Page
HONG KONG DAILY PRESS THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1936.
STAPLES SURPRISES
DELICIOUS PRUNE
PRESERVE
An excellent way to get the family to eat prunes is to make prune and apple jam.
The ingredients aret. 11b, prunes, 21b. apples (when peeled). 3 pirts of water. 2 lemors, 411b. loat sugar,
1
Wash, then soak the prunes in water overnight. Peel core and slice the apples and cook in small cupiul of water untender. Mix the fruit with the grated lemon rind, and boll for half hour. Add the sugar
and lemon juice. then both and stir for twenty minutes. or until a little will set when tested upun a cold plate. #
li
ал
stones AN
Remove 1Ls many poss.ble. pour into pors, and the "down. Store in a cool, dry place
BREAKFAST PRESERVE
Apple Ginger makes a delicious change for break ast. To make r you need 2b, apples. 4oz. preserved ginger, two tablespoonsful o the ginger syrup. the Jufce and rinds two lemons, pint water. ijlb, sugar.
Peel, core and silce the apples le the peels. rind and cores in muslin bag and boil ali gently un- tl tender. Remove the bag of peils, and the sliced ginger and syrup. lemon juice and sugar. Boll and stir for Afteen to wenty minutes. then pour into pots and tle down"
A LEMON
CARROT JAM
An unusual preserve is carrot jam. To each pound of carrot pulp allow 1lb. Jual sugar, the grated rind o. one lemon. the strained juce of two 10 bitter almonds, chopped finely.
and
Scrape and cook the carrots in astle water as possible, strain. pass the pulp through a hal; steve, hen weigh it and pus it into a
Add the preserving pan almonds and lemon rind,
sugar. Bring
to the bol`add the lemon juice for fifteen and boll and stir minutes. Pour into pots and tie down.
HAVE YOU TRIED THIS?
When making Egg sandwiches mix the eggs with a few drops of mayonnaise, to give an added piquancy,
Powdered ginger greatly in proves the flavour of a bolled upple pudding. It should be served in a casto: and sprinkled on each-por- tion at the table.
Prunes are good with roast mut- ton. Stew them until tender (with- cut sugar) and serve hot with the joint. They make a welcome change from the red currant Jelly or gooseberry jam usually served.
SANDWICHES
Add lemon juice to the water in which fish is boiled and it will firm the flesh, whiten the fish, and im- prove the flavour. Lemon Juice will whiten artichokes and rice if added the water in which they are cooked; it will improve the flavour of all stewed and tinned fruit. The inside of a cut lemon will remove ad this stiff paste thickly between
to
Sup some cooked haricot beans from their skins and mash them. To every cupful of the paste add a dessertsvoonful of grated cheese un'd a teaspoonful each of ⚫ butter and chopped parsley. Season with salt, pepper, and lemon juice. Spre-
BOILED BATTER
SWEET AND SAVOURY
EGG SAVOURIES
Try egg and ham croquettes for breakfast. They're tast
Mix lb. minced ham, with two Served either with roast lamb.or chopped, hard-boiled eggs and a mutten, as a second course, with cupful of breadcrumbs. Add salt, jam ur gyrup, this is a popular pepper and a teaspoonful of chopp-. pudd.ng. To make a boiled battered parsley, bind together with a pudding, take 8 tablespoonful of flour. a "pinch of sat, 2 egga, ± pint milk.
beaten egg, then Corm into rounds.
Brush "over with the remainder of the beaten egg. roll 'n bread- crumbs then fry a golden brown in hot at. Drain before serving.
QUICK DISH Something in a hurry?
Here s
Mix the four and salt well to gether, make a well in the centre,. break 1 the eggs and, with wooden spoon, work together unti a smooth paste is formed. Add a little more than hal. of the milk, a quick savoury. Grease a reproof › very gradually, then beat well for dish, arrange in it * layer 口罩 several minutes until t is very | mashed potatoes. next three smooth and creamy. Leave it to halved, hard-boiled eggs, with the stand for one hour, then beat in ani sides down. the remaining milk,
Pour over pint white sauce.. and two alleed tomatoes, and grate over some cheese эле bread- crumbs
Dip a pudding-cloth into bolling water. place it in a. calander, sprinkle it with a little flour, then pour in the batter. and tie cloth Garnish with chopped parsley, securely but loosely. to allow the then brown under the grill for a pudding to swell.
few minutes. As a savoury supper Have ready a saucepan of boldish. I can thoroughly recommend Heat Ing wier with an old plate at the poached eggs on sweet corn. bortom, then drop in the pudding. the contents of a tin of corn. place The plate prevents the pudding on a hot dish, top with puached from sticking to the pan. Cover egga spraakled with chopped par-" the pan with a ld. and continueşley. bolling for 1 hours.
If required. All up with bolling water,
but the pudding will be | EGG BALLS FOR SOUP lighter if the lid is not lifted.
Powder
some hard-bolled yolks
of egg and season with salt, pep- a little finely chopped parsley. Then add sufficient raw yolk to make. the mixture into " paste.
If eaten as a savoury, remember to make a good thick brown gravy to pour over the bolled batter. Jam sauce is usually liked if the per. and pudding is intended for a sweet. It is made by boiling, together two tablespoonstu of jam and two of water, with a teaspoonful of lemon Juice until well blended.
Roll it into balls the size of marbles and dip, the balls into flour. Put them into boling water and leave till they are set. Drain them and add to the soup before
To make a delicious lemon sauce, bollib tump sugar in pnt water for five minutes, add a ten-serving spoonful of arrowroot moistened with water, a pinch of salt, and the juice of three lemons. and stir until clear.
Bol!
LEMON RINGS
These are good for afternoon tea, but they should be eaten the same day. Sift six ounces of plain flour SALMON AU GRATIN
into a bowl and rub in two ounces' marks from aluminium pans, re-thin slices of toasted bread.
This is an interesting way of us- of butter. Add the grated rind of a move tarnish from brass, and clean Cover some slices of brown breading tinned salmon. Prepare scallop lemon, a pinch of salt, three ounces and whiten the hands after, house- nrst with butter, then with minced shells or other individual dishes by of castor sugar, half a teaspoonful work. Fresh iodine stains on white | seeded raisins. Put two allces to- buttering them and sprinkling with, of bicarbonate of soda, and half material can be removed if rubbed |gether, with a layer of wafer-like breadcrumbs. Remove skin and a teaspoonful of cream of tartar. of currants and well with a slice of lemon... Stains pieces of sharp, juicy apple between, bone from a small tin of salmon Add an ounce on steel cooking knives can be ra-
Melt a few bars of plain sweet and fake the first, then mix it with an ounce of chopped candled peel. pidly removed if rubbed with
chocolate in a slow over, then add almost an equal quantity of cooked Make into a dough with a beaten paste of bathbrick and lemon juice,
te it the same amount of finely rice. "Four a teaspoonful of milk egg and the juice of a lemon, add- Marks on tiled hearths should be chopped walnuts or finely chopped over each and sprinkle with a little ing enough milk if necessary to washed with hot water, rubbed with roasted almonds. Spread the mix- | pepper. · Cover with browned make it soft but not too sticky to lemon, and washed off with water.
ture quickly on oatmeal or wheat-crumbs and run a little melted but- | handle. With floured hands make Fine laces and silks can be bleached
nical biscuits, putting two together ter over. Put in a hot oven or un- by adding lemon juice to the water; sandwich fashion,
der the grill for ten minutes. The it does not harm the fabric.
addition of some skinned, chopped tomato makes variation, and flaked finden haddock or other fish can be used instead of salmon,
B
OH! FOR AN ICETM
During this hot weather one's mind turris instinctively to ices. The making of ices is one of the sim plest operations, given an ice mac- hine.
VANILLA ICE
Half a bound of sugar. Six yolks of eggs. One stick of vanilla. One quart of milk.
Give each sandwich its own wrapper of greaseproof paper; this ül prevent it from getting dry or crushed.
1.
OBITUARY
Famous Soldier And Banking G.O.M. Dead
London, May 15. Two famous men. Field-Marshal Viscount Allenby and Sir Felix Schuster, Grand Old Man of Bank- ing, died yesterday.
Lord Allenby collapsed and died almost immediately in the study of his Kensington, London, home. He was seventy-Ave.
His death reduces still further the small group of British war lea- ders now surviving.
One of the first messages of sympathy received by Lady Allen-
Put the milk, sugar, and vanilla into a saucepan on the fire. When bolling, pour it on to the yolks that have been beaten in a Bowl, mixing them quickly with a wooden spoon. Four this mixture through a hair sieve and let it cool. Three hours before the ices are to be served. pour this custard into the centre of the ice machine, and surround by was from the King. with six or eight pounds of rough
Only a week or two ago Lord Allen- ice broken into fine pieces, and two by was installed as Rector of Edin- pounds of coarse salt. Get the burgh University and made boy to turn the handle for about strong speech condemning war. half an hour, until the ice "acts." Viscount Allenby won fame in the war for his command of the British troops in Egypt and Palestine.
MOUNTAINEER-FINANCIER
Then take it out with a spoon arid put it into a mould, cover the mould with buttered paper before aflizing the cover, and put the mould into the machine again.
It is easy to know when the ice la "setting," as the handle becomes more and more difficult to work.'"
Turn the ice pudding in the mould on to a round dish upon a napkin or a fancy d'oyley.
COFFEE ICE
The same as above only flavour- ing with a little essence of coffee instead of vanilla,
CHOCOLATE ICE**
11
.
THE WOMAN HAS THE WORST
OF IT
Legion Speaker's View Of Unemployment
BEEF AND MUTTON
DIET
─;
the dough into strips, which should be formed into rings, crescents, and
each other shapes. Brush with milk, sprinkle with sugar, and bake in a hot oven for about Afteen minutes.
over
castor
TWO WOMEN FOR TELEVISION
First Announcers
London; May 5. The Daily Telegraph understands that Miss Jasmine Bligh, a nicce of the Earl of Darnley, and Miss E. D. Wuliams are the two successful applicants for the positions of B.B. C. television announcers Alexandra Palace television studios. Thousands of applications have
at
the
Miss Bligh is 23 years of age, and is the sister of Miss Susan Bugh, whose photograph was re- produced on the cover of the Lon- don Telephone Directory.
What is the ADVERTISING
USE of
IF
the claims made are proved a fallacy? Would you buy that article a second time? While advertising is a powerful force in educating as to the uses. merits or money saving advantages of a product, the people are the judges when they make their first purchase. "Delivering the goods" is what they demand, and the scrap beap of failures is piled with goods that could not stand the test of public judg. ment. 'ASPRO messages are carefully planned to prove what 'ASPRO can do to alleviate pain and suffering, and the reason of its success through- out the civilised world is simple, because it fulfils all claims made for it. Its purity is its safety, and its quick action the bealing service humanity appreciates. ASPRO conforms to the standard of purity laid down by the British Pharmacopoeia (the guiding authority of the Medical Profession), and the 15 uses enumerated below make it an invaluable quick first-aid emergency in every home.
'ASPRO'
GIVES QUICK AND SAFE RESULTS
Great Relief After
.
14 Years' Suffering
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28/2/33, Dear Sirs,
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Three-Packings: 5 s. 10's, 27's.
HERR HITLER AND THE
QUESTIONS
Interview With
A GENERAL TALK
Berlin, May 14, The British Ambassador, Sir Eric Phipps, was received by Herr Hit
morning. Baron ler" this
Von Neurath, the Foreign Minister, was also present.
is
Ambassador
BRITAIN AND ITALY
9-It spondily | redposs
Temperature.
10 The stabbing paina of Sciatica and Lumbago can be hunted out with ASPRO
11-It can be taken at any
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12-It gives great relief to when dës
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13-It relieves ll after effacts of Alcohol
་་
14-It relieves Dengue and Malaria by reducing the Ferer.
15-As a Gargle “ASPRO
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SURPRISE FOR COLLECTORS
Old Masters From Warwick Castle
By A. C. R. CARTER
London, May 15.
The Earl of Warwick has pre-
Jented on the German side that parity of strengths in front-line -machines might with advantage be
arranged between the Locarno pared a surprise for art collectors. Powers; but it is insisted that Ger. He has sent to Sotheby's, for sale many must be allowed to take in- on June 17, a rare array of draw dependent account of Russian ings by the old masters, the exis- strength.
tence of which was unsuspected by the experts until a year or two The Interview followed the re-
ago. It was always understood.. But even the negotiation of the that the dispersal at Christie's 40 quest made by the Ambassador when he presented the British Air Pact, it is argued, could not well years ago of the Warwick Castle been considered, and more than "questionnaire" last week, and to-be conducted at this moment, when drawings comprised the whole of 100 women interviewed."
day'a conversation is understood to the relations between Great Britain them. Then Michelangelo's sketch and Italy are so strained. The two
for a Pietà brought £1,400. have been of a general and pre-
But research has revealed a This evening the States are guarantors of the or liminary kind. London, May 1.
that, ¡ginal Locarno, Treaty and would wonderful Rembrandt drawing of impression conArmed
∙stand in something of the same Issac blessing Jacob, and a sheet "In talking of the unemployed
whereas full and friendly const- a
deration is being given by the Ger-position, towards the Air Pact.. Here of his studies. A series, too, of we almost invariably think of the
drawings by man Government to the British also, therefore, delay; la unavoid-remarkable naval Miss Williams also lives in Lon- man and--not the woman, but of
Qualifications for the ap- questions, not all can yet be an able. And delay is considered both William van de Vekle will be prized the French the two I think the wife of the don
swered: and that the presentation unavoidable and desirable when it by collectors," and anemployed man ought to get the pointment were, charm, personall-
of the German repy may be delay comes to defining the relations of School is représented by a beauti- largest share of our sympathy." tya "golden" volce, and features
the proposed German non-aggrea- | ful›work of a woman, and child by said Colonel G. R. Crosfield at the which reproduce well "on the aired for wome little time
It would be safe to assume that, slon pacts to the general system ot Boucher "Le Repentir," by Grenze conference of the Women's Section
with international affairs in a state collective security. The utmost cient to the French Exhibition of the British Legion in London
of flux. Herr Hitler is even less scepticism is felt here about the some time ago), and sketches by yesterday.
THE ADVANTAGE
ready than usual to commit him- future of the League of Nations in Claude Lorrain
Ahead of a girl by Madame "She has to feed and clothe her 1:
self to any definite course of action is present form. Germans have Referring to "keep ft" classes, in regard to the League of Nations long predicted its collapse, and Vigée le Brun was drawn by the family somehow on the dole, she has to keep her man in good tem- he said that if a few years ago a and cognate questions, and expect they believe their predictions are artist originally on the door of a Argument casino at Naples belonging to Bir per-not an easy task-ane, what woman of 50 or 60 had started uily, perhaps, in regard to the Air about to be fulfilled.
Hamilton husband of I should think is worst of all, she going to "gym." classes Deople Pact. His general view still is that upon argument is brought forward Wiliam has her man hanging about the would have thought she was head- a Western Air Pact is one of the just now why, in particular, "the Emma.
most desirable objectives of Euro- system of sanctions should be In the Italian section is a bril- house all day long. Could any ing straight for bedlam.
"Now mothers, and even grand-pean diplomacy and could best be abolished and why the present lant pen-and-ink drawing of a woman have a greater trial?
"When I was young," added mothers are going miles to the achieved.by.being discussed entire sanctions against Italy should be Venetian scene by Guardi. Ta the brought to an end. ahey are said English School is a delightrúl Colonel Crosfeld, "I was under 'keep fit' classes, and they all de ly op ta qwn merita.
The limitation of air strengths to be injurious to all, even to the black-and-white chalk study of a the impression that you could not j.clare they have never felt so well. be healthy unless you ate beef er One woman, when asked how she is held to be a separate question non-sanctionist countries, and to lady in a hooped dress and "pic" mutton at least twice a day. Now liked the classes, replied, It's Just The original treaty or Locarno was, hamper progress in economic retire" at thy Gainsborough, e we are learning that the only per- champion Now I can beat ell signed without any imitation of construction, which is the one Drawings by Reynolds are much,
sident of the Muse of Comedy. son such a diet benefits is the into Albert when I get 'ome." armaments, and the precedent is sphere in which cooperation is unt-rarer, and here is one by the pre-
(Laughter.) doctor." (Laughter.)
held to be perfectly valld. It is not retsally destrad and educated
Bir Felix Schuster, who had been 11 for a considerable time, was eighty-two.
He was a director of the National Provincial 'Bank and was governor of the Unlog of London and Smith's Bank, Ltd., from 1895 to 1918
Sir Felix Schuster's financial knowledge won him a place on more than one Royal Commission.
He began his career in his father's firm of merchants and bankers...
He was a keen mountaineer and was formerly vice-president of the Alpine Club. Bir Felix was one of its oldest members.
The same as vanilla ice but in- stead of vanilla dissolve eight small tablets of plain chocolate in a little His sixty years, association with water and add to the milk, etc., be-Zermatt was celebrated in 1933 at a fore passing it through the steve banquet given in his honour.
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