkin pie?"
Three
large cupfuls
or one can of boiled
pumpkin,
one and a half
cupfuls
of
sugar,
half
cupful
of best
molasses,
the
yolks
and whites of four
eggs
beaten
separately,
a
pinch
of
salt,
one
tablespoonful
each of
ginger
and
cinnamon,
half
a
teaspoonful
of
allspice,
butter size of an
egg.
Beat all to-
gether
well and bake with rich under crust.
APPLE PIE
Pare
good
tart
apples,
slice
thin, lay
in covered
pie pan,
add
sugar
to
taste,
a little cinnamon or
grated
lemon
peel,
bits of
butter,
and cover with
good
rich
paste
and bake for
three-quarters
of an hour.
BLACKBERRY PIE
Take one box of berries and cook for about
twenty
min-
utes with
sugar enough
to make rather sweet. Have
pan
with
good paste
for lower crust. Pour in berries and
juice
and
sprinkle
with one
tablespoon
of corn starch over the
berries and some bits of butter. The starch thickens the
juice
and
keeps
it from
running
out. Cover the
top
with
paste
and bake.
MRS. B. F. CHURCH.
BANANA PIE
Beat
yolks
of two
eggs
with one-half
cup
of
sugar
until
light
and
foamy.
Peel and mash two bananas into the mix-
ture. Add
pinch
of salt. Add two
cups
sweet milk. Mix
well. Turn all into
pan
lined with rich
pie
crust,
bake in hot
oven until custard is set. When
ready
to serve cover with
meringue
of whites of two
eggs,
beaten stiff. Add three
teaspoons powdered sugar, spread
on
top
and brown.
SUSIE E. PONDER.
CHOCOLATE PIE
Grate one-half ounce Baker's
Chocolate, enough
hot
water to dissolve. Beat two
egg yolks,
add four
tablespoons
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
6
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
sugar
and one
tablespoon
corn starch. Put 2
cups
milk in
double
boiler,
add
one-quarter teaspoon
salt. When hot add!
egg
and chocolate mixture,
stirring constantly
until thick.
Pour into a baked
pie
crust,
cover with
meringue
made
by
beating
two
egg
whites till sstiff and
adding
two
tablespoons
sugar
and vanilla
flavoring.
Brown in oven and serve cold.
PIE CRUST
One scant
cup
flour,
one-quarter teaspoon
salt,
mix in
two
tablespoons
Crisco. Add three
tablespoons
cold water.
Roll out and bake on
pan
turned
upside
down,
which insures
a
crisp
brown bottom.
MRS. F. C. MILLER.
PIE CRUST
One
cup
of
lard,
two
cups
of
flour,
one-half
cup
of water
(ice
water
best)
two
teaspoons
of
baking powder.
Roll out
very
thin.
Enough
for two
pies.
MINNIE
G. NEIGHBOURS.
LEMON PIE
Four
eggs,
one
cupful
of
sugar,
one and one-half
cup-
fuls of
boiling
water,
two
heaping teaspoonfuls
of
flour,
the
grated
rind and
juice
of two
Sunkist lemons. Beat the
yolks
and whites of
eggs separately, put yolks, sugar,
flour lemon
juice
and rind in a double
boiler,
mix
well,
add the
boiling
water,
stir until it
begins
to thicken. Add one-half of the
well beaten whites of the
eggs.
Stir,
let cook until thick.
Bake
crust,
fill with
custard,
use the rest of the whites of
eggs
for
merngue,
brown in oven.
MINNIE
G.
NEIGHBOURS.
LEMON PIE
Juice
and rind of one
large
Sunkist
lemon,
yolks
of three
eggs,
one
tablespoon
corn
starch,
not too
heaping,
one
cup
sugar,
one
cup boiling
water. Mix cornstarch and
sugar
together
and
put
water in last.
Meringue
of three whites of
eggs,
three
tablespoons sugar.
MRS. W. N.
PERRY.
LEMON PIE FINE
Rind of two
lemons,
one and one-half
cups
of white
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
7
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
sugar,
two
heaping tablespoons
of unsifted
flour;
one table-
spoon
of corn starch. Stir all well
together,
then add
yolks
of three beaten
eggs.
Beat all
thoroughly,
add
juice
of two
lemons,
two
cups
of
water,
piece
of butter size of
egg.
Put
all
together
in double boiler and cook till thick as
honey.
Remove from fire and let cool before
putting
into
pastry,
bake and when done have
ready
the whites of
eggs
beaten
stiff,
with three small
tablespoons
of
sugar. Spread
over
top
and brown. This makes a
deep large
sized
pie.
MRS. E. H. MULLEN.
MINCE MEAT
Cover two
pounds
of lean beef with
boiling
water and
simmer until tender
;
cool and
chop
fine
;
add two
pounds
of
suet, shredded,
two
pounds
of
layer
raisins,
two
pounds
cur-
rants,
one
pound
of
citron,
one-half
pound
candied lemon
peel,
two
pounds
Sultana
raisins,
four
pounds
of
chopped
apples,
two
nutmegs grated,
one-half
teaspoonful
of
cloves,
two
pounds
of
light
brown
sugar,
one
tablespoonful
of cin-
namon,
and one-half
tablespoonful
of mace.
Now,
reduce
the beef stock to one and one-half
cups,
add to the
mince
meat,
cook
slowly
two hours and
pack away
in
jars
; dilute,
when used with
brandy,
cider or fruit
juices.
Or,
omit the
beef
stock,
add the
juice
and rind of two lemons and two
oranges;
mix
well;
pack
in stone
jar
and
pour
over it one
quart
of
sherry
and one
quart
of
brandy.
Cover and set in
a cool
place.
TRANSPARENT CUSTARD PIE
Four
eggs,
one
cup
of
milk,
three
cups
of
sugar,
two
spoonfuls
of
butter,
a few bread crumbs or
crackers,
nut-
meg
or lemon
peel.
CUSTARD PIE WITHOUT MILK
One
cup sugar,
three
eggs,
one
teaspoon
of melted but-
ter,
one
cup
of
water,
one
tablespoon
of flour. Beat all to-
gether
and flavor to taste. Bake in
quick
oven.
MRS.
QUARRIER.
SWEET POTATO PIE
One
cup
of sweet
potato
boiled and mashed
very
fine
or
put through
colander,
one
cup
of sweet
milk,
one
cup
of
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
8
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
sugar,
one
tablespoon
butter,
two
eggs,
one-third
teaspoon
extract
lemon. Beat
eggs,
add
sugar,
butter,
potato
and
milk and extract
lemon,
place
on stove and stir until it be-
gins
to
thicken,
then
pour
in a
pie plate
that is lined with
good pastry.
Bake until a
light
brown. This makes one
large pie.
JELLY
PIE
Three
eggs,
white and
yolks
beaten
separately
;
three-
fourths
cup
of
sugar,
one-half
cup
of
butter,
one
glass
of
jelly.
This makes two small
pies.
MRS. C. T. HARPER.
WHITE GRAPE PIE
One
large cup
of white
grapes,
seeded
;
one
cup sugar
;
one
egg
;
two rounded
tablespoons
butter. Mix this
together
and bake in two crusts. Delicious.
MRS. W. N. PERRY.
KARO SYRUP PIE
Cup sugar,
one
tablespoon
melted
butter,
two table-
spoons
flour,
cup
milk,
cup
Karo
cyrup,
two
eggs,
beaten
yolks.
Flavor with vanilla or
nutmeg.
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
PUDDINGS
DELMONICO PUDDING
Into a double boiler
put
two
cups
of milk and let come
to the
scalding point. Separate
two
eggs.
Into the
yolks
put
one-half
cup
of
sugar gradually
and stir
thoroughly
into
hot milk
;
one
package
or two
tablespoons
of
gelatine,
soft-
ened in one-half
cup
of cold milk. Pour
part
of hot milk
over this
imxture,
and then
pour
into the rest of the hot
milk. When finished add
gelatine,
let
cool,
then add beaten
whites of
eggs
and vanilla and one
cup
of
whipped
cream.
MRS. W. E. SPROUSE.
STEAMED NUT PUDDING
One-half
cup
butter,
one and one-half
cups
flour,
one-half
cup sugar,
three
teaspoons baking powder,
two
eggs,
one-
half
cup
cold
water,
one-half
cup
raisins,
one-half
cup
nuts
floured. Bake one-half hour or steam one hour. Serve with
hard sauce.
HARD SAUCE
One-third
cup
butter,
one-third
teaspoon flavoring,
one
cup powdered sugar.
Cream
butter,
add
sugar gradually,
and flavor. Form in
loaf,
let stand until
ready
to
serve,
and
slice.
MRS. SEMPLE.
APPLE PUDDING
Fill buttered
baking
dish with sliced
apples, pour
over
this batter : One
tablespoon
butter,
one-half
cup sugar,
one
egg,
one-half
cup
sweet
milk,
one
cup
sifted
flour,
one tea-
spoon baking powder.
Bake in moderate oven till brown.
SAUCE
Two
cups
brown
sugar,
one-half
cup
milk,
butter size
walnut. Cook until thick.
MRS. W. N. PERRY.
FRIED BANANAS
Peel and slice
lengthwise,
then cut in
two,
dip
in well
beaten
egg,
then in cracker
crumbs,
fry
in bacon
grease
and
butter. Sliced
pineapple
is
prepared
in the same
way.
Golden Crown
Butter. Made for Particular
People
10
Viclet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
These are
very
delicious breakfast dishes and common in
the
South.
MRS. W. A. HORXE.
DANDY BREAD PUDDING
Two and one-half
cups
bread
crumbs,
two-thirds
cup
raisins,
two-thirds
cup English
walnuts,
one
apple,
one tea-
spoon baking powder,
clove
cinnamon,
allspice
and
nutmeg
to
taste,
three
eggs,
one
cup
of
milk,
sugar
to taste. Mix
and bake in slow oven.
SAUCE
One
cup sugar,
one
tablespoon
of
flour,
one-half
cup
butter,
one-half
pint
water. Cook
sugar,
flour and butter
together
before
putting
in water.
MRS. F. O. REED.
CARROT PUDDING
One
cup grated
Irish
potatoes (raw),
one
cup grated
carrots
(raw),
one
cup sugar,
one
cup
flour,
one and one-
half
cups
seeded raisins
(floured),
one
nutmeg, grated,
one-
quarter teaspoon
each of cinnamon and
cloves,
one-half
teaspoon
soda added to
potatoes.
Mix well. Put in one-
pound
baking powder
tins and steam in
tight
boiler for three
hours. Do not fill tins within two inches of
top.
Put
tops
on. Serve with hard sauce.
CONFEDERATE PUDDING
Rub
thoroughly
into four
teacupfuls
of sifted flour
one
teacup
of
suet,
shredded and
chopped
fine,
one
teacupful
of raisins seeded and
chopped,
the same
quantity
of currants
washed and dried the
clay previous,
one
teaspoon
of cinna-
mon,
stir into this
one
teacupful
of molasses and the same
quantity
of milk. Pour into a
pudding
mould and boil two
hours. To
be eaten hot with sauce.
.MRS.
W. A. HORXE.
REBEL
PUDDING
One
cup
of
molasses,
half a
cup
of
butter,
one
cup
of
sweet
milk,
one
teaspoon
of
cloves,
and of
cinnamon,
two
teaspoons,
of
allspice,
small
teaspoon
of soda dissolved in
vinegar, enough
flour to make a stiff batter. Boil four hours.
Serve hot with sauce.
MRS. W. A. HORXE.
11
"Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
PUDDING SAUCE
Two
heaping cups
of brown
sugar,
let boil
twenty
min-
utes,
then add half a
cup
of butter which has had two tea-
spoons
of flour rubbed into
it
smoothly
;
let boil till
quite
thick,
then add a wine
glass
of
good brandy
and one well
beaten
egg.
Do not let boil after
adding egg
or it will cur-
dle. Flavor to suit.
DATE PUDDING
One
cup chopped
nuts,
three-fourths
cup chopped
dates
or cut with
scissors,
one
heaping tablespoon
flour,
three
tablespoons sugar,
one-half
teaspoon
of
baking powder,
two
well beaten
eggs.
Fill six ramakins
scantily, put
them
in
pan
of hot water. Cook half hour in oven. Serve with
whipped
cream.
DATE PUDDING
One
pound
dates
(mashed
and
stoned),
one
cup sugar,
one
cup
water
;
cook a few minutes
;
add one
cup
walnuts
or
any
nuts,
lemon
juice
to taste. Serve with
whipped
cream.
EX
A KERNS.
DIXIE PUDDING
One
cup
of
preserves,
one
cup
of
butter,
one
cup
of
sugar,
one
cup
of
flour,
five
eggs.
Cream the butter and
sugar together,
add the flour and
eggs
well beaten
;
lastly
the
preserves.
Bake
in a
quick
oven. Serve hot with sauce.
MRS. W. A. HORNE.
FRENCH FROZEN PUDDING
Put over the fire one
cup
white
sugar,
one
pint boiling
water,
stir until
dissolved,
then boil five minutes.
Separate
six
eggs.
Beat the
yolks
until
light
and
creamy, pour
the
boiling syrup
over
then,
beating
until
cold,
then add one
pint
cream and one
teaspoonful
vanilla. Start to freeze
and
when half
frozen,
add two dozen brandied cherries cut into
small
pieces. Very
fine.
MRS.
JOHN
PARK DOUGALL,
PLUM PUDDING
One
cup
beef
suet,
chopped very
fine and free of skin ;
two
cups
bread
crumbs,
dry
and sifted until like corn meal
;
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
12
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
one
cup sugar;
one
cup
seeded
raisins;
one
cup
currants,
washed and dried
;
one
cup chopped
blanched almonds
;
one-
half
cup
of
citron,
sliced
very
thin
;
four well beaten
eggs
;
one
teaspoon
of salt
;
one
teaspoon
of cloves
;
two
teaspoons
of cinnamon
;
half
grated nutmeg.
Dissolve a level
teaspoon
of soda in a
tablespoon
of warm water
;
flour the fruit thor-
oughly
from a
pint
of
flour,
then mix as follows : Mix
eggs
and
sugar,
then into one
cup
of milk
put spices
and
salt,
mix well and then stir in
fruit, nuts,
bread crumbs and
suet,
when well
mixed,
put
in dissolved
soda;
then stir in the
remainder of the
pint
of sifted
flour,
which will make the
other
ingredients
stick
together.
Steam for four
hours,
preferably
in
tightly
covered bucket. Serve with
any
well
flavored sauce.
MRS. FRANKLIN L. MORGAN.
LEMON FOAM PUDDING
Two
cups
of
boiling
water,
one
cup
of
sugar,
two table-
spoons cornstarch,
juice
of one
lemon,
salt. When this has
boiled 15
minutes,
pour
over
the well beaten whites of three
eggs.
Beat well and let cool. Serve with custard sauce.
MRS. W. N. PERRY.
SUET PUDDING
Three
cups
of
flour,
one
cup
of
molasses,
one
cup
of beef
suet,
one
cup
of sweet
milk,
one
cup
of
currants,
one
cup
of
raisins,
one-half
teaspoonfuls
of
soda,
spice, nutmeg,
cloves
and cinnamon. Beat well
together,
steam two
hours,
eat
with wine sauce.
MRS. E. A. LOY.
FRENCH PAIN PERDU
(LOST BREAD)
So called
because made of stale
bread,
which would be a loss
Six thick slices of stale
bread,
soaked in
sugared
milk,
flavored with vanilla
;
drain and
dip
in beaten
egg, fry
in hot
lard,
browning
on both sides
;
sprinkle
with
powdered sugar
and
serve hot.
MRS. FRANKLIN L. MORGAN.
SWEET
POTATO PUDDING
Cut sweet
potatoes
in thin
slices,
put layer
of
potatoes
in
pan, salt,
pepper
and
butter,
then
layer
of
apples
sliced
thin. Add
potatoes
and
apples
alternately.
Make
syrup
of
sugar
and
water,
cover
potatoes
and
apples, put
in oven.
Bake about
fifty
minutes.
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
INSIST ON
UNIFORMLY GOOD
ORANGES and LEMONS
Genuine come in tissue
wrappers
marked "Sunkisf
Watch for the
wrapper
NewMethod Gas
Ranges
On
Easy
Credit Terms
Everywoman
will find cook-
ing
a more
perfect pleasure
if she would use one of
these fine
ranges.
We sell
them on
easy
terms that
every
home
may
have one.
Eastern
Outfitting
Co.
62O-26 So. Main Street
Inotctfedae
<=_^
We have demonstrated to those
in need of our services our com-
plete
knowledge
of
everything
that
appertains
to a funeral. If
you
wish to avai
yourself
of the ser
vices of an
undertaker whose
repu-
tation insures
square dealing, you
should
employ
us.
W. A.
BROWN
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
1335 South Flower St.
Los
Angeles,
Cal.
Main 2023
Home 23940
14
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
"Now
good digestion
wait on
appetite
and health on both.'
Shakespeare.
CAKE
ANGEL FOOD CAKE
Whites of nine
eggs,
one and one-half
cups sugar
(sifted),
one
cup
flour,
one-half
teaspoon
cream of
tartar,
pinch
of salt added to
eggs
before
beating.
After
sifting
flour four or five
times,
measure and set aside one
cup ;
then
measure one and
one-quarter cup sugar
;
beat whites of
eggs
about
half,
add cream tartar and beat till
very, very
stiff,
stir in
sugar,
then flour
very lightly.
Bake in moderate
oven,
35 to 50
minutes.
MRS.
P. H. BRADY.
LAYER ANGEL CAKE
Whites of eleven
eggs,
one and one-half
goblets
of
sugar,
one
goblet
flour,
one-half
teaspoon salt,
one
te'aspoon
vanilla,
one
pinch baking powder.
Bake in two
layer pans.
Filling
One-half
cup
sour
cream,
one
cup powdered
sugar,
one
cup chopped
nuts', almonds,
one
teaspoon
vanilla.
MRS. KATE N.
PROVINES.
APPLE SAUCE CAKE
Sugar
one
cup,
flour two
cups, apple
sauce one and one-
half
cups,
one-half
cup
of butter or
Crisco,
chocolate three
tablespoons,
cinnamon one
teaspoon,
cloves one-half tea-
spoon,
soda one
teaspoon
in one-half
cup
sour
milk,
raisins
two
cups,
nuts one
cup,
two
teaspoons
of
baking powder,
Mix
dry ingredients.
Then wet all
together.
MRS. G. B.
QUARRIER.
APPLE
SAUCE CAKE
One
cup sugar,
one-half
cup
butter,
cream
together;
one
cup
unsweetened
apple sauce;
one
teaspoon soda;
one
teaspoon
cinnamon
;
one-half
teaspoon ground
cloves
;
one
teaspoon
salt
;
one and
three-fourths
cups
flour
;
one
cup
seeded
raisins;
one-half
cup
nuts. Dissolve
your
soda in
one
tablespoon
of
boiling water,
and stir in
cup apple
sauce.
Mix all
ingredients
thoroughly.
Then add one well beaten
egg.
Bakeslowly
one hour.
ELIZABETH M.
GOULD.
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
15
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
BLACKBERRY CAKE
Two
cups
of
sugar,
one
cup
of
butter,
four
cups
of
flour,
whites and
yolks
of four
eggs
beaten
separately,
two
cups
of
blackberry jam,
two
teaspoons
of
cinnamon,
same of nut-
meg,
one of
allspice,
one
cup
of buttermilk with
teaspoons
soda dissolved in it. Bake in
layers
and
put
caramel
filling
between them.
Filling:
Two
cups sugar,
one-half
cup
butter,
one
of
sweet
milk,
cook until thick
enough
to
string
from
spoon.
MRS. B.
J.
BARNHART.
BLACKBERRY CAKE
Three
eggs,
beaten
separately ;
one
cup
brown
sugar,
three-fourths
cup
butter,
two
cups
flour,
one
cup jam,
three
tablespoons
sour
cream,
one
teaspoon
soda,
two
teaspoons
cloves, cinnamon,
allspice
and
nutmeg.
Put soda and cream
in last. Bake in
layers.
Boiled
icing.
MRS. ORLANDO HALLIBURTON.
CUP CAKES
Full
cup
flour,
scant
cup sugar,
two
teaspoons baking
powder, pinch
salt. Break
egg
in
cup, pour
over it butter
size of walnut melted. Fill
cup
with milk. Mix well.
MRS. GILBERT WOODILL.
CREAM CAKE
One
cup
butter,
two
cups sugar,
three and one-half
cups
flour,
one
cup
cream,
four
eggs,
one
teaspoonful
cream tar-
tar,
one-half
teaspoon
soda.
SPONGE ROLL
Four
eggs,
one
cup sugar,
one and one-third
cups
flour,
three
tablespoons
water. Beat
eggs
well before
adding
flour.
Spread jelly
and roll while hot.
COFFEE CAKE
Sift
together
one
cup
flour,
one-half
cup sugar,
one-
half
saltspoon salt,
one-half
teaspoon
cinnamon,
three tea-
spoons
level
baking powder.
Mix this into a soft
dough by
adding
the
following,
well mixed: One
egg
well
beaten,
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
16
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
four
tablespoons
melted
butter,
one-half
cup
sweet milk.
Spread
in a shallow bake
pan, sprinkle thickly
with cinna-
mon and
sugar.
Let
rise five minutes. Bake in moderate
oven.
DEVIL'S FOOD
Two
cups pulverized sugar,
one-half
cup butter,
two
eggs,
one-half
cup
hot
coffee,
one-half
cup
hot
water,
one-
half
cup grated
chocolate,
one
teaspoon
soda in
coffee,
two
and one-half
cups
flour.
Filling:
Two
cups
brown
sugar,
one-third
cup
butter,
one-half
cup
sweet milk
(boiled thick),
add one
cup hickory
nuts
chopped
fine.
MRS. ORLANDO SHALLIBURTON.
CARAMEL CAKE
One
cup
of
butter,
three
cups
of
sugar,
four
cups
flour,
three-fourths
cup
sweet
milk,
whites of ten
eggs.
Bake in
five
layers.
Color two with some kind of fruit
coloring,
pink
or
green.
Filling
for same : Three
cups
brown
sugar,
one
cup
sweet
cream,
two
tablespoons
butter. Cook until candied.
When cool flavor with vanilla and cream. Put cake
together
while hot.
MISS ANNA
ATKINSON.
DATE CAKE
Four
eggs
beaten
separately,
one
cup sugar,
one
cup
flour,
one-half
teaspoon salt,
one-half
teaspoon baking
soda,
one-half
teaspoon
baking powder,
one
pound dates,
one-half
pound nuts,
vanilla. Bake in slow oven for one hour.
EXA KERNS.
DROPPED
CAKES
One-half
cup
butter,
one-half
cup
of
milk,
one
cup
of
sugar,
one
cup
of currants and raisins
mixed,
two
cups
of
flour,
two
teaspoons
of
baking powder,
one-half
cup
of
nuts,
two
eggs
and
spices
to
suit,
one
tablespoon
of vanilla. It
makes
thirty
or
forty
little cakes and is so
easy
to make.
Work
sugar
and butter
together,
break in
eggs
one at a
time.
Drop
on
greased pan
far
apart.
MRS. E.
A.
LOY.
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
17
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
OLD-TIME POUND CAKE
One
pound sugar,
one
pound
flour,
three-fourths
pound
butter,
one dozen
eggs.
Cream
sugar
and butter
very light.
Beat
eggs separately.
Add
yolks
to
sugar
and
butter, beat,
add flour and beat until all is
very light,
then add whites.
MISS
ANNA ATKINSON.
ECONOMICAL SPONGE CAKE
Two
eggs,
one
cup
of
sugar, pinch
of
salt,
one
cup
of
flour,
grated
rind of one-half
lemon,
one-half
cup
of hot
water,
one
tablespoon
of melted
butter,
one and one-third
teaspoons
of
baking powder.
Beat the
yolks
of the
eggs
with half the
sugar,
then add the water and the
remaining
sugar,
lemon
rind,
flour sifted with
baking powder ; lastly
fold in whites beaten
stiff,
bake
twenty-five
minutes in a
buttered and floured shallow
pan.
EMERGENCY CAKE
One-half
cup
of
sugar,
one-half
cup
milk,
one
egg,
one
tablespoon
melted
butter,
one
cup
flour,
three level tea-
spoonsful baking powder,
one-half
teaspoonful
salt,
one
teaspoonful
cinnamon. After batter is
put
in
pan,
sift a lit-
tle
sugar
and cinnamon on
top.
MRS. E. M. SEMPLE.
SOUTHERN FRUIT CAKE
Cream one
pound butter,
one
pint sugar,
one
pint
flour,
six
eggs,
one
pound
of
raisins,
one
pound
of
currants,
one-
half
pound citron,
ten cents worth
dates,
ten cents worth
dry figs,
one
pound
of
English
walnuts,
one
teaspoon
cinna-
mon,
one
teaspoon allspice,
one
teaspoon
cloves,
two nut-
megs.
Put all of
spices
in a wine
glass
of
whiskey.
One-
half
teaspoon
soda in one
tablespoon vinegar.
Mix thor-
oughly
and bake in slow oven three thours.
MRS. E.
H.
MULLEN.
BURNT SUGAR CAKE
One-half
cup
butter and one and one-half
cups
of
sugar
creamed,
add
yolks
of two
eggs,
one
cup
of
water,
add
gradually
two
cups
of flour. Beat five minutes. Add two
tablespoons
of caramel made as follows: One-half
cup
sugar
burned in
pan
till
smokes,
take off and throw one-half
cup boiling
water into burned
sugar, place
on fire and boil
fast,
until like
syrup. Enough
for three cakes.
One
tablespoon
of
vanilla,
another one-half
cup
of flour
into which two
teaspoons
of
baking powder
has been stirred.
Beat
well,
then add the whites of two well-beaten
eggs,
tfake
moderately.
GEORGIE G.
OLDHAM.
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
18
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
WHITE FRUIT CAKE
One
teaspoon powdered
mace,
one
teaspoon
cinnamon,
one
grated nutmeg,
one-half
wineglass
of
rosewater,
one
pound
choice white
citron,
sliced thin
;
one
pound
blanched
almonds,
sliced thin
;
one
grated
cocoanut,
one-fourth
pound
candied
orange peel,
sliced fine
;
one
pound powdered
white
sugar,
one-half
pound
butter,
eight eggs,
beaten
separately
;
dredge
the fruit in
flour,
and warm
it,
having
it
ready
for
use..
Mixing:
Cream,
butter and
sugar,
and add
yolks;
beat
thoroughly
after each mixture. Next add one-fourth of the
flour,
sifted several times to make it
light.
Then add one-
half of the
whites,
another
quarter
of the
flour,
the rest of
the
whites,
one-fourth of flour. Now stir in rosewater and
spices,
beat two minutes. Add the rest of the
flour,
then
the
fruit;
cocoanut last.
Stir
just enough
to mix. Bake
thre hours in a slow oven and cover wih
icing.
MRS. ALBERTA RANSONE.
FRUIT CAKE
A
receipt
used in
Morgan family
for over
sixty years,
always given
to wife of oldest son and
never,
to the best
of
my
knowledge, published
before.
One and
one-quarter pounds
of
flour,
one and one-
quarter
pounds
of
sugar,
one
pound
of
butter,
one dozen
eggs,
two
pounds
of
prunes,
two
pounds
of
currants,
two
pounds
of
raisins,
one
pound
of
citron,
one
pound
of
almonds,
one
pound
of
pecans,
one
wineglass
of
sherry,
one
wineglass
of
whiskey,
one
winglass
of
rosewater,
one table-
spoon
of
grated
nutmeg,
one
tablespoon
of
ground allspice,
one
tablespoon
of
ground cloves,
one
tablespoon
of
ground
cinnamon.
The flour
you
dredge your
fruit with is extra. Mix
spices
with flour.
The
original receipt says,
"Bake in a
very
moderate
oven
five
hours,
if baked in one
pan,
if in
two,
four
hours,"
but I steam this cake for three or four hours
(according
to
whether in one or two
pans),
then
dry
out in a
very
moderate oven for one hour
;
this makes am ore moist cake
and
overcomes
danger
of
burning.
MRS.
FRANKLIN L. MORGAN.
Golden Crown
Butter, Made for Particular
People
19
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
WILSON FRUIT CAKE
One
pound butter,
one
pound
of
sugar (brown),
one
pound
flour browned and
sifted,
twelve
eggs
beaten
sepa-
rately,
five
pounds
seeded
raisins,
one
pound
shredded
citron,
one
glass grape
or currant
jelly,
one
pound crystal-
ized sliced
pineapple,
one
pound crystalized
cherries cut
up,
one
pound
blanched
almonds, shredded;
one
pound
shelled
pecans, chopped ;
two
teaspoons powderd
cinnamon,
one-
half
teaspoon powdered nutmeg,
one-half
allspice,
one tea-
spoon
scant
powdered cloves,
one
glass sherry
or coffee as
preferred.
Cream,
butter and
sugar
add
egg yolks
well
beaten,
add
spices
and
liquids
;
next alternate flour and
egg
whites,
reserving part
of flour to
thoroughly
mix in fruit
;
add fruit
last,
part
at a time. Bake or steam four to six hours if
steamed in
very
slow
oven,
about one hour will make two
big
cakes.
MRS. W. C.
TYLER.
VELVET WHITE CAKE
One-half
cupful butter,
one
cupful
fine
granulated sugar,
one-half
cupful
of
milk,
two
cupfuls
flour
(sifted),
three
level
tablespoons baking powder,
white five
eggs, one-quar-
ter
teaspoonful
cream of
tartar,
one
teaspoonful
vanilla.
Cream the
butter,
slowly
add
sugar beating
in thor-
oughly.
Add a little flour to the butter and
sugar,
then add a little
milk,
alternating
the flour and milk until
all is in. Have the
baking powder
in the last of the flour.
Beat whites
well,
add cream of tartar to
them,
and beat to
stiff froth. Flavor mixture with vanilla and last fold in
whites. To make the cake fine
grained
do all
beating
before
whites are in. Bake in loaf or
layers.
MRS. ALBERTA RANSONE.
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
20
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
PRIZE WHITE CAKE
Whites of five
eggs,
two
tablespoons
of Violet Brand
Shortening,
three
light cups
flour
(sifted),
two
tablespoons
Royal baking powder, pinch
salt,
one and one-half
cups
sugar,
one
cup
water,
one
teaspoon flavoring.
Cream Short-
ening
and
sugar,
add salt and
flavoring,
alternate with flour
(which
has been sifted with
baking powder)
and water.
Beat the whites to a stiff froth and add
lastly.
Bake either
in loaf or
layers.
MRS. W. N.
PERRY.
WHITE LAYER CAKE
Beat
together
one
cup
of
sugar,
one
cup
of butter.
When
creamy
add three
cups
of sifted
flour,
two
teaspoons-
ful of
baking powder
sifted with the flour and one
cup
of
water
;
into this mix the whites of six
eggs,
well
beaten,
stir-
ring lightly ;
flavor with vanilla and bake in three cake
pans
well
greased
with lard.
Filling:
For caramel
filling,
one
cup
of brown
sugar,
one-half
cup
cream and two
teaspoonsful
of
butter,
cook
until thick
;
take from the
fire,
flavor with vanilla and stir
until cool
;
then
spread
between
layers.
Fruit
filling:
Boil one
cup
of
sugar,
one-fourth
cup
of
water until the
sugar
threads when
dropped
from a
spoon,
then
pour briskly
on the well beaten white of an
egg
until
smooth
;
then add one-half
cup
nuts,
one-half
cup chopped
raisins with one-fourth dozen dried
figs
cut in thin
strips
;
when all of these
ingredients
are well
mixed,
spread
between
the
layrs
of cake.
MRS. S.
R. THORPE.
WHITE LOAF CAKE
One
cup sugar,
one-half
cup butter,
whites of four
eggs,
one-half
cup
sweet
milk,
one and one-half
cups
flour,
one
teaspoon
baking powder,
one-half
teaspoon vanilla,
one-
quarter
teaspoon
salt.
BETTIE E. SMITH HUGHES.
SOUR MILK CAKE NO EGG
One scant
cup butter,
one
cup sugar,
two
cups
flour,
one
cup
sour
milk,
pinch salt,
one
level
teaspoon
soda.
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
21
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
one
teaspoon
cinnamon,
one
teaspoon
cloves,
one
teaspoon
nutmeg,
one
cup
raisins,
one
cup
walnuts. Measure flour
after
sifting
three times. Put milk and soda in last.
MRS. E. M.
SEMPLE.
SOUR CREAM CAKE
One
cup
sour
cream,
one
cup sugar,
one
egg,
one and
one-half
cup
flour, pinch
of
soda,
teaspoon
vanilla,
two round
spoons
chocolate or cocoa. Double for
large
cake.
MRS. E. L. DuBOSE.
SOUR MILK CAKE
Beat one
cup sugar
and four
tablespoons
butter to a
cream,
add
three-quarters cup
sour milk or
cream,
two
cups
sifted
flour,
one-half
teaspoon
soda. Stir
well,
then add
beaten whites of three
eggs
or two whole
eggs.
Raisins
and
spices
to suit taste. Bake in
layers.
MRS.
JOHN
PARK
DOUGALL.
SPICE CAKE
Yolks of seven
eggs,
two
cups
brown
sugar,
one
cup
molasses,
one
cup
butter,
five
cups flour,
one
cup
sour
cream,
one
teaspoon
soda.
Spice
to taste.
FINE SPICE CAKE
One
egg,
two-thirds
cup
molasses,
two-thirds
cup sugar,
one-half
cup
melted
butter,
one
cup
milk,
three
cups
flour,
one
heaping teaspoon
soda,
one even
teaspoon
cream
tartar,
one
tablespoon
mixed
spices,
one
tablespoon vinegar.
Mix
in order
given
and use
plain whitefrosting.
MRS. W. N. PERRY.
RIBBON CAKE
Cream
together
one
cup butter,
two and one-half
cups
sugar,
add one
cup
sweet
milk,
four well-beaten
eggs,
four
cups
flour,
four
teaspoons baking powder.
Beat
thoroughly,
then take out one-third and with it mix one
tablespoon
mo-
lasses,
one
teaspoon
all kinds of
spices,
one
cup English
currants,
one
cup raisins,
one
cup
citron cut fine. Bake this
in one cake. The white in two. When done
place together,
with
icing
the dark in center and
press together.
MRS. P. H. BRADY.
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
22
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
STRAWBERRY CAKE
One
cup sugar
creamed with the beaten
yolks
of three
eggs
and one-half
cup
of butter. Sift
together cup
and half
of
flour,
two
teaspoonsful
of
baking powder
and
pinch
of
salt. Stir
into
sugar
a little at a
time, mixing
in one-half
cup
of water. Then stir beaten whites of
eggs,
vanilla.
Bake in
quick
oven.
Icing:
One box strawberries mashed
together
with
one
cup
of
granulated sugar,
stir in unbeaten white of one
egg
and beat with
egg
beater for half hour. When
light
and
puffy spread
on cake. This is nice baked either as three
layer
or flat cake.
HELENA THORPE.
ROSE LEAF CAKES
One
cup
of rose
petals (red
roses are
best,
but
any
kind
may
be used if
they
are
very fragrant),
three
cups
of
flour,
one
cup
of
sugar,
one-half
cup
butter,
three
eggs,
one
cup
of
milk,
two
teaspoons baking powder,
one-half tea-
spoon
salt. Cream
butter,
beat
eggs
and
sugar together,
very light,
add milk and
flour,
then add the butter.
Lastly
fold in the rose
petals. Baking powder
should be sifted in
with flour. Bake in
gem pans
in a moderate oven.
MARION CORNWALL.
PLAIN CAKE
One-half of a
pound
cold
butter, creamed,
two
cups
sugar,
four
eggs,
beaten white and
yolks separately,
but
mixed before added to butter and
sugar,
three
cups
of
flour,
sifted three
times,
two
teaspoons
of
baking powder,
one
cup
of milk. Bake in stem
pan
for one hour. This
recipe
is a
very good
one to use for small cakes baked in muffin
rings
or as a loaf
cake,
but is too rich for a
layer
cake.
MRS.
FRANKLIN L.
MORGAN.
PECAN CAKE
One
pound
sifted
flour,
one
pound sugar,
one-half
cup
butter,
six
eggs,
two
pounds raisins,
one
quart chopped
pecan nuts,
one
large nutmeg,
one
teaspoon baking powder,
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
23
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
one
large glass whiskey.
Mix as fruit
cake,
bake in moder-
ate over three hours.
MRS. AGNES HALLIBURTON.
One
cup sugar,
one-half
cup
butter,
two
eggs,
one
cup
sweet
milk,
two and one-half
cups
flour,
two and one-half
teaspoonsful baking powder,
one
teaspoonful
vanilla. Mix
in the order
given, adding
the beaten whites last.
MRS. G. W. CASE.
PRUNE CAKE
One
cup sugar,
one-half
cup
butter,
one and one-half
cups
flour,
four
tablespoons
of sour
milk,
one
teaspoon
cin-
namon,
one-half
teaspoon
cloves and
nutmeg,
three
eggs
(whites
of two for
frosting),
one
cup
cooked
prunes,
one
cup
of
chopped
nuts,
last one
teaspoon
of soda dissolved
in one
teaspoon
of water.
MRS. E. H.
MULLEN.
ORANGE SPONGE CAKE
Four
eggs
beaten
separately,
add to whites one-half
cup
of
sugar,
add to
yolks
one-half
cup
of
sugar, grated
rind
of one
orange, juice
of one-half Sunkist
orange,
one
cup
of
flour,
one
teaspoonful
of
baking powder.
Beat
eggs
thor-
oughly.
Sift
sugar
four or five
times,
sift flour four or five
times.
CARROLL LOY STEWART.
NUT CAKE
One
cup
butter,
one and one-half
cups sugar,
three
cups
flour,
two
cups currants,
four
eggs,
two
teaspoons baking
powder,
citron to
taste,
nuts to
taste,
almonds
especially
good,
one-half
teaspoon
salt. Beat
eggs,
add
sugar.
Rub
shortening
and
flour,
then add currants and nuts. Sift bak-
ing powder
in flour. Bake in slow oven.
E. PAGE KERNS.
MAHOGANY CAKE
Three
eggs
beaten
together,
one and one-half
cups
sugar,
one-half
cup
butter,
one
cup
sweet
milk,
two
cups
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
24
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
flour,
one
teaspoon
soda,
two
squares
sweet
chocolate,
boil
in one-half of the milk until
thick,
then cool. Flavor with
vanilla. Bake in two
layers, putting your
favorite
frosting
between.
MRS. C. D. SWAIN.
LEMON SPONGE CAKE
Four
eggs,
two
cups sugar,
two
cups flour,
three-fourths
cup
hot
water,
baking powder,
two small
teaspoons.
Meas-
ure flour before
sifting.
Sift
flour and
baking powder
three
times. Beat
yellows
till
light,
add
sugar
and
grated
rind
and
juice
of one small Sunkist
lemon,
then the well beaten
whites,
then the flour and last the hot water. Bake in a
moderate oven about 45 minutes.
MRS. M.
E. CHRISTIAN.
LADY BALTIMORE CAKE
Cream
together
one
cup
of butter and two of
sugar,
add to this three and one-half
cups
of flour well
sifted,
one
cup
of
milk,
two level
teaspoonsful
of
baking powder,
sifted
with the
flour,
a
teaspoonful
of
pure
rosewater and the
stiffly
beaten whites of six
eggs.
Beat the whole
vigorously.
Bake in
jelly
tins and for
filling
use the
following ingre-
dients : To three
cups
of
very
fine
sugar
add a
cup
of boil-
ing water,
stir into this one
cup
of
chopped
and seeded
raisins,
one
cup
of
finely chopped pecan
nuts
(walnuts
will
answer),
six
figs chopped
fine and beat in the whites of four
eggs
that have been
whipped
stiff.
MRS. W. A. HORNE.
HANDY CAKE
One-fifth
cup
melted
butter,
add two unbeaten
eggs,
fill
the
cup
with milk.
Second
part:
One
cup
unsifted flour
(heaping),
one
teaspoon baking powder,
one
cup sugar,
flavoring.
Beat well. Bake in two small
layers,
or add one
cup
seeded raisins and bake in muffin
rings.
GOLDEN LOAF CAKE
Yolks of
eight eggs,
one
cup granulated sugar,
scant one-half
cup butter,
one-half
cup
milk,
one
Golden Crown
Butter, Made for Particular
People
Of Los
Angeles,
California
N. W. Cor. Fifth and
Spring
Sts.
INTEREST PAID ON TIME ACCOUNTS
GARMENTS FOR
WOMEN,
MISSES AND CHILDREN
AT POPULAR PRICES
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Dressing, Manicuring,
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Scalp Massage
Switches, Transformations, Wigs
and
Toupees
Hair Ornaments for All Occasions
WEAVER-JACKSON COMPANY
HAIR
MERCHANTS
429 South
Broadway,
Los
Angeles
Leather Goods
Cosmetics
Adrien Loeb. I. G. Fleishman.
Adolph
Fleishman.
LOEB,
FLEISHMAN & CO.
Wholesale Fruits and
Produce
210-212-214 CENTRAL AVENUE
TELEPHONES
Sunset
Broadway
1251
Home 10162
LOS
ANGELES,
CAL.
26
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
and one-half
cups
flour,
two
teaspoons baking powder.
Cream
Shortening
and
sugar thoroughly,
beat
yolks
to a
stiff froth and mix well. Put in milk then flour and stir
hard. Bake
in tube
pan
in moderate oven.
SOUP
POTATO SOUP
Three small
potatoes,
one
pint
milk,
two
tablespoons
chopped
onions,
one
teaspoonful
salt,
one
sprinkle pepper,
two
tablespoons
flour,
two
tablespoons
butter.
Prepare
potatoes
and cook without salt until soft. Drain off water
and mash. Melt
butter,
add onion and flour and one
cup
of milk. Stir over heat until
thickened;
add this
slowly.
CREAM OF TOMATO SOUP
One-half can of
tomatoes,
two
teaspoonfuls
of
sugar,
one-quarter teaspoon
of
soda,
one
quart
of
milk,
one slice
of
onion,
four
tablespoonfuls
of
flour,
one
teaspoonful
of
salt,
one-eighth teaspoonful
of
pepper,
one-third
cup
of
butter. Scald milk with
onion,
remove onion and thicken
milk with flour diluted with cold water. Cook
twenty
min-
utes,
stirring constantly
at first. Cook tomatoes with
sugar
fifteen
minutes,
add soda and run
through
a sieve. Com-
bine mixture and strain into tureen over
butter,
salt and
pepper.
COLD CONSOMME
Make one
quart
of
any
unflavored
gelatine adding
enough
beef extract to the hot water used in the
gelatine
to flavor it
nicely.
Let harden.
CARROLL LOY STEWART.
VEGETABLE SOUP
Corn beef shank with water and boil two
hours,
adding
water whenever
necessary
to
keep
meet covered. Take
out meat and skim the
soup.
Add one Irish
potato,
one
sweet
pepper,
one
turnip,
two small
onions,
one half cab-
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
27
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
bage,
two or three
pieces
of
celery,
a little
parsley,
all
chopped
in small
pieces
;
three small
tomatoes, sliced,
one
cup
butter
beans,
one
cup
corn,
one-third
cup
rice. Cook
slowly
one hour. Season to taste and if it
gets
too thick
add water.
EMMA
A. LOY.
CLAM CHOWDER
Mince one
large
slice of
pork
and
fry
in iron
pot;
add
one
pint
of
potatoes
sliced
very
thin,
and one
large
onion
chopped
fine
;
add sufficient water to cover
potatoes
and
boil until tender
;
then add content of half
pound
can of
minced clams and four or five rolled crackers. Season to
taste
;
stirr
carefully,
cook for two minutes, then add one
pint
of milk and serve hot.
CARROLL LOY STEWART.
CHICKEN GUMBO
(Georgia Style)
Boil a chicken in two
quarts
of water in a
tightly
cov-
ered vessel until
very
tender,
having put
in a
bay
leaf,
a lit-
tle
thyme
and several
pepper
corns.
Just
before it is done
sprinkle
in a
teaspoon
salt. Remove the chicken from the
stock and cut in small
pieces.
Into the stock
put
one-half
cup
carrots,
cubed, one-four
cup
minced
onion,
one
cup
okra cut in small
rings,
one
large
or two small chili
peppers,
chopped,
and two slices of bacon cut in small
pieces,
one
cup
of Irish
potatoes
cubed,
and four tomatoes cut in small
pieces.
When done add the chicken and
pour
into a hot
soup
tureen. Wash
thoroughly
one
cup
rice,
drain and
sprinkle slowly
into three
quarts
of
boiling
salted water.
Boil
twenty
minutes,
drain and
put
in hot
platter.
To serve
place
a
heaping spoon
of rice in
soup plate
and
pour
around a ladle of hot
gumbo.
If
any
of this
should be
left,
thicken with a few bread crumbs and stuffed
sweet
peppers
;
dot with a little butter and bake.
MRS. P. H. BRADY.
OKRA GUMBO
Wipe
the okra and cut it in thin round slices. Cut a
chicken,
put
it to
fry
;
when it
begins
to brown
put
in a
chopped
onion,
salt and
pepper,
then add the okra. cover
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
28
Vicltt Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
the
pot
and let it continue to cook
slowly, stirring
often
and
keeping
the
pot
covered. As soon as the okra is soft,
pour
three
quarts
of
boiling
water and let it cook
slowly
for one
hour,
this will
require
one
pint
of okra after it is
cut.
MRS. S. R. THORPE.
GUMBO FILE
(Southern Style)
Put a chicken to
fry
after
cutting
it
up.
When it is
beginning
to
brown,
put
one
chopped
onion,
salt,
pepper
and a
heaping spoonful
of flour. Let that
fry
about five
minutes
longer, stirring
it to
keep
it from
burning,
then
pour
three
quarts
of
water,
boiling.
Let cook about an hour
and a
half,
or if the chicken is
old,
let it cook till it is ten-
der. When
ready
to serve add the fillet little at the time
till it
begins
to thicken. Let it come to a boil and serve.
This is
always
eaten with rice cooked
by following recipe:
one
cup
of
rice,
one
cup
of
water,
one-four
teaspoonful
of
salt. Wash the rice in two or three
waters,
pick
out
any
grains
not white, add water and salt and
put
to cook. Let
it boil hard at
first,
but as soon as the water
begins
to
dry
out,
turn the fire
very
low and
place
an iron cover between
the
saucepan
and the
fire,
and let it
dry
out for half an hour.
Never stir the
rice,
but watch it
carefully
so it will not burn
after the
water
has boiled out.
MRS. S. R. THORPE.
FRUIT COCKTAIL
One
pound
of muscat
grapes,
two
grape
fruit,
one small
can
grated pine apple,
one
orange,
one
tablespoonful
of
brandy.
Seed and skin the
grapes, cutting
half in two. Cut
orange
and
grape
fruit into small
bits,
removing
seeds and
skin
;
put
in
pineapple
and
brandy
and
enough sugar
to
sweeten it. Serve in sherbet
cups
as an
appetizer.
CARROLL LOY STEWART.
FISH
''How oft we hear of him the
hungry
sinner,
W
r
ho
spends
his
days
in
angling
for a dinner."
BOILED FISH
Dredge
fish
lightly
with
flour,
wrap
and secure
firmly
in
a
cloth,
put
in a
kettle and cook in
slightly
salted
boiling
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
Ralph's Grocery Company
SELLS FOR LESS
We
Appreciate
Delivery
Orders of 50 cents and
up
FOUR STORES
317 and 321 South
Spring
Street,
631-3-5 South
Spring
Street
Vermont Avenue at 35th Place and Pico Street at Normandie Ave.
West 6500 Send for
Catalog
Home 60791
LESLIE SALT
Supplies
the tastiness which coaxes
the best flavor out of
your cooking
"Every
Good Grocer Sells It"
German
&
Savings
Spring
at Seventh St Los Anodes
-TivS*
Personal Service to Each Patron
Is the standard
by
which
every
transaction and
policy
of this
Bank is measured.
Prompt,
accurate, courteous,
complete
these words form our
definition of the
banking efficiency
of which we invite
you
to take
advantage.
Your
patronage
in
any
of our
Departments
will be welcomed and
appreciated.
30
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
water. A medium sized fish will boil in about half an
hour,
and when it is
sufficiently
cooked
the flesh will flake and
separate.
As soon as done take from
kettle,
remove the
cloth,
drain
well,
lay
in a folded
napkin
on hot
platter, gar-
nish with lemon
points
and
sprigs
of
parsley,
and serve with
drawn butter or fish sauce.
BAKED FISH
Wash and
dry
fish,
salt and
pepper.
Rub well with but-
ter then with
flour,
put
into a
pan
with a little hot
water,
bake in
moderately
hot
oven,
baste
frequently, adding
a lit-
tle hot water if
necessary.
Serve on dish
garnished
with
parsley.
Make sauce for fish with one
pint
of
milk,
two
hard boiled
eggs,
one
tablespoon
butter. Take
yolk
of
egg,
mash
fine,
add flour
enough
to thicken milk. Season well
with
mustard, salt,
pepper (black
and
red),
stir with milk
and cook to
consistency
of
gravy. Chop
white of
eggs
and
add to sauce. Serve in
gravy
bowl. This is fine.
To
fry perch, sprats,
or
any
small fish
Sprinkle
them
with salt and
dredge
on both sides with flour.
Fry
in hot
lard and serve hot.
CREAMED SALMON
One
pound
of
salmon,
one
pint
of
cream,
two
large
tablespoons
of
butter,
two and one-half level
tablespoons
of
flour,
one
tablespoon
Worcestershire
sauce,
salt and
pepper.
Heat salmon and cream in sauce
pan,
in another the butter
and
flour;
stir until melted and
pour
into hot cream and
salmon,
stir until it thickens
;
then
pour
into a
baking
dish
and bake fifteen or
twenty
minutes. Serve hot.
CODFISH CREAMED
Soak two
cups
of boned confish for
twenty
minutes
in
cold water
;
drain off
water,
put
fish in
stewpan
with
enough
cold water to cover
well,
bring
to a
boil,
drain off
water;
have three-fourths of a
pint
of milk
hot,
pour
over
fish,
a
lump
of butter
size of an
egg,
and mix a
tablespoonful
of
flour in a little cold
milk,
add to
fish,
boil
up
and serve.
Just
before
serving
add a little white
pepper.
SARDINES ON TOAST
Take
large
sardines from the box and drain off all the
oil.
Carefully
skin and
bone them.
Prepare
thin slices of
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
crisp
buttered toast cut in
strips
;
on each
strip lay
a sardine.
Sprinkle
with
cayenne
and a
grating
of Parmesan cheese.
Put in a hot oven
just long enough
to heat
through
and
serve at once.
SAUCE TARTARE
One
teacup mayonnaise
or cooked salad
dressing,
three
olives,
one
gherkine (small) chopped,
one
tablespoon capers
(chopped),
one
teaspoon chopped parsley,
one
teaspoon
onion
juice.
Mix
thoroughly.
SHRIMP A LA NEWBERG
Chop
two cans
shrimps,
mix
yolks
of two
eggs,
one-
half
teaspoon
salt,
one
tablespoon
Worcestershire
sauce,
one
cup
of milk. Cook until
thick,
salt and add
shrimps.
Pour over buttered toast or crackers.
MRS. W. N. PERRY.
LOBSTER A LA NEWBERG
Lobster
(meat
from boiled fresh
lobster),
milk,
one
pint, egg
one,
cornstarch one
teaspoon,
butter one
teaspoon,
thick cream one
tablespoon,
lemon
juice
one
teaspoon,
salt
and
pepper
to taste. Beat
together
the
egg,
cornstarch and
milk,
add salt and
pepper.
Put in
the lobster cut in
pieces,
and butter. Cook until the sauce
thickens;
then add cream
and lemon
juice.
Serve on crackers or toast.
MRS. VIVIENNE MARTINEZ.
SALMON LOAF
One
pound
can
salmon,
drained
;
rub with two table-
spoons
butter;
beat two
eggs lightly;
add one-fourth
cup
bread crumbs
;
one-fourth
cup
cream and one-half table-
spoon chopped parsley
;
cayenne
and salt to taste. Mix thor-
oughly
with salmon and cook in steamer
twenty-five
min-
utes. Serve with sauce.
(See
sauce
following.)
SAUCE FOR SALMON LOAF
Drain
liquor
from
salmon,
add one
tablespoon
melted
butter,
one-half
cup
milk,
bring
to
boiling point.
Thicken
with one
teaspoonful
cornstarch diluted with two table-
spoonsful
cold milk. Add four
tablespoonsful
tomato cat-
sup
(if
desired),
salt and
pepper.
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
32
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
SALMON LOAF WITH PEAS
(Luncheon Dish)
One can salmon
(red),
one
egg,
salt,
one
cup
cracker
crumbs,
milk to moisten. Method : Make as for a beef loaf,
when moulded tie
up
in a clean cloth and
put
in
boiling
water and cook
thirty
minutes,
remove from cloth to
platter,
thicken can of
peas slightly
with white
sauce,
pour
around
the
salmon loaf. Garnish
top
with slices of lemon. Saute
with lemon sauce.
Two
tablespoons
butter,
two
tablespoons
flour,
one
cup
boiling
water,
juice
one
lemon,
make as for white sauce.
MRS. E. L. DuBOSE.
BAKED FISH
Select nice thick
pieces
of
halibut,
about four
pounds,
wash and
dry,
then
dredge
with
flour,
salt and
pepper.
Place
in
baking pan,
cover fish with one
pound
canned tomatoes,
one sliced
onion,
one sliced lemon and
strips
of fat bacon.
Place in hot oven and bake one
hour,
or until fish is well
done. Serve with tomato sauce and
chopped parsley.
MRS. H. E. MOORE.
SALMON LOAF
One can red
salmon,
one-half
tablespoon
salt,
one and
one-half
tablespoons sugar,
one
teaspoon
mustard,
yolks
of
two
eggs,
one and one-half
tablespoons
melted
butter,
three-
quarter cup
milk,
one-quarter cup vinegar, three-quarter
tablespoon gelatine
in two
tablespoons
cold water. Mix
ingredients.
Add
egg yolks,
butter and vanilla. Cook
in
double boiler until thick. Remove from
fire,
add
vinegar
and
gelatine
dissolved in cold water.
MRS. E. H. MULLEN.
TUNA LOAF
One can
tuna,
two
eggs,
one-half
cup
cracker crumbs,
few broken nut
meats,
mould into loaf. Put slice of bacon
on
top
and bake.
MRS. E. L, DuBOSE.
SHRIMP ROLLS
Cut
some thin slices of
bread,
removing
the
crust,
and
butter.
Sprinkle
on them a few
shrimps
from which
the
shells
have
just
been taken. Roll
up
each
slice, keep
them
the same
size,
build them
up
on
platter
covered with
doilie,
garnish
with
little
sprigs
of
parsley.
MRS. ALBERTA RANSONE.
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
33
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
BAKED FISH A LA CREOLE
Bake fish with
just enough
water to
keep
from
burning,
or
sticking
to
pan
;
while
baking prepare
this sauce :
Fry
in bacon or ham
grease,
or
lard,
one
large
onion,
one
large
chile
pepper,
one
very
small
piece
of
garlic
(this
may
be
omitted)
all
chopped very
fine,
add can of tomatoes
(or equal quantity
of fresh
tomatoes),
into which
you
have
put
a
pinch
of soda and a
teaspoon
of salt. When this sauce
is
smooth,
add,
if
desired,
one can of
shrimp,
one
can of
small mushrooms. After fish is on
platter pour
over it this
sauce and serve at once.
MRS. FRANKLIN L. MORGAN,
OYSTERS
"First month with an
R.,
Lo!
September
is
here,
And with it the
oyster
to
epicures
dear."
BLUE POINTS ON THE HALF SHELL
Wash half dozen shells
carefully,
then
slip
a knife be-
tween the
upper
and under shell and
open, allowing
them
to remain on the under shell. Serve on
plate
of cracked
ice with lemon and horseradish.
BROILED OYSTERS
Pick out
large
fat
oysters, dry carefully
and season well
with salt and
pepper, place
on the
broiler,
turn on the other
side when browned and
drop
into a hot dish and
pour
melted butter over them. Some serve them on
squares
of
buttered toast.
OYSTER COCKTAIL
Mix
together eight drops
tobasco
sauce,
one half tea-
spoonful
horse
radish,
one-half
teaspoonful vinegar,
one tea-
spoonful
lemon
juice,
one-half
teaspoonful
tomato
catsup,
add
eight oysters.
Serve in
glasses.
OYSTER COCKTAIL
Mix three
tablespoons
each of tomato
catsup,
Wor-
cestershire sauce and lemon
juice
;
calt and
pepper
to taste
and add
fifty oysters
cut in halves. Serve in
glasses
and
eat with fork..
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
34
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
STEAMED OYSTERS
Drain a
quart
of nice
oysters
and wash. Place in shal-
low
pan
and
place
in steamer over
boiling
water
;
cover
steamer till the
oysters
are
plump
with
edges
ruffled. Have
some slices of bread toasted
nicely,
dish
oysters
on the
toast
(on
well heated
dish),
add
butter,
pepper
and salt and
serve hot.
LITTLE PIGS IN BLANKETS
Take as
many large oysters
as are
desired,
wash and
dry
them
thoroughly
with a towel. Cut some bacon in thin
slices, coyer
each
oyster
with them and
pin
on with wooden
tooth
picks.
Broil or roast until the bacon is
crisp
and
brown. Do not remove tooth
picks.
Serve hot.
Very
dainty.
MRS. E. G. ROBIXSON.
FRIED OYSTERS
Select
large, plump oysters, put
them into a colander to
drain,
wipe dry
with a
towel,
being
careful to remove
all
bits of
shell,
season well with salt and
pepper.
Beat one or
two
eggs, according
to the. amount of
oysters,
roll bread
crumbs or crackers
fine,
roll
oysters
in
crumbs,
then in
eggs,
again
in the
crumbs,
fry
in
plenty
of
hot Violet Brand Short-
ening.
When cooked on one side turn
by slipping
knife
blade under. Never stick a fork into an
oyster,
as it makes
it
tough.
When a delicate brown remove from the
fat,
serve
en
napkin
to absorb the
grease.
Should be served at once.
MRS.
J.
E. BUCKLEY.
NoOtherChickenCan
Compare
with
genuine
milk-fed
poultry
for
tenderness,
delicacy
of flavor or whole-
someness.
But,
in
ordering
"milk-fed
poultry"
remember that the
Young's
Market
Company
is
positively
the ONLY
producer
of PROPERLY
MILK-FED POULTRY on the Pacific Coast.
Young's
Fresh-Dressed Milk-Fed
Poultry
is sold ONLY
through
the
YOUNG'S MARKET COMPANY STORES. Order direct from
us,
if
you
want the GENUINE.
Phones: Home 10628 Main 8076
'SKBK?
ttODEHi
Try
Willowbrook
Sausage
Made Fresh
Every Day
Packed in
Purity-Protecting
Cartons
nRRKETCD
Dealers in all
Meats, Fish, Fruits,
Delicacies and
Bakery
Goods.
MAIN STORE 638 S. BROADWAY
Central and
Gladys
Avenues
216 South
Spring
Street
325 West Fifth Street
131 Marine
Street,
Ocean Park
WALTER E. SMITH COMPANY
36
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
Poulty
and Game
"For finer or fatter ne'er
ranged
in a
forest,
or smoked in a
platter."
Goldsmith.
TO FRY MILK FED CHICKENS If Under One and
One-Half Pounds
Split
in
half,
wash clean and salt and
pepper
roll in
flour,
brown
quickly
in
deep
fat then lift into a kettle in
which there is about one-half
pint
of
boiling
water under a
rack so that the chicken does not touch
the
water,
steam
about 30 minutes or until served.
When chickens
weigh
over one and one-half
pounds
each,
joint
and wash
clean,
salt and
pepper,
roll in
flour, fry
moderately
fast until a
golden
brown
(do
not turn until
brown),
when browned on both sides cover and let steam
very slowly
for about
thirty
minutes or
more,
remove chick-
en,
stir in
large spoonful
flour in the
grease
and
brown,
add
milk for a
delicacy,
and cover. Salt and
pepper
to taste.
When
frying
more than one chisken take
up
as soon as
fried,
place
in bake
pan,
add
butter,
cover and
place
in
very
slow oven so it will steam
slowly
for about
thirty
minutes,
or until served.
TO FRICASSEE CHICKEN
Joint
a
four-pound
hen,
put
in
boiling
water,
stew until
tender,
remove and roll in
flour,
brown in butter and then
remove
again,
stir flour in
grease,
brown
it,
add the stock
that the chicken was stewed in and
place
chicken into the
gravy ready
to serve.
MRS. P. M. YOUNG.
ROAST TURKEY
Select a
young turkey,
remove all the feathers care-
fully, singe
it over a
burning paper
on
top
of the stove
;
then "draw" it
nicely, being very
careful not to break
any
of the internal
organs;
remove the
crop carefully,
cut off
the head and tie the neck close to the
body by drawing
the
skin over it. Now rinse
through
several
waters,
and in the
last water mix a
teaspoonful
of soda. After
washing wipe
the
turkey dry,
inside and
out,
with a clean
cloth,
rub the
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
37
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
inside with
salt,
then stuff the breast with
"Dressing
for
Fowls." Then sew
up
the
turkey
with a
strong
thread,
tie
the
legs
and
wings
to the
body,
rub it over with a little soft
butter,
sprinkle
over with salt and
pepper; dredge
with a
little flour
; place
in a
dripping pan, pour
in a
cup
of boil-
ing
water and set in the oven. Baste the
turkey
often,
turn-
ing
around often so that
every part
will be
uniformly
baked.
A fifteen
pound turkey requires
between three and four
hours to bake.
TURKEY DRESSING
See that the
turkey
is cleansed and washed.
Salt
and
pepper
it inside. Take a loaf and a half of baker's
bread,
or take half and half of
light
bread and corn bread
;
rub fine
with the hands
;
have in the skillet a
lump
of butter
larger
than an
egg;
cut into this one-half of an
onion,
let it cook
a few
minutes,
but not brown
;
then stir in the bread
;
add
one
teaspoonful
each of salt and
pepper;
let it
get
thor-
oughly
heated. Fill the
turkey
with this
dressing
and if
any
is left
put
in one end of the
pan.
Put the
turkey
into a
dripping pan,
salt and
pepper
the outside and
dredge
with
a little flour. Put about one coffee
cup
of water in the
pan
;
baste
very
often
;
have a moderate fire
;
roast fifteen minutes
to
the
pound.
SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN
Joint
chicken or cut in
joints, dip
in sweet
milk, dredge
with white corn meal instead of flour
;
salt and
pepper.
Fry
in
boiling
hot fat.
(I preferred
lard and butter
mixed.)
Make a cream
gravy.
Serve with corn fritters made of
canner or fresh corn. For three to
four,
one can of corn or
six ears cut. Make a batter same as for hot
cakes; put
corn,
salt and
sugar
to taste. Pour out of end of
spoon
into
boiling
fat. Cook a
golden
brown and serve.
MRS.
J.
E. BUCKLEY.
FRIED CHICKEN
Disjoint
the chicken. Wash it
carefully
and salt
light-
ly, put
on ice for twelve hours or
longer (not absolutely
necessary
but it
improves
the
chicken),
rinse off and
wipe
dry.
Roll each
piece
in
flour,
fry
in hot lard
(I prefer
butter
and lard
mixed),
until a
golden
brown,
then add one table-
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
38
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
spoon
of
water,
cover
closely
and simmer
slowly
until water
cooks
up.
If chicken is
large
turn and add another
spoon-
ful of
water, cooking slowly,
but not so slow that the
grease
is soaked
up.
Put on hot
platter.
To make the
gravy put
one
tablespoonful
of flour into the hot
lard,
stir it
well,
cook a
minute,
add one
cup
cold water and one
cup
sweet
milk,
stir
constantly,
boil for an instant.
MRS. W. A.
KERLEY.
CHICKEN PIE
Make
pastry
not so rich as for
puddings.
Put chicken
on and boil until the meat falls
off,
then
put
in
pastry
and
season with salt and
pepper.
Take the bone and skin and
put
back into the water. When
pastry
is finished and meat
put
in,
strain this water and thicken with
flour,
put
butter
in this and
pour
over the meat. Put the
top
on and cut
a
hole with a thimble in the
top,
and when done
pour
the rest
of the thickened water in this hole to
keep
it from
being
too
dry.
FRICASEE OF
CHICKEN,
WHITE GRAVY
One
chicken,
one
onion,
one
tablespoonful
of
butter,
two
tablespoonsful flour,
one
pint
fresh
milk,
salt and
pep-
per
to taste.
Clean and cut chicken into
joints
and clean
gizzard,
liver and
open
heart. Put all in a
stewpan,
after
seasoning
with salt and
pepper.
Cover with
boiling
water,
let simmer
for an hour and a half or
quarter
if the chicken is
very
young, longer
if the chicken is old. Add
juice
of two
onions. Cook until tender. When done blend
together
one
large teaspoonful
of butter and of flour in a
frying pan
without
browning;
add and mix with a
pint
of milk. Add
this to the
chicken,
mixing
and
stirring constantly
till it
boils. Salt and
pepper
to taste. Take from fire and add the
beaten
yolks
of two
eggs
and a little
chopped parsley.
Serve
hot.
CHICKEN A LA MARYLAND
Split
a small chicken down back as for
broiling;
re-
move breast bone and cut off
pinions ;
cut into four
pieces
;
dredge
with salt and
pepper
;
dip
in
egg
and fresh crumbs
;
place
in
pan
and
pour
over each
piece enough
melted butter
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
39
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
to moisten. Roast in oven
eighteen
or
twenty
minutes.
Make cream sauce,
taking cup
of Bechemel
sauce,
add-
ing
one-half
cup
cream and one-half
tablespoon
butter. Pour
sauce in dish and
place pieces
of chicken on it. Garnish
with slices of fried bacon and
parsley.
KENTUCKY BROILED CHICKEN
Pound and a half
chicken, feathered,
drawn and
split
down the back. Put in water with a
tablespoon
of
salt,
over
night.
Tablespoon
each of butter and bacon
drippings
in
frying pan,
heated.
Dry
chicken
thoroughly, dredge
with
salt,
pepper
and
flour,
place
breast down in
frying pan.
Put
a small
plate
with a flat iron or other
weight
on it. Be sure
plate
is not as
large
as
pan.
Cook
slowly
half hour on each
side.
SMOTHERED CHICKEN
One or several broiler size chickens
split
down
back,
place
in
pan, sprinkle
salt and
pepper
over chicken. Flavor
with Cover
water,
boil ten minutes on
top
of
stove,
then
spread
butter over chicken. Place on side of
stove,
brown
lightly,
then serve after
making gravy
with
sweet
milk,
with rice or Irish
potatoes.
CHICKEN LOAF
One hen boiled
slowly
till
done,
mince
quite
fine,
add
three hard boiled
eggs, one-quarter teaspoon celery
seed,
four
large
crackers,
salt and
pepper.
Mix
well,
mold into
loaf,
and
press
over
night.
BETTIE E. SMITH HUGHES.
QUAIL
ON TOAST
.... Parboil in salt and water to toast on
top
of stove.
Dredge
with
flour,
pepper ;spread
with
butter,
run in hot
oven,
brown
golden.
Make nice toast browned on both
sides. Make a cream sauce with flour or corn starch and
sweet milk. Smooth
chopped parsley, chopped yolk
of one
egg
or slice. Place
quail
on the
toast,
pour
cream
dressing,
add
chopped egg
or sliced on toast and serve.
CREAMED RABBIT
Parboil salt water with red until
tender,
then remove
and roll in flour and milk or flour and
egg. Fry
in
boiling
hot fats. Make
gravy
with the
liquor
with corn
pop-over
and
potatoes.
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
the
greeting
card created to
supply
the ever
increasing
demand from the friends of the
expectant
mother.
ask to see "Laddies and Lassies To Be"
designed
and made in the studios of
A. E. Little
Company
J^.
Stationers
Engravers
Art Dealers ZW.
,
426 South
Broadway
.^^
BROADWAY .* SiXTM
c
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of A FRIEND
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a definite end of
espe-
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wage-earner. SYSTEM
THRIFT BOOKS
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denominations of
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and
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25c,
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and
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for
particulars
of this
unique plan.
LOS ANGELES TRUST & SAVINGS BANK
SIXTH AND SPRING STREETS
41
Viclet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
MEATS
"'But man is a carniverous
production,
And must have
meat,
at least one meal a
day,
He cannot
live,
like
woodcocks,
upon
suction,
But like the shark and
tiger,
must have
prey."
Byron.
ROAST BEEF
Take
a rib
piece
or loin roast of four
pounds. Wipe
thoroughly
all over with a wet clean towel.
Lay
in a
drip-
ping pan,
and baste it well with butter or suet fat. Set
it
in a hot oven. Baste
frequently
with its own
drippings,
which will make it brown and tender. When
partly
done
season with salt and
pepper,
as it hardens
any
meat to salt
it when
raw,
and draws out its
juices
;
dredge
with sifted
flour to
give
it a
frothy appearance.
It will take about
one
hour and a
quarter
to be
properly
done,
leaving
the inside
a
little rare or red. Remove the meat to a hot
dish,
set where
it will
keep
hot. Then skin the
dripping
from all
fat,
add
a
tablespoonful
of
flour,
a little
pepper
and a
teacupful
of
boiling
water. Boil
up
once and serve in a hot
gravy
boat.
FILLET OF BEEF WITH MUSHROOMS
Lard the
fillet,
put
in a
baking pan
with a slice of
onion,
a
bay
leaf,
a
sprig
of
parsley,
a small carrot
sliced,
and half
a
cup
of stock. Put a
tablespoonful
of butter over the fillet
and bake in a
quick
oven for
thirty
minutes,
basting
fre-
quently.
Dish the fillet
;
add two
tablespoonfuls
of flour to
the fat in the
pan,
mix
;
add a
pint
of
stock,
a
teaspoonful
of
browning
sauce,
strain
;
add one can
mushrooms,
a tea-
spoonful
of
salt,
a dash of
pepper.
When
boiling pour
round the fillet and serve
very
hot.
ROAST FRESH PORK
Season with
salt,
sugar, pepper,
a little
powdered sage
if liked
;
put
in
roasting pan
in oven. As soon as meat
begins
to
brown,
baste
every
fifteen minutes with hot water
sea-
soned with salt and
pepper.
Pork
requires very thorough
cooking
to render it wholesome or
palatable.
Pork should
be cooked
longer
than veal.
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
42
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
BAKED HAM
Put a ham butt
in cold
water,
then boil
slowly (one-
half hour for each
pound), changing
the water when half
done. Remove the
rind,
insert cloves in
the sofe
fat,
cover
thickly
with brown
sugar.
Place in
baking
dish with little
water and bake for one-half hour.
MRS. F. C. MILLER.
FLANK STEW EN CASSEROLE
Take about one and one-half
pounds
of veal
flank,
and
small
piece
of
suet,
cut into
pieces
about two inches
square.
Put suet i nhot skillet and add
pieces
of veal and brown on
both sides. Place in casserole and
dredge
well with
flour,
salt and
pepper.
Then slice one
large
onion and brown in
skillet with some of the suet fat. Add one
can of tomatoes
and one
chopped
bell
pepper.
Let come to a
boil,
then
pour
over the veal in the casserole. Add
pepper
and salt to taste
and bits of butter. Cover and bake in over about one and a
half hours.
MRS. H. E. MOORE.
ROAST LEG OF LAMB WITH MINT SAUCE
Remove the
caul,
wipe
meat with wet
cloth,
sprinkle
with salt and
pepper, place
in hot
roasting pan
and
place
in
hot oven. The heat in oven should be reduced after the
first
thirty
minutes of
roasting.
It will take about one and
three-quarters
to two hours for
roasting.
Serve with mint
sauce.
Gravy
: Drain off all but three
tablespoons
of fat from
the
dripping pan, dredge
into it three
tablespoons
of flour
and brown well. Add one
pint
of cold
water,
cook
slowly,
stirring constantly
until thick and smooth. If made care-
fully
this will
require
no
straining.
Mint Sauce : Four
tablespoons
of minced mint
leaves,
one
tablespoon
of
sugar,
one-half
teaspoon
of
salt,
six table-
spoons
of
vinegar.
Place mint in small covered bowl or
cup
and cover with
sugar
;
let stand one hour. Add salt to hot
vinegar
and
pour
over
mint;
let this infuse for ten minutes
before
serving.
MRS. ALVA B. STEWART.
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
43
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
SOUTHERN RED MEAT OR RARE ROAST
Six or
eight pounds
of beef.
Insure
by washing, place
in
roast,
sprinkle
black
pepper over,
rub salt in well with
both
hands,
place
in roaster with water half
full,
cut two
lemons in thin
slices,
places
on
top
of
meat,
one whole
onion,
sprinkle spice
over the
whole,
place
inside of
slow,
baste
every twenty
minutes,
cook in
a
very
hot
stove,
45
minutes. Turn meat
the second time. Slice and serve hot
with artichoke
vinaigrette.
Select four medium sized arti-
chokes,
remove the hardest lemon from
the base
pan,
the
bottom will tie
separate
with
strings,
tie to each bunch a
slice of lemon and boil in salt until outside leaves
detach,
let them
get
cool in thier own
liquor
and set off on a
napkin
or
drain,
then serve with
vinaigrette separate.
BEEF LOAF
Two
pounds ground
beef,
one-half
pound ground pork,
four slices stale
bread,
four
green
chili
peppers,
one
large
onion,
one
large
tomato,
one
egg,
one
teaspoon
salt. Soak
bread in milk or water then
squeeze
as
dry
as
possible.
Peel onion and tomato and
chop
with
peppers very
fine.
Then mix all
ingredients thoroughly
and make into loaf
about two inches thick. Bake in hot oven
three-quarters
hour. Makes a
very pretty
dish if a
poinsettia
is
arranged
on
top,
made of canned
pimientoes.
Garnish with
parsley.
MRS. C. P. OLDHAM.
VEAL LOAF
Two
pounds
veal,
one
pound
fresh
pork, chopped
fine,
season to taste with salt and
pepper.
Add three
eggs
un-
beaten,
twelve soda
crackers,
mix and bake in loaf.
MRS.
JOHN
PARK DOUGALL.
SPAGHETTI AND HAMBURG STEAK
Cook four bunches of
spaghetti
in clear water until
done,
slice and
fry
two onions in
butter,
make out in cakes
two
pounds
of
hamburg
steak,
fry
brown in same
pan,
slice
three
good
sized tomatoes and two chili
peppers
over the
meat,
then the
spaghetti,
salt to
taste,
set on stove and let
simmer until well done.
MINNIE G. NEIGHBORS.
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
44
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
SPANISH STEAK
Sear a flank steak on both
sides,
then
put
in a
baking
pan
and cover with the
following:
One can or a dozen
large
tomatoes,
one chili
pepper,
one medium sized
onion, salt,
pepper
and a little
sugar,
bake
three-quarters
to one hour
in medium oven.
MRS. H. C. WARDEN.
FRIED FLANK STEAK
Poorest steak in beef. If cooked
properly
is
very pal-
atable and most tender. Have butcher to score steak well.
Dderge
with bacon
drippings,
salt,
pepper
and flour. Put in
frying pan
with a
tablespoon
of bacon
drippings.
Care
closely, fry slowly
for half hour on each side. If
pan
is not
kept
covered
closely every
minute,
except
when
turning,
steak will not be tender.
Gravy:
Put two
tablespoons
flour in
dripping
after
taking
steak
up,
brown
well,
add one
cup milk,
and stir until
smooth and thick.
CHOP SUEY
One
pound
of
hamburger
or
ground pork,
one ten-cent
box of
macaroni,
one-half can of
tomatoes,
two or three
large
onions cut
up
fine.
Fry
meat and onions in
butter,
cook
macaroni,
then mix all
together,
and
put
a
layer
of
mixture,
then
layer
of
cheese,
using
two or three
layers
with cheese on
top.
A
pound
of cheese in all. Bake
slowly
three-quarters
of an hour.
GEORGIE G. OLDHAM.
BRAINS AND MUSHROOMS
One small can
mushrooms,
one set of
brains,
one
small
can
pimientos.
Cook brains and mushrooms
separate,
make
rich cream
dressing
and stir all
together.
Bake in rama-
kins set in water. Cover with rolled crackers.
MRS. F. A. CHASE.
CREAMED TONGUE
A slab of butter in the
spider,
one onion
chopped
fine,
brown a little then add one
tablespoon
flour and one
cup
milk,
enough
to make a thick
gravy.
Add one-half can
mushrooms cut
small,
twenty
cents worth of boiled
tongue
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
45
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
in
squares. Just
cook mushrooms and
tongue long enough
to heat. Serve
on toast.
MRS. W. N. PERRY.
DOBE ROAST CREOLE
Into two
tablespoons
of bacon fat or
butter,
brown
one
very large
onion,
three chili
peppers
and two table-
spoons
of
flour,
then add two
cups chopped
tomatoes,
either
fresh or canned. Cook until a
paste
then add one
pint
boil-
ing
water and
pour
over a
pot
roast which has been
placed
in a casserole or a cover
pot
and cook
slowly
until
very
done.
Just
before
taking up
add the salt.
MRS. P. H. BRADY.
GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE'S FAVORITE DISH
Use for this one
pint
of left-over
chicken,
turkey
or
meat of
any
kind,
three or four toasted
crackers,
two hard-
boiled
eggs,
two small cucumber
pickles
or two
spoonfuls
of
chow-chow
pickles,
three cold boiled Irish
potatoes,
two or
three stalks of
celery
or two
teaspoonfuls celery-seed,
one-
half
teacupful sugar, pepper
and salt to
taste,
two raw
eggs
and one-half
cupful
sweet milk or meat
gravy
left
over,
mixed,
with two
tablespoonfuls
of
strong vinegar.
Cut the meat off the
bones,
add
pickles, celery, potatoes
and boiled
eggs
and run
through
the
meat-chopper.
Put
into a
bowl,
sprinkle
in the
sugar
and
spices
and mix thor-
oughly
before
adding
the raw
eggs
beaten with
milk or
gravy.
Add the two
spoonfuls
of
vinegar, pour
over the
meat,
and when
thoroughly
mixed turn into a
deep,
well-
butter
pan.
Cook
slowly
in oven until a nice
brown,
turn
out on a
steak-platter,
slice and
serve,
either hot or
cold,
with brown
gravy
or
mayonnaise.
What is left over can be served for an
appetizing
breakfast dish.
Harlow's Cafe
WISHES YOU LOTS OF GOOD LUCK
-
So.
Forty-Five
Feet From
Broadway
GENE MURPHY
HABERDASHER
My
Shirts Guaranteed Not to Fade
307 West Fifth
Street,
Between
Broadway
and Hill
OFFICES: REFINERY:
307-8-9 GROSSE BLDG. Vernon Avo. and Santa
Fe
R. R. Tracks
MAIN 1348 CALL
A-1348
The California Oil &
Asphalt
Co.
FOR
STOVE AND FURNACE DISTALLATE
HOTELS,
RESTAURANTS and APARTMENT HOUSES
"BEST"
QUALITY
with "PROMPT" DELIVERY
Motor
Transportation
Co.
TRUCKING
1011-1013 SANTA FE AVENUE
LOS
ANGELES,
CAL.
47
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
SALADS
A
Spanish proverb says
: "To make a
per-
fect salad there should be a miser for
vinegar,
a
spendthrift
for oil, a wise man for
salt,
and a
maniac to stir it."
EGG SALAD
Boil
eggs,
take
yolks
and mash until
smooth,
add
pep-
per,
salt,
mustard and
celery
seed,
a little
lamb,
veal or
chicken,
also a little
cabbage
if
you
have it. Mix with
mayonnaise
and fill white.
Arrange
on
crisp
lettuce leaves
with stuffed olives as a
garnish.
WALDORF SALAD
Use
large
red
apples,
remove all the
rind,
leaving
the
unbroken
cups.
To the
apple
taken
out,
chop
and mix
an
equal quantity
of
celery
and a third as much nuts. Mix
into a cream
dressing
and fill the
cups covering
the
open-
ing
with
dressing.
CHICKEN SALAD AU VERSAILLES
Boil two chickens. Remove meat and
chop
in small
cubes. Add one
cup chopped celery, three-quarter cup pate
de foies
gras,
three
tablespoons chopped
onions,
one tea-
spoon
salt,
one-half
teaspoon
black
pepper,
dash of
cayenne,
one
teaspoon paprika,
four
tablespoons sherry.
Serve cold
with
mayonnaise
to which has been added 3
tablespoons
of
claret.
FLORENCE
BRADY.
MARSHMALLOW SALAD
Ten cents
marshmallows,
one-half
pint
double cream
whipped,
two
large spoons mayonnaise,
four or five
rings
of
pineapple,
several
pieces
of
pimientos,
nuts if wanted.
Cut
marshmallows,
pineapple
and
pimientos
in small
pieces, whip
cream,
mix all
together early
in the
morning.
Set in ice box until wanted. This is
very
nice.
MRS. F. A. CHASE.
STUFFED EGGS LA PARIS
Remove the
yolks
from twelve hard boiled
eggs,
mix
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
48
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
yolks
well with two
tablespoons grated celery,
four table-
spoons grated
cheese,
one-half clove of
garlic, chopped
salt
and
pepper
to
taste,
two
tablespoons
Madeira wine.
Refill whites and
garnish
with
parsley.
Serve
very
cold.
FLORENCE BRADY.
PINEAPPLE AND CHEESE SALAD
Placed sliced
pineapple
in the heart of lettuce leaf. Pour
a
tablespoon
of
mayonnaise
over
this,
then
sprinkle
mound
shaped grated
cream cheese. Add maraschino cherries if
desired.
ELIZABETH
M. GOULD.
PINEAPPLE SALAD
One can sliced
pineapple
one box of
strawberries,
two
oranges,
one
cup
of
sugar,
one-half
cup
of
sherry
wine,
one-half
cup
of
orange juice,
one can marshmallows. Place
on ice. Serve on lettuce leaf with
whipped
cream
dressing.
MINNIE G. NEIGHBORS.
LOBSTER SALAD
One can of
lobsters,
same
quantity
of
celery.
Mix mus-
tard,
cayenne pepper
to taste Add
yolks
of three
eggs
(hard boiled),
one
tablespoonful sherry
wine and mix well.
Pour over lobster and
garnish
with
parsley. Sprinkle
lightly
with salt and
sherry
wine.
SHRIMP SALAD
Same as lobster
salad,
but substitute beer for the
sherry.
FLORENCE
BRADY.
TOMATO SALAD
One boiled
tongue, pulp
of 10 or 12
large
tomatoes,
one-quarter
of
a bottle of chow
chow,
three
large
cucum-
ber
pickles,
four hard boiled
eggs chopped,
salt and
pepper.
Cut the
tops
off
the tomatoes and stuff them with the salad.
Set on ice before
serving.
When
ready
to use
put
a tea-
spoon
of
mayonnaise
on
top
of each and set
in lettuce leaf.
MRS. ALBERTA
RANSONE.
FRUIT SALAD
Take a tender cooked
beet,
hollow it out to make a
cup,
fill it with
chopped apple, celery, pecan
nuts,
(walnuts
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
49
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
will
answer), chopped very
fine and on
top
a
tiny
ball of
cream cheese and
thin,
cover the whole with a French dress-
ing,
and
place
on a crist lettuce leaf. Serve one for each
place.
MRS. W. A. HORNE.
FRUIT SALAD
One
apple
cut in dice, one
orange
two
bananas,
two
slices
pineapple,
two dozen blanched almonds cut
up,
six
marshmallows. Mix with
mayonaise
dressing
or fruit
salad
dressing
MRS. H C. WARDEN.
FRUIT SALAD
Two dozen
English
walnuts,
two dozen white
grapes,
two
large oranges,
one can of sliced
pineapple,
three ba-
nanas,
one
cupful
of
sugar
two
tablespoonful
of lemon
juice,
one-half
cupful
of
orange juice,
maraseino cherries.
Arrange
on lettuce leaf and
pour
over it
dressing
of one-half
cup
of
Maderia
wine,
one
cup
of
sugar,
two
tablespoons
of lemon
juice.
The whites of
eggs whipped
well and flavored can
be used as a
dressing.
MRS. MINNIE G. NEIGHBOR.
DELICIOUS FRUIT SALAD
One
grape
fruit,
one
orange,
one-half
cup pineapple,
two
bananas,
one-half dozen marshmallows,
whipped
cream.
Boiled
dressing (made
without
mustard).
Shred the
grape
fruit and
orange pulp,
add the
pineapple
and
bananas,
cut
in small
cubes,
and the marshmallows cut into bits. To each
serving
allow one
tablespoon
salad
dressing
and two table-
spoons
of
whipped
cream.
CARROLL L. STEWART.
CUCUMBER
WELLS
Pare
fresh,
firm cucumbers and cut into two inch
lengths, hollowing
them out to form
tiny
wells.
Drop
into
boiling
salted water and let simmer
gently
until tender.
Drain and chill
thoroughly,
fill with cold minced
chicken,
lobster,
or
salmon;
mask with
mayonnaise
and serve cold
with a
pinch
of
finely chopped
radish
parings, topping
each.
Place on
paper
doilie and
garnish
with
sprigs
of
parsely.
MRS. VIVIENNE MARTINEZ.
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
50
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
ST. PATRICK SALAD
One-half Knox
geletine,
two
cups
of hot
water,
one-
third
cup
of
vinegar, juice
of one
lemon,
one-half
cup sugar,
one
chopped
cucumbers, one
cup grated pineapple. Tiny
speck
of
green
fruit
coloring.
WHIPPED CREAM SALAD DRESSING
Yolks of two
eggs, juice
of two medium sized lemons,
one-fourth
teaspoon
of salt and two
teaspoonful
of
sugar,
one-half
pint whipped
cream. Beat
yolks
thoroughly
and
add
remaining ingredients,
cook in a double boiler until
thick; Let cool.
Just
before
serving
add one-half
pint
of
cream,
whipped
stiff. Serve with
any
combination of fruit
salads.
MRS. G. W. CASE.
COOKED SALAD DRESSING
Four
teaspoons
butter,
two
tablespoons flour,
two
tablespoons sugar,
one
cup
milk;
mix well. Put in double
boiler and cook until it thickens.
Add Second half. Three
eggs
well beaten without
separating,
one
teaspoon
salt and one
teaspoon
Coleman's
mustard,
two
tablespoons sugar,
one-half
cup garlic-vinegar
or
plain vinegar
if
preferred.
Cook to
consistency
of cream.
Will
keep indefinitely.
BOILED SALAD DRESSING
One
tablespoon
mustard,
two
tablespoon
flour,
one
teaspoon
salt, one-third
cup sugar,
one-third
cup
of
vinegar,
'
two-third
cup
of
water,
four
eggs,
one-fourth
cup
of butter.
Mix all
dry ingredients
with
eggs.
When
perfectly
smooth,
add
vinegar
and water. Boil
slowly
in double boiler. When
almost
done,
add one-half
pint
either sweet or sour cream.
For small
family,
one-half this amount is sufficient.
BETTIE E. SMITH HUGHES.
SALAD DRESSING
Use three
parts
of oil to one of acid
(either vinegar
or
lemon
juice).
The
regular recipe
calls for a
cup
of oil for
every yolk
but this makes such a stiff
dressing
that I do not
use more than two-thirds
cup
of oil. Beat the
yolk
stiff
and then add oil
by
the
tablespoonful
and beat
vigorously
and add more oil thin
your dressing
more and then with
the acid as
you go along.
Have
oil,
eggs,
etc.,
very
cold.
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
51
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
I like to add a
tablespoonful
of
whipped
cream add
salt,
mustard to suit
your
own taste.
MRS. E. A.
LOY.
SALAD
DRESSING
Two
teaspoons
of
sugar,
one-half
teaspoon
of
mustard,
one-half
teaspoon
of salt. Rub a don of
garlic
in
mixing
bowl,
Worcestershire sauce to
thicken,
then add olive oil a
little at a time and
vinegar
to taste. This is delicious over
lettuce.
MRS. W. E. SPROUSE.
For Fruit Salad
Three
tablespoons sugar,
one
teaspoon
mustard,
one-
half
teaspoon
salt,
a little white
pepper
and
paprika,
butter
size
egg, yolks
of three
eggs.
Cook in double boiler till thick
as mush Take off stove and add
juice
of one lemon. When
cool and
ready
to serve add one-half
pint whipped
cream.
MRS. W. N. PERRY.
STUFFED ROLLS
Scald one
cup
milk,
add two
tablespoons
butter;
when
lukewarm add one
teaspoon
salt,
one
yeast
cake dissolved
in two
tablespoons
lukewarm
water,
and one and one-half
cups
flour.
Let
rise,
add flour to
knead,
pat
and roll
out,
shape
with a biscuit
cutter,
arrange
on a buttered sheet
three-quarters
inches
apart,
let
rise,
brush over with white
of
egg,
and bake in a moderate oven. Remove
tops
and
centers and fill with the
following
:
CHICKEN SALAD
To two
cups
cold boiled fowl cut into one-half inch
dice,
add one and one-half
cups celery
cut in small
pieces
and moisten with :
BOILED DRESSING
Mix one-half
tablespoon
salt,
one
teaspoon
mustard,
one and one-half
teaspoons sugar,
a few
grains cayenne,
and one-half
tablespoon
flour,
add
yolks
two
eggs, slightly
beaten,
one and one-half
tablespoons
melted
butter,
three-
fourths
cup
milk and one-fourth
cup vinegar.
Cook over
boiling
water until mixture thickens.
Use level measurements.
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
Maximum
Quality
at
a Minimum
Price
"L. A. GAS
"
Gives
Complete
Satisfaction.
LOS ANGELES GAS AND ELECTRIC CORPORATION
645 South Hill Street
Main 8920 Home 10003
COMPLIMENTS OF
H. E. HUNTINGTON
53
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
VEGETABLES
"O little
green things growing,
we hear
the first faint
stirring
Of roots beneath dark mold that hides
the
plants
from
sight;
They
know that
spring
is
coming
;
they
hear the
birdwings
whirring,
And
every
one
yearns upward
toward the sweet warm
light."
LETTUCE
Select
nice,
fresh
heads,
look over
carefully, put
into
cold water
long enough
to make the leaves
crisp
;
lay
on a
flat dish and cover the
top
with slices of hard boiled
eggs.
This is eaten with
vinegar, pepper
and
salt,
or
mayonnaise
dressing.
CUCUMBERS
Select medium sized cucumbers of a
green
color,
pare,
cut off the hard end near the
stem,
and slice thin
;
let stand a
half hour in cold salt water.
Serve with
chopped
ice,
vine-
gar, pepper
and salt.
STUFFED PEPPERS
Cut ends from
large green
bell
peppers,
remove seed.
Then boil about five minutes. Stuff with
any
kind of cold
meat
chopped,
mixed with bread crumbs and seasoned with
onions,
parsley,
salt and
pepper.
Bake. On
removing
from
oven
sprinkle grated
cheese on
top.
MRS. ALBERTA RANSONE.
ONIONS AU GRATIN
Select white onions of uniform
size;
peel
them,
cover
with
boiling
water and let stand for five minutes.
Drain,
cover with
boiling
salted water and simmer until
they
are
quite
tender.
Prepare
a white
sauce,
using
for one
quart
of
onions,
one
tablespoon
and half of
butter,
the same of
flour,
two-thirds of
tablespoon
of
salt,
one-third of a
teaspoon
of
pepper
and one and a half
cups
of milk. When the
onions
are tender drain them and
arrange
in buttered
baking
dish.
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
54
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
Into the sauce
stir three
tablespoons
of
grated
mild cheese
and
pour
it over the onions.
Sprinkle
with buttered crumbs
and
place
in a hot oven until browned.
FRIED ONIONS
Slice
onions after
removing
the
dry
skins,
about one-
sixth of an inch thick. Cover the bottom of a
frying
basket
with these slices and
fry
in hot
grease
until a rich brown.
Shake the basket to free them from
grease
and dust
lightly
with salt and
pepper.
Serve with beef steak.
MASHED POTATOES BROWNED
Mash
potatoes,
which have been boiled until
thoroughly
done;
add
lump
of
butter,
a little sweet milk and salt to
taste.
Heap
on shallow
baking
dish and
smooth,
sticking
in
bits of butter. Place in hot oven and brown.
POTATOES AU GRATIN
Boil six medium sized Irish
potatoes
in
skins,
make
white
sauce,
one
tablespoon
butter
melted,
one
tablespoon
flour, add
cup
of
milk,
until smooth. Sauce : Stir one
cup
grated
cheese,
peel potatoes
and slice
layer
of
potatoes,
salt,
then fill in alternate
layers.
Put
pepper,
butter and
paprika
on
top,
brown in oven
twenty
minutes.
MRS. E. L. DuBOSE.
BAKED CORN WITH TAMALE
One can
corn,
one can chicken tamale. Mix corn and
tamale in
baking
dish,
put
in few
lumps
of butter and
season with salt. Bake for fifteen or
twenty
minutes.
. CARROLL LOY STEWART.
CORN OYSTERS
One can of
corn,
four broken
crackers,
one-fourth
spoon
pepper,
salt and butter to
season,
one
egg,
one
tablespoon
cream. Simmer corn few moments
first,
then
put
in in-
gredients. Drop
in
deep
fat and brown.
MRS. E. L. DuBOSE.
CORN FRITTERS
Milk,
two
tablespoonfuls
;
egg,
one,
slightly
beaten
;
flour, one-half
cupful
;
baking powder,
one-half
teaspoonful
;
salt,
one-fourth
teaspoonful
; corn,
one
cup
seasoned to
taste. Mix and sift the
flour,
baking powder
and salt. Add
the milk to the beaten
egg
and mix into the sifted flour to
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
55
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
a smooth batter. Season corn and add to the batter.
Drop
by tablespoonfuls
into
deep, smoking
hot
fat,
and
fry
to a
delicate brown. Drain on brown
paper
and
serve in a hot
dish in which is a folden
napkin.
MRS. VIVIENNE MARTINEZ.
SUMMER
SQUASH,
SPANISH
Take three or four
squash,
one medium sized
onion,
one
tomato,
two
green
chili
peppers.
Cut all
up together
and
cook until tender,
salt to
taste,
sprinkle grated
cheese over
top
and
place
i nthe oven a few minutes. This is delicious.
CARROTS
Pare and dice carrots also one bell
pepper,
cook to-
gether
until tender and
pour
over this a cream
dressing.
GREEN CORN PUDDING WITH CHICKEN
Boil six
large
ears of
corn;
slice the
grains
off,
com-
mencing
with a
very
thin coat of the outer
grains.
Boil a
spring
chicken until
quite
tender, salt,
pepper
and flour each
piece
of the chicken. Beat four
eggs
with a small
cup
of
butter,
a
spoonful
of
pepper
and salt
;
add to the
corn,
mak-
ing
a thick batter with the
top
of the chicken
water;
place
the batter in a
large
buttered
baking
dish
;
lay
the floured
pieces
of chicken
carefully
down into the
batter;
sift a little
flour over the
top
of
the
batter,
but not on the side
of the
dish. Bake it until the
bottom,
top
and sides are a
light
brown.
MRS. W. A. HORNE.
SOUTHERN CORN PUDDING
Six
nice ears of
corn,
cut down each
row of
grains,
then
cut off of cob and
scrape
cob so as to
get
the
juice.
Add two
beaten
eggs,
salt,
pepper
and about
teaspoonful
of butter
and
enough
milk to make it
quite
thin. Bake about one-
half an hour.
MRS. B. F. CHURCH.
BAKED CORN
One can
corn,
beat two whole
eggs,
one
cup finely
chopped
cheese,
one bell
pepper
cut
up
fine,
one-half
cup
sweet milk. Put
altogether
in
pan
and bake in slow oven.
ESCALLOPED CORN
Cover the bottom of
baking
dish with canned corn
;
put
in a
layer
of bread
crumbs, salt, pepper
and butter to taste
;
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
56
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
then another
layer
of
corn,
covering
with bread
crumbs,
seasoning
and
butter;
add milk
enough
to make moist and
put
in oven and bake.
SPANISH BEANS
Put to soak over
night
one
quart pink beans,
in morn-
ing
boil
up
with one-half
teaspoon soda,
until the skins
crack when blown on. Drain and rinse well. Put on to
boil with one-half
pound
of
pork
and a dozen little chili
capino peppers,
two
large
or three small cloves of
garlic.
Fry
three or four slices of
bacon,
add two-thirds can of
pimentos,
one
large
onion
;
when fried add some bean
juice
and boil for a few
minutes,
stirring
often. Then add this to
the
beans,
and boil for two or three hours. One-half hour
before
serving
add one full can of
tomatoes,
salt to taste.
MRS.
JOHN
PARK DOUGALL.
SPANISH BEANS
One
good pint pink
beans,
wash and soak over
night.
Next
morning put
on to boil in same water with a
good-
sized
pinch
of soda. Boil till
tender,
but not too
long.
Pour
off water and wash
through
several hot waters. Then mix
with one can
tomatoes,
one bunch
celery,
one
onion,
one
chili
pepper, sugar, pepper
and
salt,
three or four slices
bacon and cover with hot water. Cook
slowly
two or three
hours.
MRS. H. C. WARDEN.
GREEN TOMATOES EN SURPRISE
Chop
one-half dozen medium size
green
tomatoes and
simmer until
tender,
skimming
out skins. Same out of white
onions until
tender in
separate
vessel. Mix after
tender,
adding
salt,
pepper, paprika,
butter,
cook few moments
and serve.
MRS. E. L. DuBOSE.
BAKED TOMATOES
Select
large perfect
tomatoes,
remove stem end.
Make
a small cut both
ways
across
top,
fill with
finely chopped
onion and
green pepper,
season well with salt and
pepper.
Add small bits of
bacon,
as much as tomato will hold. Cook
slowly
until tender. Searve
immediately.
Good
served in
combination with Boston baked beans and baked
potatoes.
DIXIE WILLIAMS FARNSWORTH.
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening ty
a
Long Way
SWEET
POTATO
CROQUETTES
One
pinth
ot mashed sweet
potatoes,
add one table-
spoon
of
butter,
one
teaspoon
of
salt,
one-half
teaspoon
of
butter,
one
teaspoon
of
salt,
one-half
teaspoon
of
pepper,
one
tablespoon
of
chopped ceiery
(if
you like).
When cold
form in
croquettes
and
dip
in the
yolk
of
egg,
roll in cracker
crumbs and
fry
in
deep
fat.
MRS. W. E. SPROUSE.
ASPARAGUS A LA MILANESE
Boil
asparagus
in salt water. When
tender, drain,
place
on
deep platter, sprinkle
with
grated
Parmesan cheese and
pour
beaten
eggs,
one for each
person,
over all. Season
well with butter. Place in hot oven until
eggs
are done.
DIXIE
WILLIAMS FARNSWORTH.
EGG PLANT
Cut the
egg plant
in two
lengthwise,
then with a
sharp
knife remove
every
bit without
disfiguring
the shell. Boil
the
egg plant
in salt water till tender. While that is
cooking
ornament the shell
by notching
or
scalloping,
with a
sharp
knife around the
edge.
Drain the
egg plant,
add one well
beaten
egg,
one onion
chopped
fine,
one
spoonful
of
sugar,
butter the size of an
egg, pepper,
salt and return to the shell
put
in oven to brown well.
MRS. W. A. HORNE.
SAUCE FOR ITALIAN PASTES
Three
pounds
lean
beef,
one onion
chopped
fine,
one
handful dried mushrooms
(soak
in hot water until
soft,
then
chop fine),
one-half can
tomatoes,
spoonful rosemary,
spoonful thyme,
one-half can olive
oil,
one
pound
butter.
Heat oil and
butter,
put
meat
in,
brown
well,
season with
pepper,
salt. Add onions and mushrooms. Cook until
onions are rich
brown,
add tomatoes and
thyme.
Simmer
on slow fire
for several
hours,
adding
stock or
boiling
water
to
keep
from
boiling.
DIXIE WILLIAMS FARNSWORTH.
ITALIAN TOMATO SAUCE "SHELL" MACARONI
1. Beef
pot
roast,
browned in lard or butter
(no water.)
2. Add about one can of tomatoes
;
chop
fine,
mint Italian,
parsley,
onion or
garlic,
chili if liked
hot;
cook all
together
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
58
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
slowly
and for a
long
time
;
add a little water if too rich
when cooked. 3.
Macaroni,
put
into water which is
boiling:
vigorously,
strain
through
colander when cooked. 4. Put
layer
of hot
macaroni,
grated
cheese,
tomato
sauce,
until
baking pan
or casserole is filled.
Ready
to serve.
E. PAGE KERNS.
SPAGHETTI,
SPANISH
Spaghetti,
one box
; tomatoes,
one can
;
hamburg
steak,
one and one-half
pounds;
bacon,
seven
slices; onions,
one
large; pepper
colas,
eight,
cut fine. Cut bacon and onions
fine,
fry
till
brown,
then add
tomatoes,
pepper
colas, salt,
steak and cook till meat is about done. Now add the
spag-
hetti,
which has
previously
been boiled till tender and
washed
thoroughly
in cold
water,
cook about half an hour.
Just
before
taking
from fire add about half
pound grated
Parmesan cheese.
MRS. VIVIENNE MARTINEZ.
BOILED RICE
Have four
cups
water
boiling rapidly
in an uncovered
stew
pan.
Add one
cup
well washed rice
slowly
so as not
to
stop
the
boiling.
Boil so
rapidly
that the kernels
fairly
dance in the water. Cook from
twenty
to
thirty
minutes,
depending upon
the
age
of the rice and add more water if
necessary.
Test often and the moment the
grains
are soft
and before the starch
begins
to dissolve and cloud the water
pour
into a colander. Drain and stand the colander on a
pan
and
place
in oven where the heat will
pass through
the
rice,
or return to
kettle
and stand over a slow
fire,
shape
in
kettel so as to let steam
escape
and the kernels became
dry
and sweet and each
grain
will be
separate.
Be
careful not
to cook the rice
enough
to burst the
grains,
as
nothing
can
prevent
them from
sticking together.
Plain boiled rice
is
served with mutton or lamb and
poultry
of all kinds
;
as a
starchy accompaniment
to dishes made of dried
peas,
beans
and lentils.
MRS.
J.
E. BUCKLEY.
SPANISH RICE
One and one-half
cups
of boiled
rice,
two or three slices
of
bacon,
chopped
into small
pieces,
one
good
sized
onion,
three medium sized
tomatoes,
two
green
hot
peppers. Fry
bacon,
add
onions,
stir until
tender,
then add tomatoes
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
59
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
peeled
and cut
up,
and
peppers
and rice. Mix
thoroughly,
put
in
baking
dish and bake until all the
juices
are absorbed
and the rice is
dry.
Season with salt,
MRS. W. A. BROWN,
PILAF
(TURKISH)
Into double boiler
put
one
cup rice,
one
cup
stock,
one
cup
tomato,
one scant
teaspoon
salt. When tender saute
with two
tablespoons butter,
add a little
paprika
and if
you
like,
a little
curry powder.
SPANISH RICE
Saute one
cup
rice in two
tablespoons
of bacon fat
or
butter,
into which has been
placed
two chili
peppers chopped
fine and two
tablespoons
of
chopped onion,
add two
cups
of
tomato
juice
and cook until rice is rather
dry,
season with
salt.
PAULINE CANTRELL
BRADY.
BREAD
"Man must not live
by
bread
alone,
but
by every
word
of God."
BREAD
Original way
to make b'scuit. Two
cups
of
flour,
two
teaspoons
of
baking powder,
one
rounding tablespoon
of
shortening,
one
cup
of sweet milk.
Sift
flour and
baking
powder together,
rub in
shortening,
then milk. Mix thor-
oughly,
turn out on floured board and knead well. Bake
in
moderate oven. Will not hurt to let
stand,
in fact I think
ft
improves
them to stand a few minutes.
MRS. W. A. BROWN.
KENTUCKY BISCUIT
Four
cups
of unsifted
flour,
four
tablespoons
of
lard,
one
teaspoon
of
salt,
one
cup
of ice water. Rub lard into
flour
thoroughly.
Add water
gradually
and work till the
dough
blisters and
snaps.
Make out into
balls,
flatten with
rolling pin.
Stick with fork and bake in hot oven. Should
bake about fifteen minutes.
MRS.
M.
E. CHRISTIAN.
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
6Q
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Lon-g Way
GEORGIA SWEET POTATO BISCUIT
One
pint
of
flour,
one
pint
of
potato,
one-half
cupful
of
granulated sugar,
one
tablespoon butter,
one
teaspoonful
of
soda,
and buttermilk to mix. The
potatoes
should be
baked,
instead of
boiled,
and run
through
a
meat-chopper
before
measuring.
Mix the
dough
and allow to stand sev-
eral hours before
making
out the biscuit. Bake
slowly
in a
moderate oven.
This is the
recipe
of an old
negro
cook,
famous in ante-
bellum
days.
VIRGINIA BEATEN BISCUIT
One
quart
of sifted
flour,
one
teaspoon
of
salt,
one-
fourth
pound
of
butter,
milk to moisten. Put flour in a
bowl,
add the
salt,
then rub the butter into it with the
hands,
add the milk
gradually
until
just
moist. Work and knead
until smooth and
elastic,
then
put
the
dough
on a block
and beat until full of bubbles. Roll one-half inch
thick,
cut
in small round
cakes,
stick with a
fork,
and bake in a
quick
oven,
a
light
brown.
SCOTCH SCONES
Four
cups
flour,
one
egg,
five
tablespoons
melted
butter,
one
tablespoon sugar,
one-half
teaspoonful
salt,
one scant
teaspoon baking
soda,
two scant
teaspoons
cream
tartar,
enough
sweet milk to make soft
dough.
Divide into five
pieces,
roll each
piece
out
separately,
and cut with
sharp
knife into four
equal pieces (any shape you like).
Bake in
hot oven. Currants or raisins
may
be added if
you
like.
This makes
twenty
small scones.
MARION CORNWALL.
BROWN BREAD
A. Two
cups graham
flour,
one
cup
white
flour,
one
teaspoon baking powder,
one
teaspoon
salt,
one
cup
of nuts
and raisins.
B. Two
cups
of sour
milk,
one
teaspoon
soda.
C. One-half
cup
of
molasses,
one-half
cup
of
sugar.
Add B to
C,
then add A. Bake one hour in moderate
oven.
MRS. E.
H.
MULLEN.
POTATO ROLLS
One
cup
mashed
potatoes,
one
cup granulated sugar
stirred in while
potatoes
are
warm,
one cake
compressed
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
61
"Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
yeast
soaked in one
cup
warm water.
Stir these
together
at
night
and let rise until
morning.
Four
eggs beaten,
one
cup
butter. Add this to
sponge
that has raised over
night.
Do not
stir,
but mix with hands
adding
flour until
you
have a soft
dough;
roll out as for
biscuit.
If to be used at noon set in a warm
place
to rise dur-
ing
the forenoon as
they
must be
very light.
They may
be set
away
in a cool
place
and not allowed
to rise until about three hours before baked. Grease
pan
and do not
put
too close
together
in
pan.
Put melted but-
ter and
powdered sugar
on
top just
before
they
are done.
HEALTH BREAD WITH YEAST
One
quart
lukewarm
water,
one-half cake of
yeast
(compressed),
one
tablespoonful
of
salt,
one-half scant
cup
of
molasses,
one level
teaspoon
of
baking
soda,
white
flour,
and
graham
flour as directed below.
Mix lukewarm
water,
one-half cake
compressed yeast,
one
tablespoonful
of salt and
enough
white
flour,
perhaps
one
quart,
to make stiff batter.
Let stand in warm
place
until
light
and
foamy.
Take scant one-half
cup
of
molasses,
stir in level
teaspoon
of
baking
soda,
add
enough
warm
water to fill
cup,
stir in
bread,
then add
graham
flour
enough
to make
good
stiff batter. Fill
good deep pans
half
full,
let rise until
pans
are level
full,
then bake one-half to
three-quarters
of an hour.
MRS. EMMA
A.
LOY.
BRAN MUFFINS
(Health Bread)
Two
cups bran,
one and
one-quarter cups
sour milk
(with
some
cream),
one
teaspoon
soda,
one
teaspoon
salt,
one
cup chopped
walnuts,
one or two
eggs.
Put
milk,
soda
and salt
together,
stir in bran and
nuts,
beat
eggs lightly
and add. Bake in muffin
pans.
EMMA
A.
LOY.
BRAN BISCUIT
Two
cups graham
flour,
one
cup
white
flour,
one
cup
bran health
flour,
two
tablespoons shortening,
one
teaspoon
soda,
one-half
cup sugar.
MRS. FANNIE WRIGHT.
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
62
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
WAFFLES
Two
cups
of cold sweet
milk,
three
cups
of
flour,
two
tablespoons
of melted
butter,
two
teaspoons baking powder,
one
teaspoon
salt,
two
eggs.
Mix milk in
gradually,
add
butter,
then
yolks, lastly
whites beaten stiff. Bake at once,
NUT BREAD
One
cup sugar,
one
cup milk,
one
egg,
one
cup
nuts,
four
cups flour,
four
teaspoons baking powder.
Put in
pan
and raise one-half hour. Bake one hour.
VIRGINIA SPOON BREAD
Three
tablespoons
melted
butter,
two
cupfuls
corn
meal,
one
quart
milk,
one
teaspoon
salt,
three
eggs.
Heat milk
almost to
boiling point,
then stir in meal and
salt,
add but-
ter and cook five
minutes,
stirring
all the time. Cool mix-
ture and add
yolks
of
eggs
well beaten. Beat white of
eggs
to stiff froth and fold in. Pour batter in
two-quart pan,
well
greased,
and bake in moderate oven
forty-five
minutes.
Serve
while
hot,
using
a
spoon
in
serving.
MARION
CORNWALL.
SOUTHERN CORN PONE
Three
cups
bolted corn
meal,
one
teaspoon
salt. Mix
with cold water. Make three
pones
in
skillet,
bake
until
thoroughly
done. If bolted meal is not
procurable
scald meal
slightly
before
mixing
with
cold,
water.
SOUTHERN SPOON BREAD
One-half
cup
white corn
meal,
scald with one-half
cup
boiling
water,
add one-half
cup
buttermilk,
one-half
cup
sweet
milk,
one-half salt
spoon
of
salt,
two
teaspoons
level
lard,
two well beaten
eggs,
salt and soda. Turn into a
very
hot
greased pan.
Cook
twenty
minutes.
BETTIE E. SMITH HUGHES.
NUT BREAD
Two
cups
flour,
one-half
cup sugar (scant),
one
cup
sweet
milk,
one-half salt
spoon
of
salt,
two
teaspoons
level
baking powder,
three-fourths
cup chopped
nuts,
one well
beaten
egg.
Set to rise one-half hour where it will not be
too warm. Cook
three-quarters
of an hour. Nice with one
cup
seeded raisins added.
MRS. E. M.
SEMPLE.
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
SECURITY FOR SAVINGS
SAVINGS COMMERCIAL TRUST
The Oldest and
Largest Savings
Bank in the Southwest
SECURITY BUILDING
EQUITABLE
BRANCH
Fifth and
Spring
First and
Spring
Los
Angeles
The Woman's
Shop
On the
Mezzanine,
is
arranged
so as to offer
every "trading
comfort" and we
especially
desire that women who wish a
quiet place
to rest or meet their friends will avail themselves
of the conveniences we've
provided
for them here.
j?
"Desmond's"
Women's
Wear Spring
near Sixth
Hammond Lumber
Company
(Southern
California
Division)
LUMBER SASH and DOORS MILL WORK
HARDWARE
-
CORRUGATED IRON
-
LIME
-
CEMENT
-
PLASTER
Roofing Applied
or in Rolls Hardwood
Flooring
Laid
Main Office and
Yards,
2010 South Alameda Street
Sunset So. 1501 LOS ANGELES
Home 60364
Wholesale Yard Terminal
THOMAS B. CLARK
Antique
Furniture
MAHOGANY AND
ROSEWOOD;
COLONIAL
AND
OLD ENGLISH
We have the
largest
stock in the
city
of
Fine,
Old
Mahogany,
Rosewood and Black Oak
Furniture. Also Old
Porcelains and Brasses.
840 SOUTH HILL STREET
F-1907 BDWY. 1921
64
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
COOKIES
"The
beauty
of the house is
order,
The
blessing
of the house is
harmony,
The
glory
of the house is
hospitality."
AMMONIA COOKIES
One-half ounce bakers'
ammonia,
one-half
pint
sweet
milk,
two
eggs,
two
cups sugar,
one
cup
butter,
one-half
teaspoon
salt,
flavor and mix soft. Bake in
quick
oven. Put
ammonia in bowl and cover with sweet milk.
Let stand
over
night.
In the
morning
add
sugar,
butter, salt,
and
the well beaten
eggs.
Add sufficient flour to make
dough
stiff
enough
to roll. Cut in
fancy shapes
and bake. Use
any
kind of
flavoring.
MARION CORNWALL.
BOSTON COOKIES
Cream one-half
cup
butter,
add
gradually
three-fourths
cup sugar,
and two
eggs
well beaten. Add one-half tea-
spoon
soda dissolved in
three-quarters tablespoon
hot
water,
three-fourths
cup
flour mixed and sifted with one-fourth
teaspoon
salt and one-half
teaspoon
cinnamon
;
then add
one-half
cup chopped English
walnut
meat,
one-half
cup
raisins seeded and
chopped
and one
cup
flour.
Drop by
spoonfuls
one inch
apart
on a buttered sheet and bake in a
moderate oven. Use level measurements.
MRS. C. D.
SWAIN.
DROP COOKIES
One and
one-quarter cups sugar,
one-half
cup
butter,
two
eggs,
whites and
yolks
beaten
separately,
one-half level
teaspoon soda,
one-half
tablespoon
hot
water,
one table-
spoon sherry,
one
teaspoon
vanilla,
one-half
teaspoon salt,
one and one-half
cups
flour,
one-half
pound
dates cut
fine,
one
pound
walnuts
chopped
fine,
one-half
teaspoon
cinna-
mon.
MRS. W. E. SPROUSE.
DEMOCRATIC COOKIES
One-half
cup butter,
one
cup sugar,
one
tablespoon
milk,
flavoring,
two
eggs,
two
teaspoons baking powder,
one-fourth
teaspoon salt,
two
cups flour,
cream
butter, add
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
65
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
sugar, yolks
well
beaten, flour,
baking powder
and
salt,
milk
and whites beaten stiff. Flour
enough
to roll. Cut with
cutter. After
they
are in
pan place
one-half walnut on each
cooky.
Bake in
quick
oven.
MRS. W. C.
TYLER.
SNOW FLAKES
Three
eggs,
two
tablespoons
of
cream,
butter size of
walnut, pinch
of
salt,
enough
flour to work stiff. Roll out
and let stand for a while until
dry. Sprinkle
with
powdered
sugar,
after
frying
in
deep
fat.
MRS. F. O.
REED.
ENGLISH COOKIES
One
cup
of
butter,
well
creamed,
three
eggs,
well
beaten,
one
cup pulverized sugar, thoroughly
dissolved in
the
egg.
Mix all
together,
beat
well,
and add flour to make
stiff
enough
to roll.
E. PAGE KERNS.
HERMITS
Three
cups
of flour sifted with three
teaspoons baking
powder,
one
egg,
one
cup
of
milk,
one-half
cup butter,
one
and one-half
cup
of
sugar,
one
cup
of
chopped raisins,
one
cup
of
nuts,
spices
to taste.
MRS. W. A. HORNE.
ROX
Three
eggs,
one and one-half
cup sugar,
one
cup
sour
milk,
one
teaspoon soda,
one
cup butter,
one
teaspoon
cinna-
mon,
one
teaspoon
cloves,
one-fourth
teaspoon ginger, pinch
salt,
one
pound
raisins,
one
cup chopped
nuts,
flour
enough
to make a
dough
that
drops.
MRS. KATE
N.
PROVINES.
LEP KUCHEN
Two
tablespoons
of
butter,
one and one-half
cups sugar,
two
cups
nuts,
one-fourth
pound
citron,
three and one-
quarter cups
flour,
one
cup
molasses,
six
yolks
and two
whites of
eggs,
one
wineglass whiskey,
three bars chocolate
(sweet),
one
teaspoon
each
cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice
and
cloves,
two
teaspoons baking powder. Drop
from the
spoon
on
greased pan
and ice if desired.
MRS. ORLANDO HALLIBURTON.
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
66
Violet Brand
Shortening
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Shortening by
a
Long Way
POTATO DOUGHNUTS
Three medium-sized
potatoes,
boiled and
put through
colander,
beat
lightly
in this one
teaspoon
butter,
one-half
teaspoon
salt. Beat two
eggs
in a
cup,
fill
up
with milk and
beat
lightly together.
Stir
in the
potatoes,
add
heaping
cup
of
sugar,
one-half
teaspoon baking powder
in
just enough
flour to mix soft.
MRS. F. O. REED.
DOUGHNUTS
Three and one-half
cups flour,
one
cup
cream,
one
cup
powdered sugar,
two
teaspoons baking powder,
two
eggs,
a
pinch
of salt.
MRS. E.
M.
SEMPLE.
"And
Marty's
twins,
from Aunt Marin's.
And little
orphant
Annie,
All's a eatin'
ginger
bread
And
giggle-in
at
granny." James
Whitcomb
Riley.
GINGER COOKIES
One
cup granulated sugar,
one
cup
Aunt
Jane's
mo-
lasses,
three
eggs,
one
cup
butter,
two
teaspoons ginger,
two
teaspoons
salt,
three-quarter cup boiling
water
poured
on
two
teaspoons
soda. Let
cool and mix as
any
cookies.
GEORGIE G. OLDHAM.
SOFT GINGER BREAD
One-half
cup shortening,
fill
cup
with hot
water,
one
teaspoon
of soda in hot
water,
one-half
cup
molasses,
fill
cup
with
sugar,
one dessert
spoon
of
ginger,
one
teaspoon
cinna-
mon,
one
egg,
two scant
cups
of flour.
MRS. F. O. REED.
SOFT GINGER BREAD
One
cup molasses,
one-half
cup
butter or
Crisco,
one
teaspoon
each of
cloves,
ginger
and
cinnamon,
two tea-
spoons
soda dissolved in one
cup boiling
water,
two and
one-half
cups
of flour. Add two well-beaten
eggs
and bake.
MRS. KATE N. PROVINES.
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
67
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
OLD-FASHIONED GINGER LOAF
One
cup
black
molasses,
one
cup sugar,
one
cup
butter-
milk,
flat
teaspoon
soda,
one-half
cup
butter, melted,
flat
spoon ginger, spice,
cloves,
cinnamon. Flour to make soft
batter.
MRS. E. L. DuBOSE.
SOUR MILK GINGERBREAD
One
cup molasses,
one
cup
sour
milk,
two and one-half
cups
flour,
one and one-half
teaspoons
of
soda,
two tea-
spoons
of
ginger,
one
teaspoon
of
salt,
two
teaspoons
of
baking powder,
one-third
cup
butter. Bake in a moderate
oven
thirty
to
forty
minutes.
INEXPENSIVE GINGERBREAD
One
cup
brown
sugar, three-quarter cup any
shorten-
ing,
one
egg
well
beaten,
one
cupful molasses,
one
teaspoon
each of
ginger
and cinnamon. Into one
cupful
of
boiling
water stir two even
teaspoonsful
of
soda,
three
cups
flour.
Add
three-quarter cup
of raisins if desired. Use
part
of the
flour to
dredge
raisins.
MRS. W. A.
KERLEY.
Let
Christopher's
Suggest
a Menu
If
you
are
going
to
give
a
party
and
just
can't decide on what to
serve,
please
consult us and we will
suggest
the
party complete
for
you.
This
is a
complimentary
service for our friends. Our exclusive stores are on
Broadway
between 5th and 6th and between 7th and 8th.
Christophers
Compliments
of
First
National Bank
69
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
Dessert Dishes
A wilderness of sweets." Milton.
PEACH ICE CREAM
Three
eggs,
one
tablespoon
of
flour,
one
cup
of
sugar.
Add flour and
sugar
to beaten
eggs.
Stir into one
quart
of scalded milk. When
cool,
add one
quart
of
cream,
one
quart
of crushed
peaches,
one-half
teaspoon
of
vanilla,
one-fourth
teaspoon
of salt. Sweeten to taste.
BETTIE E. SMITH HUGHES.
MARSHMALLOW SOUFFLE
1. Dissolve one rounded
tablespoon
of
granulates
of
jelatine
in one-half
cup
cold water and stir over fire until
thoroughly
dissolved.
(2.)
Add one-half
cup
cold water
to hot
gelatine
and let stand to cool a little as
you separate
whites of four
eggs. (3.)
Beat the whites of
eggs
with a
tiny pinch
of salt until stiff and then
pour
dissolved
gelatine
very slowly
into beaten whites. Beat
continually
while
pouring
in
gelatine. (4.) Sprinkle
in one
cup
of
sugar
and
keep
on
beating. (5.)
Add one
teaspoonful
of almond
extract and beat util well mixed.
(6.)
Take out one-third
of mixture and tint
pink, spread
it over bottom of
deep
dish,
sprinkle
over this
choped pecans.
Then
put
on second
layer
of white and more nuts and candied
fruit;
the
last
third tint lavender and
spread
on
top
of white
layer.
Put
in cold
place.
MAPLE PARFAIT
Maple syrup, large cupful
;
eggs,
four
; cream,
one
quart.
Beat the
yolks
of the
eggs
and add the
syrup.
Cook
slowly
and beat until thick.
Whip
the
cream and add the
beaten whites. Add this to the other and sweeten if neces-
sary.
Freeze as for
any
ice cream.
MRS. VIVIENNE MARTINEZ.
PEACH COMPOTE
Peaches,
one can
(or
like
amount of fresh
fruit)
;
mara-
schino
cherries,
small bottle
;
oranges,
one-half dozen
;
marshmalows,
about ten cents worth. In the bottom
of
For Best Results Use Golden Crown
Butter
70
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
each
compote glass put
a half
peach.
Sliced
oranges, chop
marshmallows and cherries rather fine and fill in
next,
using
both fruit and
juice.
This will serv from ten to twelve
people.
MRS. VIVIENNE MARTINEZ.
REAL ITALIAN CUSTARD
Yolks of two
eggs,
beaten well
;
add four
heaping
tea-
spoons
of
sugar
and beat
again.
Fill
large
half of
egg
shell
four times with
sherry
wine,
add to
eggs
and
sugar
and beat
well.
Put in a thin bowl or double
boiler,
set in
boiling
water
and stir well until thick. Cool before
using. Very
fine.
MRS.
JOHN
PARK DOUGALL.
MADAM POMPADOUR
Into a
pint
of
whipped
cream add diced bananas and
marshmallows. Serve ice cold.
CREME DE MENTHE
Two
cups sugar,
one and
one-quarter cups
water,
thor-
oughly
dissolve
by stirring together
without
heating,
then
let stand until it becomes clear and thick like
syrup.
Add
as much
grain
alcohol as
syrup, put
in one
teaspoonful pep-
permint
extract and color
green
with fruit
coloring.
Always
serve
through
crushed ice in small
glasses
after
a rich dinner. It aids
digestion
and is a
delightful
cordial.
LEMON AND ORANGE DESSERT
Two
slightly heaping tablespoonfuls
of cornstarch dis-
solved in cold
water,
to which add three
pints
of
boiling
water
(this
quantity
of
boiling
water should make this
about the
consistency
of thin
starch).
Add to this the
juice
of two
large
lemons or three small
ones,
two
cupfuls
and
one-half of
sugar,
a
pinch
of salt. Allow this sauce to come
to a
boil,
remove from the fire and when cold
pour
over six
oranges
which have been
peeled
and cut into small bits (not
sliced
thin,
but
cut more like small
chunks).
This
quantity
will be
enough
with which to serve ten
people.
The whites
of two well-beaten
eggs may
be
poured
over the
top
of this
dessert.
By freezing
the above it makes delicious
orange
sherbet. Omit the
oranges
and
freeze
it,
and
you
have the
best ever lemon sherbet.
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
71
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
BAVARIAN CREAM WITH PINEAPPLE
Take one can
(and juice)
of
grated pineapple
and boil
with two
cups sugar.
Press
through
a sieve and add one
package
of
gelatine
dissolved in one
cup
water. Stir and
add one
quart
of
whipped
cream and
pour
in mould.
MRS. W. N. PERRY.
PINEAPPLE FANCHONETTS
Cut rounds from
plain pastry.
Plan these over inverted
muffin
tins, pinch
in to fit sides. Bake in a hot oven. Fill
these with
pineapple
cut in cubes.
Arrange
a
merangue
on
on
top.
Brown
slightly
in oven.
Merangue:
Made with
two whites of
eggs,
four
tablespoonsful
of
sugar.
Beat
eggs
very light
and then add
sugar.
MRS. E. A. LOY.
FRUIT DELIGHT
Line
platter
with
large
halved
pears. Whip pint
of
cream
stiff,
sweeten and flavor to taste
(sherry preferred).
Add almonds and dates to the
whipped
cream,
pour
over
the
pears.
An
attractive and delicious dish.
MRS.
JOHN
BURTON.
(Wade Hampton Chapter.)
COCOANUT SPONGE
Thicken one
pint
of milk in which is dissolved three-
fourth of a
cup
of
sugar.
With two
tablespoonfuls
of corn-
starch,
cook
thoroughly
in a vessel set into
boiling
water.
W
r
hen cooked and
boiling
hot,
beat this with the whites of
three
eggs
beaten stiff. After
standing
a few
minutes,
add
one
cup
of
grated
cocoanut. Flavor with vanilla and turn
into a mould with
grated
cocoanut on
top.
Serve with
cream,
sweetened and flavored with wine or other
flavoring.
MRS. E. A. LOY.
PRUNE WHIP
Four whites of
eggs,
sixteen
prunes,
four
tablespoonfuls
of
sugar,
one
teaspoon
of
vanilla,
pinch
of salt. Stew
prunes
without
sugar
until
tender,
drain and cut in small
peices
and then beat the
eggs
to a stiff froth
;
with a
pinch
of
salt added
;
add
sugar, flavoring
with one-fourth of a tea-
spoonful
of vanilla
;
fold in the
prunes, pour
the
mixture
into a buttered
baking
dish,
place
in a
pan
of hot water and
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
72
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
bake in a moderate oven for ten minutes. Then remove
the
covering
to allow the
pudding
to brown
slightly.
Serve
cold in
glass cups
with
whipped
cream.
MRS. E. A. LOY.
CANTALOUPE WITH ICE CREAM
A novel
way
of
serving cantaloupe
is to cut it into some
pretty shape
and fill with vanilla ice cream.
MRS. VIVIENNE MARTINEZ.
ORANGE TRIFLE
Two
teaspoon gelatine,
two
tablespoon
cold
water,
two
tablespoon boiling
water,
two
tablespoon sugar,
two table-
spoon orange juice,
little
grated orange
rind,
one
teaspoon
lemon
juice,
one-half
cup
cream. Soak
gelatine
in cold
water,
add
boiling
water,
add
sugar, juice
and rind.
Strain,
stir and cool until a thick
syrup.
Fold in
whipped
cream,
alending thoroughly. Whip
until thick
enough
to hold
drop.
Stiffen in wet molds.
DIXIE WILLIAMS FARNSWORTH.
ICE CREAM
Two and one-half
quarts
milk,
six
eggs,
two
cups
of
sugar,
one
teaspoon
corn starch or
flour,
one
tablespoon
of
flavoring.
Put milk on to scald and when hot
add the beaten
eggs
and corn starch
(mix eggs
and corn starch
together),
cook until it
begins
to thicken. Be sure that corn starch or
flour is well dissolved. This makes about three
quarts.
MRS.
REED,
Beverly
Hills,
Call
PRUNE SOUFFLE
Steam
eighteen large prunes
until
soft,
remove
pits
and
chop
or mash
prunes
fine
;
add one
cup pulverized sugar
and bet. Add a
little
lemon
juice,
then fold in the
stiffly
beaten whites of
five
or six
eggs.
Butter a
baking
dish,
turn in mixture
heaping lightly,
dust with
pulverized sugar,
and
bake in a slow oven one-half hour. Serve with
whipped
cream.
CHARLOTTE RUSSE
Yolks of four
eggs
well beaten. Stir into one
quart
of
milk,
boil like custard and set
away
to cool. Pour a
cup
of warm water over one-half a box of
gelatine,
when thor-
oughly
soaked stir with the custard while
still hot. Next
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
73
Violet Brand
Shortening
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Shortening by
a
Long Way
morning
beat the whites to stiff
froth,
with one-half
cup
sugar
and vanilla and stir into custard. Line dish with
sponge
cake or
lady fingers.
Pour this over and set
away
to cool five or six hours.
SANDWICHES
FILLING FOR
SANDWICHES
Chop finely,
one
cup English
walnut
meats,
blend with
one-half
cup
rich salad
dressing. Spread
between thin
slices of bread. This amount makes
eighteen
sandwitches.
CHEESE SANDWICHES WITH MUSTARD*
For these sandwiches use
graham
bread
;
spread
it first
with
butter,
then a thin
coating
of
mustard;
next with a
layer
of
cottage
or
pimiento
cheese,
then add a
layer
of
chopped
olives mixed with
mayonaise.
MRS. S. A. THORPE.
CHICKEN SANDWICHES
Delicious chicken sandwiches. Take cold boiled chicken
or canned
chicken,
chop
fine with
yolks
of three
eggs,
a
little
cream,
and three
spoonsful
of melted
butter;
season
with
salt,
black
pepper
and
paprika
and a few
drops
of
onion
juice; spread
on thin
pieces
of white
bread,
buttered
and cut in
symetrical shapes.
MRS. S. A. THORPE.
CAPER SANDWICHES
Press two hard boiled
eggs through
sifter,
grate
one-
fourth
pound
of cream
cheese,
add two
tablespoons
of
chopped capers
with
salt,
paprika
and mustard to taste.
Moisten with salad
dressing. Spread
between thin slices
of whole wheat bread.
CHEESE STRAWS
Beat one
egg,
add one
cup grated
cheese,
butter size
of an
egg, pinch
of
salt,
cayenne,
flour. Roll
out,
cut
in
strips
and bake in a moderate oven.
E. PAGE
KERNS.
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
74
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
NUT AND CHEESE SANDWICHES
Either Graham
or Boston Brown bread can be used
for
these,
the nuts must be
pounded
or rolled with the roll-
ing pin
until
they
are almost like
paste
;
then mix them
with cream cheese which has been moistened with milk and
seasoned with salt and
paprika
;
spread
this mixture on thin
pieces
of buttered bread.
MRS. S. R. THORPE.
CHEESE DISH
Butter a
baking
dish, sprinkle grated
or
finely
broken
cheese
thick,
then fine
pieces
of
bread,
another
layer
of
cheese,
season well with
paprika
and salt. Then
drop
about
six
eggs
in
these
nests. Pour in milk to cover and bake
twenty
minutes.
NUT AND CHEESE ROAST
One cuful of
grated
cheese,
one
cupful
of
chopped
wal-
nuts,
one
cupful
of bread
crumbs,
two
tablespoonsful
of
chopped
onions,
one
tablespoonful
of
butter,
juice
of one-
half a
lemon,
salt and
peper.
Cook the onion in the butter
and when it
begins
to brown
pour
one-half a
cup
of water.
Then add the other
ingredients, pour
into a
pan
and bake
until brown.
MRS. THORPE.
PIMIENTO AND CHEESE ROAST
Two
cupsful
of cooked lima
beans,
one-fourth
pound
of cream
cheese,
three
pimientos, chopped,
and a
cup
of
bread
crumbs,
season with
butter, milk,
pepper
and salt.
CHEESE BISCUITS DELICIOUS
Put
in a
pan
and brown in the oven.
Two
cupsful
of
flour,
two
teaspoonsful
of
baking pow-
der,
two
heaping tablespoonsful
lard,
one-half
cup
of
milk,
one-fourth
teaspoonful
salt. Mix these
ingredients
as for
biscuits. Roll thin and divide in two
parts. Spread grated
cheese on half of the
dough, lay
the other half of the
dough
over the cheese, cut
out with cutter and bake.
MRS. S. R. THORPE.
Golden Crown
Butter,
Made for Particular
People
Jackson
-Eno Rubber Co.
1010 MAIN STREET
Phone Main 3656
P.
J.
Bachmann
FINE ARTS
HIGH-GRADE PICTURE FRAMING
540 West
Washington Street,
Los
Angeles
Broadway
657
Highest
Prices Paid for New and Second Hand Auto Parts
Chas. F. Rice
Company
WRECKERS OF AUTOMOBILES
1127 South Main
Street,
Los
Angeles,
Cal.
Compliments
0//BRESEE
"\
BROTHERS
V
COMPANY
J
Compliments
of
PC. H. BAKER!
L
SHOE CO.
J
629 SOUTH BROADWAY
451 SOUTH BROADWAY
410 SOUTH BROADWAY
323 SOUTH SPRING STREET
76
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Preserves & Jellies
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES
Wash three boxes of
strawberries one at a time and
put
in
pan
with the same amount of
sugar
and berries. Let
them stand for a short while then
place
on a warm stone
until berries are covered with the
juice,
then
put
over
good
fire and boil hard for
five
minutes,
being
careful not to
mash berries. Put in the sun
every day
for a week and
stirring
them
every day.
RASPBERRY AND APRICOT
PRESERVES
Three boxes of
raspberries,
fixe
pounds apricots,
cut
apricots
in halves
(do
not
skin)
and stew them a few min-
utes in one
cup
of water. Add berries and three-fourth
cup
sugar,
one
cup
fruit. Cook
slowly
until
preserved.
MRS. SEMPLE.
GOOSEBERRY CONSERVE
Four boxes or five
pounds
of
gooseberries,
four
pounds
of
sugar,
one and one-half
pounds
of
raisins,
juice
and rind
of four
large oranges. Chop
rind fine and boil
thirty
minutes.
MRS. F. O. REED.
GRAPE AND
WALNUT CONSERVE
Four
pounds
of white
grapes,
two
pounds
of
sugar,
one-half
pound chopped
walnuts.
Take the seeds out of the
grapes
and cook with
sugar
till thick
;
add the
chopped
nuts
and let cook for ten minutes. Put in
jelly glasses.
MRS. S. R. THORPE.
GRAPE FRUIT AND ORANGE MARMALADE
One
large grape
fruit,
one
orange,
one lemon. Shave
the fruit
exceedingly
thin,
taking
out the seeds and the
tough
white
centers,
measure and add three times as much
water as
pulp,
allow it to stand for
twenty-four
hours. Meas-
ure
and add an
equal quantity
of
sugar.
Boil
together
un-
til of the
right consistency
to
jelly
;
put away
in
glasses.
This should make ten
glasses.
MRS. THORPE.
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
77
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
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Long Way
RASPBERRY AND
CRABAPPLE
JELLY
Cook
crabapple
and
strain;
do
the same with
rasp-
berries. Then take two-third
crabapple
and one-third
rasp-
berry juice. Bring
to a boil and to
every cup
of
juice
add
one
of
sugar.
Makes a most delicious
jelly.
MRS. W. A. BROWN.
ORANGE LEMON
MARMALADE
Three
lemons,
three
oranges.
Slice both as thin as
possible, taking
out all seeds. To each
pound
of sliced fruit
add three
pints
of cold water and let stand
twenty-four
hours
;
then boil three-fourths of an hour and let stand an-
other
twenty-four
hours. Then
weigh
and to
every pound
of fruit add one and
one-quarter pounds
of
sugar.
Boil
until
quite
clear,
so will make
jelly
about
three-quarters
of an hour. This is an excellent marmalade.
CARROLL LEY STEWART.
ORANGE MARMALADE
Six or
eight large oranges,
two
large
lemons
;
peel
off
all
pealing, (be
careful to not leave
any
of the
white),
slice
thin
;
add three
quarts
of cold water and cook three-fourths
of an hour
;
then add five
pints
of
sugar
and cook until it
jels.
KATHRYN ENTLER.
ORANGE MARMALADE
Twelve
oranges,
two
lemons,
slice
all
thin,
cover with
water and let stand over
night.
Drain off water. To one
quart
fruit take two
quarts (fresh)
water;
boil until
tender,
then cool. Drain
again.
Take
equal quantities
of fruit and
sugar
;
cook until it thickens. Makes one dozen
glasses.
FIG PRESERVES SPANISH
One
tablespoon
of lime to one
gallon
of water. Soak
fruit
twenty-four
hours. Washin three or four cold
waters,
then boil in clear water. Then
drop
in
syrup
and cook until
done.
FIG NUT
JAM
Eight pounds
of
figs
;
after
peeling
four
pounds
of
sugar
moisten
sugar enough
to make a
syrup;
when
boiling put
Golden Crown Butter Twice Awarded Gold Medal Over All
Competition
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Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
in
figs.
This
constantly,
cook until clear and of the desired
consistency.
If too stiff before clear add a little water. Add
two
pounds
of
chopped
walnuts and cook fifteen minutes
Seal hot.
MRS. KIRBY.
FIG
JAM
One
gallon ripe figs,
four
cups sugar, juice
of one
lemon,
spices
to suit taste. Peel
figs,
then
put
all
ingredients
to-
gether
and mash with
potato
masher until well mixed. Cook
two hours over slow fire. Put in one
pint jars
and seal.
MRS. C. P. OLDHAM.
JAM
Six boxes
strawberries,
one
large
can
grated pineapple,
one whole
orange.
Wash,
stem and
thoroughly
crush ber-
ries,
put orange through
meat
chopper.
Mix crushed straw-
berries,
chopped orange
and
grated pineapple
and add six
or
seven,
if
you
like it
sweeter,
seven
cups sugar.
Cook
until thick over a slow fire.
MRS. W. A. BROWN.
PICKLES
MUSTARD PICKLE
One
quart
each of small
cucumbers, sliced,
large
cucum-
bers, sliced,
tomatoes,
green,
onions,
small button
;
one
large
cauliflower in small
pieces,
four
green peppers
cut fine, two
cups sugar,
one
cup
flour,
six
tablepsoonfuls
mustard,
one
tablespoonful
tumeric,
two
quarts vinegar.
Soak
vege-
tables over
night
in
brine,
one
pint
salt to one
gallon
water,
drain and cook till half done. Some cook faster than others.
so soak each kind
by
itself. Mix
dry ingredients
and make
a smooth
paste
with a little
vinegar,
add rest of
vinegar
and
cook till smooth and
thick,
stirring
often to
prevent
burn-
ing.
Add
vegetables
and heat
thoroughly.
Bottle and seal
with
paraffine.
UNCOOKED CHILI SAUCE
One
peck ripe
tomatoes,
two
cups chopped
onions,
two
cups chopped celery,
two
cups sugar,
one-half
cup
salt,
four
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
79
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
ounces white mustard
seed,
one
teaspoonful powdered
mace,
one
teaspoonful
black
pepper,
one
teaspoonful pow-
dered cinnamon, four
chopped green peppers,
one
chopped
red
pepper,
three
pints vinegar. Chop onions,
celery, pep-
pers,
then add tomatoes
peeled
and
chopped
and
drained,
and add the rest of the
ingredients.
Seal. This
requires
no
cooking.
CARROLL LOY STEWART.
CHILI SAUCE
Twelve
large ripe
tomatoes,
one
large green pepper,
one
large
onion
chopped
fine,
three
tablespoons
of
sugar,
one
tablespoon
of
salt,
one
teaspoon ground
cloves,
one
teaspoon ground
cinnamon,
one
cup vinegar,
one
teaspoon
ground
mustard. Cook all
together slowly
until done.
ELIZABETH M.
GOULD.
CHILI SAUCE
Eighteen large ripe
tomatoes,
six
large ripe onions,
six
large
red chili
peppers,
twelve
tablespoons sugar,
three
tablespoons
salt, three
cups
of
vinegar. Chop
or
grind
fine,
add mustard or
celery
seed,
cook hard one
hour,
remove
seeds from
peppers,
use skins
only.
MRS. A. R. MARKHAM.
UNCOOKED TOMATO PICKLE
Two
gallons
of
green
tomatoes,
sliced
fine,
one
gallon
of
cabbage chopped
fine,
one-quarter gallon
of
onion, sliced
fine,
one-eighth gal
of
green
sweet
pepper, chopped.
Salt
all and leave over
night.
In the
morning press
all the
liquor
out and throw
away.
Take one and one-half
quarts
of
good
vinegar
and one
pint
of
sugar
and heat. Add a ten cent-
package
of mixed
spices
and
put
in
jar
to
ripen
about ten
days.
E. A.
LOY.
SPICED CURRANTS
One
quart ripe
currants,
one and one-half
pints sugar,
one-half
cup vinegar,
one
cup chopped
and seeded raisins
;
one
large tablespoon
cinnamon,
one-half
tablespoon
cloves.
Cook until
thick,
stirring
often.
MRS.
JOHN
PARK DOUGALL.
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Competition
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Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening
by
a
Long Way
WATERMELON RIND PICKLE
1. Soak twelve hours in lime water
(one
handful lime
to one
quart water), changing pieces
from
top
to bottom.
2. Soak in clear water six
hours,
changing
water two
times.
3. Scald in alum water. Boil one-half hour in clear
water.
Plunge
in cold water.
Repeat
twice.
4. Boil in
ginger
tea one-half hour. To one
gallon
vinegar
add two
pounds sugar.
Cook rind in mixture till a
straw
may
be stuck
through easily. Spices
to taste.
MRS. P. H. BRADY.
FIG PICKLE
The
figs
used in this
recipe
are the small
honey figs;
they
do not have to be
peeled
and will
keep perfectly
with-
out
sealing.
Ten
pounds
of
ripe figs,
four
pounds
of
sugar,
one
quart
of
vinegar,
one
cup
of mixed whole
spices,
cloves,
cinnamon,
allspice
and cassia
buds,
in a muslin
bag.
Put
figs
in after
syrup
has come to boil
;
boil two hours.
MRS. FRANKLIN L. MORGAN.
GREEN TOMATO SAUCE
Two
gallons green
tomatoes,
chopped,
twelve
onions,
chopped,
two
tablespoons
salt,
let stand a few hours and
drain. Add two
quarts vinegar,
one
quart sugar,
two table-
spoons ground mustard,
two
tablespoons
black
pepper,
one
tablespoon allspice,
one
tablespoon
cloves. Mix and cook
until tender.
MRS. W. A. KEELEY.
FRENCH PICKLES
One
peck
of
green
tomatoes and six
large
onions
chopped
fine and mix
through
them one
teacup
of
salt,
let
stand over
night.
Next
day
drain
thoroughly,
boil in one
quart
of
vinegar
mixed with two
quarts
of water for fifteen
or
twenty
minutes. Then drain this off and take four
quarters
of
vinegar,
two
pounds
of brown
sugar,
one-half
pound
of white mustard seed.
Spice
with
ground
cinnamon
and cloves and boil all
together
for fifteen minutes.
MRS. F. O. REED.
PICCALILI
One
gallon green
tomatoes,
one
quart
small
onions,
three
teaspoons mustard,
two
teaspoons
black
pepper,
one
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Quality
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BAKERSFIELD
PASADENA
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Violet Brand
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Shortening by
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teaspoon ground
cloves,
one
gill
white mustard
seed,
salt to
suit,
one
gill celery
seed,
one-half
gill sugar,
three
pints
strong vinegar,
one small head
cabbage.
Grind or slice.
Cook until tender.
MRS. A. R. MARKHAM.
SWEET PICKLE
Two
quarts cabbage,
one
quart green tomatoes,
one
pint
onions,
one
pod green pepper, chop
these fine and drain off
the
moisture,
one
tablespoon
mustard
seed,
one
tablespoon
celery
seed,
one
tablespoon salt,
one
pint
brown
sugar,
pepper,
cloves,
spice, cinnamon,
one-half
tablespoon
each.
Cover with
vinegar
and boil until soft.
MRS. FANNY WRIGHT.
SPANISH PICKLES
Two dozen
cucumbers,
two
large
heads
cabbage,
two
dozen
large
onions,
three
pounds
brown
sugar,
two ounces
celery seed,
two ounces white
mustard,
ten cents worth of
tumeric,
one-half box Coleman's Mustard. Cover with
good
vinegar
and boil
thirty
minutes and seal in
jars.
This is fine.
MRS. B.
J.
BARNHART.
HEYDEN SAUCE
One
gallon
of
cabbage, chopped
fine,
one
gallon
of
ripe
tomatoes,
chopped,
not
peeled,
one
quart
of
chopped
onions,
four
green
or red
peppers,
seed
out, chop,
mix and add
three
tablespoons
of salt. Let stand a few hours and
press
juice
out. Add to
pickle,
four
tablespoons
of
ground
mustard,
two
tablespoons
of
ginger,
one
tablespoon
each of
cinnamon, cloves,
celery
seed,
three
tablespoons
of
tumeric,
one and one-half
pounds
of
sugar,
one
gallon
of
vinegar.
Boil one-half hour and can. Measure for
spices.
MRS. W. A. KIRBY.
TOMATO CHILE
Eighteen large
tomatoes,
six
large
onions,
six red
pep-
per,
five
cup vinegar,
three
tablespoons
salt,
eight
table-
spoon sugar.
Cook until smooth. This delicious chile will
keep indefinitely
in well sealed
jars.
MRS. ALBERTA P. RANSONE.
CHOW CHOW
Cut fine one
large
head of
cabbage,
one dozen bell
pep-
pers,
one dozen
large
white onions. Put these with three
Golden Crown Butter Butter of Uniform
Quality
82
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
CANDY
"Sweets for the
sweet,"
the
saying may
be
trite,
But here are dainties for
the
appetite
;
And
life, indeed,
would be most
incomplete,
Aye,
most monotonous without its sweet."
CHOCOLATE CREAMS
Four
cups granulated sugar,
three
tablespoons glucose,
one
cup boiling
water. Stir
thoroughly, put
cover
on,
boil
rapidly
until it will almost
candy (not qnite.)
Pour it out
in a
large pan
so that it will be no more than two inches
deep.
Set in a cool
place
until it is almost lukewarm. Then
stir with a wooden
paddle
until it looks white and
dry
as if
it were
graining,
then
put
in the hands and knead as
you
would
bread,
when it will soon be of fine
creamy consistency
and this is
just
what is desired. To
flavor,
pour
a few
drops
of the extract on the cream and knead a few times. Cover
the cream with a
damp napkin
and it will
keep
in
perfect
condition for some time. Dust
molding
board with least bit
of
flour,
roll this cream on
it,
then cut in small
pieces
and
form into balls. Set on
paraffine paper
to harden. It is
better to do this the
day
before
they
are
dipped
in chocolate.
Put a cake of Baker's chocolate in a double boiler to melt.
Put into the chocolate
a
lump
of
paraffine
the size of a
hickory
nut and a
piece
of butter half as
large.
Add vanilla.
Dip
creams in this chocolate and set on
paraffine paper
to
harden.
For
pink
ones,
roll into balls and
press
into the
top
of
each a blanched
almond,
then roll in
sugar.
For chocolate tinted ones knead in some
grated
choco-
late.
For fruit
candy Chop up
raisins,
fig,
citron and al-
monds to suit and knead into some of the
plain
cream. Then
roll out a
layer
of the
plain
white cream about half an inch
thick,
then
put
a laver of
pink
on
that,
then a
layer
of
fruit,
then
pink again, being
careful that it reaches over the side
of
the other
layer
of
pink,
then the white
again
to reach over
to the other
layer
of white. Roll in
the
melted chocolate
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Competition
83
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
and
lay
on
paraffine paper
to harden. When hard slice across
as
you
would a loaf of bread. This is
very
delicious.
E. PAGE KERNS.
CANDIED FIGS
Make a thin
syrup
of three
cups
of
sugar
and one
cup
of water. Put about two
pounds
of
figs
with skins on to
boil in
syrup
five
minutes,
take out and
put
on
greased
plate, put
in sun all
day.
Next
day put figs
in same
syrup
and boil for five
minutes,
put
in sun to
dry.
Third
day
make
a thick
syrup
of the same and boil
figs
for ten minutes.
Take out and roll in
powdered sugar, dry
in sun for the
day,
then
pack
in a box with
plenty
of
sugar
on each
layer.
Press
down
good,
with waxed
paper
on
top. They
are better if
they
stand for a month or
longer.
Same
recipe
can be used
for
oranges
and other fruit.
GEORGIE G. OLDHAM.
MOLASSES CANDY
One
cup
of
molasses,
one
cup
of brown
sugar,
one tea-
spoonful
of
soda,
one ounce of melted
butter,
mix
molasses,
butter and brown
sugar together,
boil without
stirring
until
it hardens when
dropped
in cold
water,
add
soda,
pour
on
buttered
platter, pull
or cut in sticks.
MINNIE G. NEIGHBOURS.
Nut
candy
can be made
by
same
recipe, adding peanuts
or walnut meats.
MARSHMALLOWS
Two
cups granulated sugar,
two-thirds
cup
water,
two
tablespoons gelatine
dissolved in
eight tablespoons
water.
Boil the
syrup
until it thickens then
pour
into a
bowl,
add
the dissolved
gelatine
and beat
constantly
until the mixture
is
very
thick. Add vanilla
flavoring
and
put
on a board
dusted with
powdered sugar,
also dust the
top
with
sugar.
When cold cut into little
squares
and roll each one in
sugar.
For the
pink
marshmallows use the fruit
coloring
and straw-
berry flavoring.
Beat first with wire
spoon egg
beater then
with a
spoon.
E. PAGE KERNS.
RUSSIAN NOUGAT
Two
cups
white
sugar,
one-half
cup
corn
syrup,
one-
fourth
cup
water. Cook until it hardens when tested in
For Best Results Use Golden Crown Butter
84
Violet Brand
Shortening
the Shortest
Shortening by
a
Long Way
water. Beat
this into the beaten whites of two
eggs.
Add
one
pound
nuts. Flavor.
PENOUCHE
Three
cups
brown
sugar,
one
cup
milk,
one
tablespoon-
ful of
salt, cook,
stir while
cooking,
flavor,
add
chopped
nuts.
FUDGE
Two
cups
white
sugar,
two
squares
Baker's
chocolate,
cut
fine,
two
tablespoons
butter,
one
cup
milk,
cinnamon.
Beat
all for a minute or
so,
then
put
on to boil. Cook until
it hardens in water. Put in nuts and beat one
way,
until
it
thickens,
then
pour
into buttered
plate
and cut in
squares.
E. PAGE KERNS.
AFTER-DINNER MINTS
Two
cups
of
sugar
and one
cup
of
water,
boil in
granite
sauce
pan
until it forms a soft ball when tested in cold
water. Take from fire and let cool until "milk
warm,"
then
begin
to stir or beat with wooden fork or
spoon
until it
creams. Then add fruit
coloring, green
or
pink,
and two
drops
of the essence of
peppermint.
Mould and
shape
with
the
hands into small "wafers."
MRS. H. E. MORE.
PRESERVED ORANGE PEEL
Weigh oranges
whole and allow
pound
for
pound
of
sugar
; peel
the
oranges neatly
and cut the
rind into narrow
shreds
;
boil until
tender,
changing
the water
twice,
and
replenishing
with hot from the kettle
;
squeeze
the strained
juice
of the
oranges
over
sugar,
let this
boil,
put
in the
shreds and boil
twenty
minutes.
MRS. E. G. ROBINSON.
ACCURACY IN
TELEPHONING
Is
just
as
important
as
accuracy
in
cooking.
Ladies
using
these
recipes
should
always telephone
their
grocery
orders over the
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iillmiMiuii
86
BEVERAGES
FRUIT PUNCH
To the strained
juice
of ten lemons and six
oranges,
add one can of sliced
pineapple
cut into small dice
;
one
can
of black cherries
;
six bananas sliced
very
thin
;
one-half
pound
of red candied
cherries,
two lemons cut in thin circles.
Mix,
and sweeten to
taste with a stock made as for boiled
icing
and
perfectly
cold. Fifteen minutes before
serving
fill bowl half full of crushed
ice,
pour
in the
punch,
add one
bottle of
Apollinaris
water. Serve in
punch glasses.
MRS. ALBERTA RANSOME.
SOUTHERN MINT TEA
Two
teaspoons
tea,
pinch
of
cayenne,
handful
mint,
one
pint boiling
water. Let stand fifteen minutes and strain.
Add
juice
of two or three lemons and one
cup
of
sugar.
Ice.
MRS. E. H. MULLEN.
MINT
JULEP
In a tall
glass place
a thick slice of
lemon,
one cube
sugar
and two
tablespoonsful
best Bourbon
whiskey
and
several
sprigs
of mint. Fill
glass
with
finely
shaved ice and
stir without
touching
the outside of
glass
with
fingers
till
the
glass
is
thoroughly
frosted. Serve with straws and
garnish
with
sprigs
of fresh mint.
FLORENCE BRADY.
CHAMPAGNE PUNCH
Squeeze
the
juice
from one-half dozen lemons and one-
fourth dozen limes. Add three-fourths of a tumblerful of
sugar,
one
wineglassful
of rum and one bottle
champagne.
COFFEE
One
cup
of
ground
coffee,
white of an
egg
and shell
;
one
quart
of fresh
boiling
water;
one-half
cup
of cold water
to settle. Stir
up
the coffee
and
egg
and about one table-
spoonful
of cold water. Pour on to this the
boiling
water,
stir as it boils. Boil for about ten
minutes,
add the one-half
cup
cold water to
settle,
strain into the coffee
pot
for the
table.
87
DRIPPED COFFEE
Put three ounces of
finely ground
coffee in the
upper
division of
your drip pot,
and
pour
over this a little
boiling
water at
a time until one
quart
has been
used,
and
having
it
where it will be
perfectly
hot without
boiling.
If not
strong
enough
it will be
necessary
to let it
drip through
the second
time. Serve with
boiling
milk about one-half
cupful
of
dripped
coffee to one-half
cup
of
boiling
milk,
or a little
more coffee.
TEA
"Except
the water
boiling
be,
Filling
the
teapot spoils
the tea."
One
heaping teaspoonful
of
green
tea is sufficient for
two
cups.
The water for
making
should be boiled
quickly.
The
china or stone
teapot scalded,
a
teacup
of
boiling
water
poured upon
the tea and set near the fire to draw. In about
ten minutes
pour
on another
cupful
of
boiling
water. This
is
strong
;
if wanted weaker add more
boiling
water.
ICED TEA
It is better to
put
the tea in cold water in a china
pitcher
and set in the ice box the
morning
of the
day
it is to
be used for
supper.
The flavor is better and milder than if
steeped
in hot water.
BLACKBERRY CORDIAL
Cover the berries with cold water and let boil a few
minutes until done. Then
strain,
and to
every pint
of
juice
add one
pound
of
granulated sugar.
Put back on the fire.
Tie
up
a
little
cinnamon,
allspice
and cloves in a thin muslin
bag,
and let boil with the
juice
until the latter is a
pretty
thick
syrup,
then take
off,
and when it is
thoroughly
cold
add one-third as much
good brandy
or
whisky
as
you
have
syrup.
It is not
necessary
to seal it.
90
One full
teaspoonful
of cream tartar to one
quart
of
flour.
One
pinch
of
salt,
one salt
spoonful.
Two wine
glassfuls,
one
gill.
Two
gills,
one
teacupful.
The success of a
recipe
is often due to exactness in
measuring
materials as well as care with which directions
are followed.
60
drops
.... 1
teaspoon
3
teaspoons
... 1
tablespoon
4
tablespoons
J4
CU
P
5^3 tablespoons
. . . .
% cup
8
tablespoons
. . . .
l
/2 cup
1
cup
*/2 pint
To measure
flour,
meal and similar
ingredients,
sift
lightly
and then measure.
To measure a
spoonful
of
dry
material lift the
spoon,
heaping
then level to measure a half
spoonful,
then divide
in halves
lengthwise.
A kitchen
cup
holds a half
pint
and must be used to
measure
everything calling
for
cupfuls. Recipes
are never
written for the use of
ordinary
tea or coffee
cups.
Halves,
quarters
or thirds of a
cup
should be measured
with a
tablespoon according
to above
table.
A
"rounding teaspoon"
means two level
teaspoons.
A
"heaping teaspoon"
means three level
teaspoons.
FOR BURNS
Grate
Irish
potatoes
and
put
over the
burn,
change
fre-
quently.
A
splendid
remedy. Cooling
and
healing.
MINNIE G. NEIGHBOURS
Cooper,
Coate &
Casey
Dry
Goods Co.
SEVENTH AND LOS ANGELES STS.
Broadway
2448 F 2448
PHOTOGRAPHER
811 South Hill St.
"pjotos ulljat
Official
Photograper
for
Burbank Theatre
INDEX
Pies
5
Puddings 9
Cake
14
Soups
26
Fish
28
Oysters
33
Poultry
and Game
36
Meats
41
Salads 47
Vegetables
53
Bread 59
Cookies 64
Dessert Dishes 69
Sandwiches 73
Preserves and
Jellies
76
Pickles 78
Candy
82
Beverages
^ 86
Hints
88
Table of Measures
. _ _ _89
631 SO. SPRING ST.

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