Thrifty Main Dishes
Beef Biscuit Roll . . . Tjiruty main course.
By CECILY BKOWNSTONE
Associated Press Food Editor
Here are two ground beef dishes
that will help you serve a main
course that's thrifty, delicious, and
filling. Tut them in your best bak
ing dishes, add a first course, a sal
ad, and a light dessert, and you'll
find these hamburger variations
are good enough for company.
BEEF BISCUIT ROLL
Ingiedients: 3/4 pound ground
beef. 1/2 cup diced onion. 1/2 cup
diced green pepper, 1/2 cup bread
crumbs, 1 teaspoon salt, 1/4 tea ,
spoon sage. 1/3 cup milk. 1 table- j
spoon melted fat, 2 cups sifted all 1
purpose flour, 1/2 teaspoon salt, 4
teaspoons baking powder, 1/3 cup
shortening. 2/3 cup milk, few j
sprigs parsley, tomato sauce.
Method : Mix together beef, on
ion, pepper, bread crumbs. 1 tea
spoon salt, sage and 1/3 cup milk.
Cook beef mixture in 1 tablespoon
melted fat until mixture is lightly
browned. Sift together Hour, 1/2
teaspoon salt and baking powder.
Cut shortening into mixture with !
2 knives or pastry blender or rub
in with fingers until mixture is like
coarse meal. Add 2/3 cup milk and |
mix lightly. Roll dough into 9-inch
square. Spread with meat mixture.
Roll as tor jelly roll. Place roll on
a well greased heat-resistant glass
utility platter. Bake in a hot
(400 F.) oven for about 25 min
utes. (iarnish with parsley and
strve with tomato sauce. Makes 6
servings.
OVEN (HIM
Ingredients: 1 1/4 pounds ground
beef, 3 tablespoons fat. 3/4 cup
diced onion, 1 clove garlic (peeled
and minced), 1 1/2 tablespoons
chili powder, 2 teaspoons paprika,
1/2 teaspoon oregano, 1 1/2 tea
spoon salt, 1/8 teaspoon pepper. 2
1/3 cups tomato puree, 3 cups cook
ed kidney beans. 2 slices American
brick cheese (about 2 ounces).
Method: Brown beef in fat. Add
onion and garlic and continue cook
ing for about 5 minutes. Stir in
chili powder, paprika, oregano.
salt, pepper, tomato puree and kid
ney beans. Pour into heat-resistant
glass 2 1/2 quart bowl of oven and
table set. Cut cheese slices in half;
arrange on top. Bake in slow
(235 F.) oven for about 1 hour.
Serve in small bowls of oven-table
set. Makes 8 servings.
Oven Chili . . . Satisfying cool Heather treat
For Teatime
For teatime make sandwiches of
apricot jam and a sprinkle of cin
namon. Spread outside surfaces
with soft butter or margarine and
grill in a hot skillet until golden
f brown. Serve at once, while still
piping hot.
The green peel on cucumbers is
attractive left on when they are
served raw. Or if you don't like
that much peel pare off part of it
in a striped effect.
Alternate slices of banana and
orange around cream tapioca pud
ding lor a fresh tasting dessert. Or
fold crushed peppermint stick can
dy into the pudding and serve with
a chocolate sauce.
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By BETTY CLARKE
AP Newsfeatures Beauty Editor
The fall and winter social season
calling for strapless gowns and
deep-plunge necklines, requires ex
tra attention to those little points
of grooming which can make a big
difference in ballroom glamor.
Backs need scrubbing, softening
and lubricating to remove and tone
rough little patches of skin. If dis
colored from sun or very freckled,
a makeup must be applied.
Make back glamor a once-a-week
chore until you get your back and
shoulders into a smooth and vel
vety condition. Lie down for ten or
15 minutes in a very hot tub of
soapy water. Then moisten a bath
brush and sprinkle over it a half
and-half mixture of cornmeal and
soap beads. Brushed over back and
upper arms, this helps stimulate
circulation and acts as a mild scour
ing beautifier that sloughs off
flaky scales and smooths skin into
soft prcttiness. When the skin is
glowing, rinse with warm water
and dash with ice-cold water. Alter
terry-drying, smooth on a light
film of lubricating baby oil, and let
it soak in.
Back, shoulders, neck and face
i should be the same shade when
I wearing a strapless gown. You must
not wear a tinted makeup on the
I face that will be in contrast to a
| yellow-tinged neck and pale back
( and shoulders. Makeup must be
1 carried over neck, shoulders and
; face completely. Cake makeup does
! a very effective job. and can be
applied to shoulders and back with
i a sponge, using the same method
as when applying it to the face. If
you can't reach the exposed parts
you may need some help. Olive
skinned girls usually are gifted
with that nice one-tone skin that
does not need camouflage to make
it appear uniform in shade.
Some tints stain clothing if ap
Hark Interest . . . Use lubri
cating baby oil on shoulders and
back.
plied to soon before you dress. A
good test is to put some on your
nock and leave it on lor an hour
and then rub a towel over it. If
the towel shows a yellow or brown
smudge from the makeup, you may
be Mire that it will come off on the
neekline of your dress, particularly
noticeable if you plan to wear
white.
Strapless gowns demand more
ladylike demeanor of the wearer.
You can't jump and flit around in
the best of them. You will need
to make sure your own fits you
perfectly or be prepared for pos
sible disaster. In particular, if
you've lost weight, and plan to
wear last year's strapless gown, try
it on several days before the big
evening so that alterations can be
made, particularly at the bosom, in
case the dress doesn't fit.
HOLLYWOOD.,..^
Hollywood ? The movies' new
est daneing whiz seems to be built
; on springs. He is a 28-year-old ex
GI and Sonja Henie troupe skater
named Gene Nelson.
In "Tea for Two" he not only
hoofs magnificently but does a back
'flip. He dances agilely up a nar
row stair railing, leaps off. plucks
the banister posts as if they were
harp strings, and clogs in a wall
niche. Then he slides down the
I long railing a maneuver from
which his back is still sore,
i It took Hollywood quite a while
i to discover the blond youth's spcc
i tacular talents, but it's keeping him
! busy now. Featured earlier in "The
j Daughter of Rosie O'Grady," he has
just finished "The West Point
j Story" and soon starts "Lullaby of
Broadway." Next will come "We're
1 Working Our Way Through Col
j lege."
Nelson doesn't remember just
what started him dancing at 12. "I
might have seen a dancing movie."
he says. His mother noted their
! hoofed-on hardwood and said. "If
I you're going to mark up our floors,
I you might as well take lessons."
, This was in nearby Santa Monica,
where his father has been a Doug
las Aircraft tool and die maker for
25 years.
! Gene danced for women's clubs
and school events. Then he put
'blades on his flying feet. He per
formed two seasons with the Henie
I ice troupe on tour and two more
! at New York's Center Theater.
During four years in the Army
lie was with the Irving Berlin
show. "This Is The Army," that
entertained troops in Kuropc and
the Pacific. After the war he got
ja non-dancing bit in "Gentleman's
Agreement" and did two dances
| in "1 Wonder Who's Kissing Her
Now."
! Nelson's wife. Miriam Franklin.
1 also a dancer, helps him work out
| his routines. Actually they are a
I three-way collaboration with the
| dance director. But Gene gets in
spiration for footwork at odd
| hours.
As m6st crooners speak of Cros
by. Nelson speaks of Fred Astaire
among dancers. "He's the greatest.
There'll never be another like
him."
"We've enjoyed Bamby
for years at our house.
Now that I've seen their
fine bakery, I know why
it's so good."
Many are the warm
praises for Bamby and
the Bamby Bakery from
those women who know
best ? visitors who have
seen the care with which
Bamby is made.
Bm v
TAKE HOME BAMBY BREAD
?folk
BY VIVIAN BROWN
AP Newsfeatures
Is it true that a boy must have
a car these days to net dates?
One boy thinks it is. He is John
ny Waris, Finnish student attend
ing classes at Georgia Tech. and
he really believes "you've not to
have a car to fall in love in Amer
ica."
In Finland, he says, a boy would
suggest a long walk when meets
his dream girl. But in America "a
girl thinks you are crazy when vou
ask her to walk."
Johnny ought to speak to a few
girls who are pretty thin-soled dis
proving his theory. And lie might
also query a few other girls who've
had to buy gas for the buggies
they've had the "good fortune" to
ride in.
Some girls think it would be
more fun to get back to the caval
ier days<c A boy walked into the
parlor with a little bag of popcorn
or jelly beans or peanuts or maybe
(on special occasions) a carton of
ice cream. Later, there would be a
walk, perhaps, or just cozy conver
sation on the front porch. Hut in
any event, the girl would not have
to rustle up movie money or spec
ial treat change tor her swain lie
would be embarrassed to take it.
It is good news in a way to hear
that girls are making it a little
tough for the boys, who've had life
pretty easy for a while. Girls
shamelessly got to the, point where
they were outbidding each other i
with special favors in exchange for
male companionship.
Another custom that strikes the
Finnish student as weird is the cas- '
ual way girls date. He says: ? !
"In Atlanta you ask a ^irl for a|
date, and she is so enthusiastic you
think you are practically engaged
. . . Uu?n she says it is two weeks
before she will have a free night."
While it is too bad that Johnny
is having his troubles, we'll have
to applaud the fact that maybe girls
are getting smarter.
There are a few facts that maybe j
Johnny doesn't know some rea
sons why America!^ girls might be '
playing the game of romance so
they at least break even.
The American male is a pamper
ed critter. He plays the field be
fore marriage and sometimes con- '
tinues to be a lone wolf and a bach
elor in spirit after marriage.
One common type wants his wife
to be a personal valet she must 1
keep him bright and shiny as a
Hold medal Her cooking must rival
the culinary art of a Cordon Bleu
graduate. She must be an amateur
psychiatrist and interpret bis
moods and whims, know exactly
how to humor him and when to
keep her mouth shut. She should
be a high finance expert and fig
ure out how to cut corners on the
groceries so he can play poker
i twice a week She also must be
prepared to be nursemaid to his
fishing tackle and be an expert
Hardener ? if they have a garden.
Is it any wonder girls might have
decided to have fun at the boys'
expense before marriage, a custom
that has been out of style for quite
? few years? The girl know s if she
doesn't keep him on his toes be
f
fore marriage, when companion
ship must be developed, it will be
difficult to impress on him the
necessity for sharing the burden
of home life, after the big event.
And. why not date lots of boys un
til you find one worth marrying?
a difficult task in any case judging
by divorce statistics.
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