Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / May 30, 1952, edition 1 / Page 11
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I (IUuLgaJ). ?UosUogJz& Rhubarb gingerbread shortcake . . . spring treat By Cecily Brownstone Associated Press Food Editor Your family and guests have a treat in store for them if you try a new kind of shortcake ? this lus scious rhubarb-gingerbread crea tion. The cake base has a delight ful flavor that comes from old fashioned mild molasses and just the right blend of spices. The rhu barb filling also is sweetened with molasses and has a surprise in gredient ? quick-cooking tapioca The tapioca thickens the filling a bit and gives it interesting texture. 1 One word of warning about the ' rhubarb filling ? keep heat low, I watch carefully, and don't stir the ! rhubarb once it begins to soften I if you want it to keep its shape. If $)you prefer rhubard sauce to hav ing the rhubarb in pieces, just stir it well once it's soft; when it cools it will be thick enough to spoon be tween the layers of spicy ginger bread. - In buying rhubarb for the short cake, choose stalks that are fresh, firm, thick, and of good color. Usu ally, well-colored rhubarb is well flavored. Do not peel; the skin helps to give the cooked rhubarb attractive color and to hold the pieces together. Rhubarb is sold either in bunches or by the pound. Rhubarb is delicious teamed with strawberries, pineapple, orange sec tions, and sliced bananas. When fou want to use it in a fruit com pote be sure that, in cooking, the pieces stay whole. . Rhubarb Gingerbread Shortcake Ingredients. 2 1/3 cups sifted flour, 2 teaspoons baking soda, H teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, \ teaspoon ginger, V* teaspoon] nutmeg, teiaspoon cloves, % cup ! brown sugar (firmly packed), % i cup shortening, \ cup old-fashion ed mild molasses, 1 cup buttermilk, 2 eggs, rhubarb filling, 1 cup heavy cream (whipped and sweetened). Method: Into large mixing bowl sift flour, baking soda, salt, cin namon, ginger, nutmeg, and cloves; mix in sugar well. Melt shortening In small saucepan; stir in molasses, ^ then buttermilk. In small bowl beat eggs until foamy; stir in mo lasses mixture. Now gradually stir molasses-egg mixture into flour mixture. Beat until smooth, about tt minute. Turn into 2 well greased lightly floured 9x9x2 inch pans. Bake in moderate (375F.) oven 25 minutes or until cake tester comes out clean. Turn out on wire rack to cool. Put to gether shortcake fashion 'with rtiu- | barb filling and whipped cream. Makes 9 servings. Rhubarb Filling Ingredients: l1* to 2 pounds rhubarb, 2 tablespoons quick-cook ing tapioca, ta teaspoon salt, 1 cup sugar, % cup old-fashioned mild molasses. Method: Cut leaves and root ends from rhubarb. Wash but do not \ peel. With sharp knite cut stalks into lVs-inch lengths to make 4 cups. In top of double boiler mix tapioca, salt, sugar, molasses, ami rhubarb together. Place over very | hot (but not 'boiling) water; have water in lower part of double boil er just touching bottom of upper part; cover tightly. Cook, stirring several times before rhubarb soft ens. Keep covered and cook with out stirring until tapioca is trans parent ? this may take as long as ltt hours. (With spatula scrape down sauce from sides of pan a few times). Remove from hot! water. Chill in pan. Use as fill- j BUY WITH CONFIDENCE Buy the names you know and depend on for best service. FRIGIDAIRE Refrigerators Ranges Water Heaters Automatic Washers Food Freezers EASY Washers ZENITH Radios TV IRONRITE Ironer KITCHEN AID Dishwasher MYERS Water Softener YOUNGSTOWN Kitchens Soond Appliance Co. 1406 Bridges St. Phone 6-4452 Morehead City, N. C. ? , I ? Veterans Not Collecting Cash ISSLI Dividends to Get Credit Veterans who do not reques their 1952 National Service Lif Insurance dividend in cash befor it is due will be notified by th Veterans administration of the divi iend amount placed on deposit ti their credit, says E. C. Elliott, oi ficer in charge of the New Beri VA office. VA said dividend notices will b mailed to such veterans after th 1952 dividend is payable. The firs notices are scheduled to be mailet soon. The notice will advise th> policyholder that if the dividem credit is not applied in payment o premiums becoming due and no otherwise paid, or is disposed of ii full at the insured's request with in three months from the anni versary date, it will earn interest says Elliott. The authority for this procedur is Public Law 36, 82nd Congress rhis law provides that on and afte lan. 1, 1952, dividends on NSL ?hall be applied in payment of pre 11 iu ins becoming due and no >therwise paid unless the insuret tias requested payment of the di? lend in cash. VA has begun to mail 1952 divi lend checks to policyholders wh< lave made requests in writing foi ash payments. Approximately 5, >00.000 policyholders are eligibU or the $200,000,000 dividend. Policyholders who desiiJe divi lends paid in cash and have no 'et so requested should write th( ng .md topping for gingerbreac ihortcake. VA office to which they are pay ing premiums, giving their full name, insurance policy numbers and the address to which they wish the dividend payment sent. The New Bern VA office will nssist vet erans with these letters if they will call at the office. Room 211. Post Office building. New Bern. N. C., from 8 a.m. until 4:45 p.m., ?aeh weekday except Saturdays. The Carteret county veterans' service officer is located in the Legion hut, Turner St., Beaufort. Guerilla Warfare Gains Impetus ia Southeast Asia Kuala Lumpur, Malaya (AP) ? Communism has shifted its atten tion to Southeast Asia to prejudice the western powers, and Commun ist guerrilla warfare in Malaya is expected to increase as a result, Malaya's new high commissioner, Gen. Sir Gerald Templer, warns. The Red terrorists will moreover have a temporary advantage in the war because many police jungle squads are being withdrawn for further training, he said. British troops are to replace them during the period. Gen. Templer has said he could beat the terrorists in three months provided the entire Malayan popu lation was behind him. Experiments indicate that a hive of bees can gain as much as 40 pounds in a day through storage of honey and pollen and growth of the bees in the hive. MAOLA Orange-Pineapple Ice Cream ENJOY IT AT HOME. TOO! c You can give your family a delicious ice cream treat tonight when you bring a pack home from your shopping trip. They'll love it. Ask for MAOLA Ice Cream and Milk at Your Favorite Fountain or Grocery Store. Naola Milk & Ice Cream Co., Inc. Phone 6-3434 North 18th Street Morehead City, N. C. THE CHRYSLER NEW YORKER NEWPORT WHAT ARE M DOING TOMORROW? This invitation could result In the most \7?Pc!r?*,nt d*y of >,our motoring lite. We d hke you to late the wheel and really drtM a Chryeler New Yorker ear. Every thing good you've heard about this great car is true . ..and then tome. Iu new V-8 enpne... its power steering... its power brajiee . . . iti astonishing comfort . . . each is an experience you will thrill to. and remember. So . . . tomorrow ... or any time that fa convenient . come dUcover real power steering! Hydraulic power does 4/5 the work as you turn the wheel . . . and also given you 5 times the usual con ??L 'oa^9 ? ? ? th* *ome won derful wheel feel" every mile! Drive America's finest engine! Pee! for yourself the acceleration, response, re serve power of 180 V-8 horsepower. Learn why owners praise the matchless per formance they cet . . . without even hav ing to use premium fuel I Feel what prnrer braket are like! Power from the engine boosts the power of your toe. With up to two-thirds lea than normal pressure, you will get the surest. ? t stops in your life! Test the comfort that's unequaled! On body-pleasinp chair-height seats . . . with sweeping vision all around . . . you take good roads and bad on nhock abtorbert with owr twice the nhock-abgorbing power of those on car s you've had before \ CHRYSLER THE FINEST CAR AMERICA HAS YET PRODUCED \ V y PARKER MOTORS AitENOEU. STREET MOREHEAD CITY Home Hints By Ruth Current State Home Demonstration Agent For success in canning low-in acid vegetables and meats, you need to have your pressure canner in good working order. Two im portant points to check before each canning session are: Fir^t, test the canner to see that no steam, or very little, leaks out where cover and kettle join. If too much leaks out, you may not be able to main tain the pressure needed and the canner may boil jry and be ruined. Second, check the dial face gauge to find out if it accurately registers the pressure inside the canner. If the ga,uge is five pounds or more off. you need a new one. To prevent food spoilage, not only must jars be sealed air-tight but in addition the whole canning process must be conducted under the most sanitary conditions. Clean liness is absolutely essential. All jars and their tops should be wash ed in hot. soapy water, rinsed with hot water, and turned upside down mmm Cjueir<iHtee<i < 'to KILL... / " WiikUi, Ihi^vi AMi t.l??f?uK. Mi 4-4, ? on a clean towel or kept in hot water until it is time to fill them. Care must be taken to avoid scalds and burns when canning. Handle hot jars with dry towels, use holders when handling hot ket tles; avoid spilling or splashing hot water, hot food, and hot liquids in general; turn handles of cooking utensils away from the edges of the stove so that persons passing by will not strike them; don't reach over steaming kettles. When using the water-bath method, be sure io lower the jars very carefully into the boiling water to avoid break age. Be equally careful when lift in# the trayholder out of the bath to avoid spattering and splashing hot water and being burned. Beer seems to have been used from the most ancient times in Babylon and Egypt. Beheading was Regarded as an honorable form of execution by the Romans. JACOBSEN 18" Rotary LAWN MOWER * For AII-Purpo?e Gra?? Cutting and Weed Control SPECIAL TERMS Price $122.00 $25.00 DOWN - $10.00 MONTH Newport Tractor & Equipment Co. NEWPORT, N. C. FIVE OCLOCK DISTILLED LONDON DRY GIN fttll PIN? i $|80 ?/? a U ART l2?s ?S Proof PIORIA, IIIINOIS Ann Page MAYONNAISE Jane Parker ANCEL FOOD Round Cake Mild, Mellow Coffee 8 O'CLOCK l-Lb. Bag White House DRY MILK l-Lb. Pk t. White House SKIMMED MILK c,n 9c Free retainer 41 OUR OWN TEA BAGS 57c money saving values on line kooils IS AN EVERY DAY AFFAIR ? o D at A&P Golden Maid Margarine - - ,? 10 ? aap rnut Pk* -W Cockbil : s, 23c Ion* Stringless Green Beans - - 2 ^ 25c Ann Page Grape Jelly - : =' : 19c Packer's Label Grapefruit Juice- - - 2 r ; 35c White House Evaporated Milk - : 3 a 40c J Fresh Tender Well Filler Ears Corn - - 4 ears 29c I Firm Slicing ^Tomatoes - carton 19c J Yellow ?Onions - - 2 lbs. 15c jjuicy Lemons - 2 lbs. 27c JSolden Ripe Bananas - 2 lbs. 25c IT'S AAP FOR FINE MEATS Sliced All Meat I Sliced All Meat ! Bologna - - lb. 49c J Swift's Premium 1-Lb. Pkg. (frankfurters - - 55c J Sliced Cooked jSalami - - lb. 69c | Sliced Pickle A Pimento ot Macaroni & Cheese Cold Cuts - - lb. 49c ? \ A I Super Right Choice Western Beef, Bone In Sirloin Steak - lb. 99* Porterhouse, Club or ( T-Bone Steak lb. Sl.OSi ? \ 7-in. Cut Standing Rib Roast lb. 79c Sliced Beef Liver - lb. 85c; Beltsville White Broiler 4 to 8 Lb. Avg. Turkeys - - lb. 69c Loin End ! Pork Roast - lb. 49cj Fresh Pork ' Back Bone - lb. 49cj Wilson's Corn King I Bacon - - - lb. 43c Smoked Skinned Hamsj Butt Portion lb. S5c| Shank Portion lb. 53c | Half or Whole ... lb. 6Scj iiiy, m ? i Morehead City aid Beaufort Clapp's Strained Foods 3 j?? 29c Clapp's Chopped Foods "Z 14c Planter's Saltec* Cocktail # Peanuts Can 35C Chef-Boy-Ar-Dee Spaghetti Dinners 43c Lava Soap 2 Ba" 19c P&C Soap 3 B.r? 22c Camay Soap 2 Bars 23C Camay Soap 3 5S 23c Tide _4i? GUI Pkg. Pkg. Ue 29c nr1 79c Draft rk? Glani Pkg. A9C Pkg. Lge 29c Pkg1 79c Frisco *? 81c r BATH SIZI fcfell
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 30, 1952, edition 1
11
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