STAPLES
"MORE SWEET SAUCES
Here are a few Sweet Sauces...
APRICOT SAUCE
Take equal quantities of cream and the pulp of tinned apricots rubbed through a sieve. Beat the cream stiffly, add it to the pulp and sweeten as you like.
COFFEE CREAM SAUCE Ingredients: 1 cup strong cot- fee: 3 egg yolks; 4 tablespoonfuls -df sugar; a gill of cream.
Cream the eggs and sugar with a pinch of salt and add the co- Isa very gradually. Let the mix- ture cook in a double saucepan pinki it is thick, then when it is cold fald in the stiffly-wipped Cream.
YELLOW SACCE
ingredients: 2 eggs; 402. powder- ed sugar; vanilla or brandy. Beat Ine eggs until light and frothy, then gradually add the sugar, beating all the while. Flavour with 2 teaspoonful of vanilla essence or of brandy, it you prefer it
ORANGE SAUCF
Ingredients: 2 oranges; Ileman; powdered sugar; 3 egg whites, Beat the, whites suffy and add by de- grecs a quarter of a pound 01 sugar. beating all the time. Fin- ally add the juice of the lemon and the juice and 'grated rind of the oranges
HONEY CREAM Ingredients: A gill cream; a tri- fe more honey; lemon, Beat the cream stiffly, then whip in the
TRY THESE
SALADS
POTATO SALAD
HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1936.
SURPRISES
4 cups cold bolled potatoes (eur
w the potatoes lato dice'
slices
Add
chopped onion and sliced cucumber or
2 pickles sliced). Mix with cup French dressing and
4 shoes cooked bacon and chill
MIX with the salad dressing. serve on lettuce, and garnish with parsley. Celery cut into cubes or celery seed may be used with the other ingre dients if desired.
JELLIED VEGETABLE SALAD
Soak
2 tablespoons gelatin in
cup cold water. Stir in
2 cups boiling water
cup sugar and.
Add cup vinegar, chill until mix- ture begins to thicken, into
1 teaspoons salt.
mold 1
layers with
chopped onion
in
cup shredded cabbage
cup diced celery
Pour alternate
TURKISH
DELIGHT
1 lb. granulated sugor. "
1 oz, leaf gelatine.
1 dessertspoonful rosewater.
1 gtil water
Juice of large lemon.
Few drpos of cochineal,
TRY THESE SANDWICHES
TOMATO SANDWICHES
The usual drawback to tomato sandwiches is that they are 80 "mushy" due of course to the amount of liquid in the tomatoes, There 13 good tip to coun- teract the defect, but here
would only be of one had
ice box refrigerator. Scald and skin the tomato in the usual way, and crush down smoothly with a 'fork, and season highly with pepper and
it
if
OF
Te
Soak the gelatine in the water and, when quite dissolved, add the Let lemon-juice and the sugar. fall melt very slowly, and then boil up quicky for Ave minutes. Add the rose-water, and pour half into a tin or soup plate. colour the other half pink and pour into an-salt. Dissolve half a leat of gela- other tin. Allow to stand until
Stir tine in 2 tablespoons water. set. Dip the tins quickly into a this into the tomato mixture, and little hot water and turn out of place on ice to sett will
only to a paper thickly dusted with take a few minutes. Use for sand- equal parts of cornflour and icing wiches, and serve at once. sugar. Cut into squares, and rub well with the Iring sugar and corn- Dour.
DRY GINGER CAKE
Put half a pound of four into a bowl, add a quarter of a pound of brown sugar, one teaspoonful of ground ginger, half a teaspoonful
2 tablespoons choped pimlen- of bicarbonate of soda, and half
tos
a teaspoonful of cream of tartar, and mix all well together. Then mb la quarter of a pound of but-
2 tablespoons chopped olives, Chill in refrigerator until set turn out on platter and gar-ter till the mixture looks like fre nish with jelly, lettuce and breadcrumbs. Turn it into a well- mayonnaise.
greased tin and level Ughtly with a knife. Bake in a moderate oven for half an hour till It is a nice golden brown colour." Cut whue It is hot and leave on the than to
cool
Any combination of vegetables or tru't may be used with this foundation, Fruit Juice may re-
honey and a teaspoonful of lemonplace part of the balling water.»
*
julce
W
MELDA SAUCE
Squash some fresh or timped Taspberries and rub them, through
steve, then add a quarter of their welght in sugar and cook until it is a heavy syrup. Let grow cold (The famous Peach Melba consists of a peach on a vanilla Lee with this sauce poured over it.
Good News! |
'OVALTINE' COLD or Hot
is now served in the leading
Cafes and Restaurants
VEAL CHOPS WITH
SPAGHETTI
Beat the veal chops well, season them with salt and pepper, brush them with beaten egg and cover
"Oooh!....
How lovely!
them with very fine white bread-. crumbs, pressing them on well. Fry them in shallow butter, and serve them with spaghetti bound with tomato sauce.
Spinach goes well with this dish.
I'll have this every day"
MANY a mother will be grateful this summer for the instant appeal which Ovaltine '--served" cold-makes to her children. Its creamy delicious- ness is so tempting when appetites are fickle, and its rich nourishment is just what is needed to make light summer meals complete in health giving, and energy-creating value.
"Ovaltine'is, in itself, a complete and perfect food scientifically prepared from the highest qualities of malt extract,
BAPB17
creamy milk and new laid eggs. It con tains the vitamins and other valuable nutritive elements necessary to create energy and vitality and to build up per- fect fitness of body, brain and nerves.. For these important reasons, 'Ovaltine is an essential part of every child's sum- mer dietary. But be sure it is 'Ovaltine?!
there is nothing "just as good." Don't forget when going to the Beach to take a thermos flask of Ovaltine' Cold-it will be welcomed by all.
OVALTINE
The delightful
Summer Drink
COLD
·
EGG AND TOMATO CREAM SANDWICHES
To make the cream, take 2 me- dium sized tomatoes, 1 egg, pep- per and salt. Plunge toinatoes into boiling water fo: one minute and skin, then. Cut in slices, and stew gently with a table-spoon of water, pepper and salt.. When tender, mash with q, fork add beaten egg, and stir over a gentle heat till a smooth cream is formed. Allow to cool, and spread on but. tered bread.
2:
When
SCONES
the
scones are to be baked, the oven should be made very hot 1450 to 500 degrees). and scones should be bakeď quickly for. not longer than ten to twelve minutes. Mix half a pound of flour with a pinch of salt, a teaspoon- ful of cream of tartar, half a tea- spoonful of bicarbonate of soda, a dessertspoonful of sugar, and two
ounces of sultanas Rub in
an
ounce of butter, and mix to a dough at once with a gill at milk. Make into rounds of the ze re- quired, and cut across the top twice. Brush over with milk or egg, and bake in a hot OYER. For wholemeal scones use four ounces of white Dour, four ounces of wholemeal four, two ounces of butter, a teaspoonful of cream of tartar, half a teaspoonful of bicar- bonate of soda, a teaspoonful of sugar, and a good pinch of salt, Make and bake in the same way,
CHOCOLATE REFRIGERATOR CAKE
1b, sweet chocolate
3 thap. powdered sugar
4 eggo
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp vanilla
2 doz. lady fingers
3. tbsp. warm water.
Melt chocolate" in double boiler, add sugar and water and cook un- til smooth when tool, add egg yolks, one at a time, beating after each addition. Add the egg whites beaten stiff, then the salt and va- nala. Line a loaf pan or round dish with waxed paper, put a
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BRIGHT YOUNG THINGS A MENACE
National Danger,
Declares Methodist
President
A FACULTY OF MISSIONS
London July 16.
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IN MEMORY OF MRS. PANKHURST
SERVICES HELD
Two new appointments are an- nounced to-day at the Selly Oak Colleges. at Birmingham One is
London, July 17. that of the Rev. Godfrey. E. To St. John's Church, in Smith Phillips, one of the, secretaries of square. where the funeral service the London Missionary. Society, to for Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst took a new Chair on Missions, which place eight years ago, the women has been made possible by who had been her fellow-suara- generous gift to the Central pattes gathered to-day for the
layer of lady fingers on the bot- MIDNIGHT REVELRIES Coupe of the Colleges by Mr yearly memorial service to their
Add
tom and around the sides, some chocolate filling. more lady fingers and remaining chocolate. Decorate top with walnut halves, D'eces of lady fingers and candied cherries, Put in refrigerator over night, leaving temperature at nçz- Lal, Serve with whipped cream.
TEACAKES
London, July 15,
Edward Cadbury, chairman of the leader, "We are getting old now," connell. The other appointment one of them said as she watched The Rev C. Ensor Walters, the is that of the Rev. John Foster the procession with roses, car- well-known preacher, addressing a missionary in Bouth China, to nations, and les move slowly Chair of Church History and from the church to lay the flowers as president the Methodist Con-
Newcastle-upon-Tyne the History of Misalons, created at the statue of Mrs. Pankhurst ference
at
in Victoria Tower gardens. The yesterday, contrasted poverty with on the retirement of Professor W. West-End ostentation and a Wilson from the Chair of New Bishop of London in his memorial Testament Theology and Christian address had said that the mesent garity.
Ethics. These appointments, the generation of women had not in amt of their kind in this country, herited the political ardour of the constitute a new Faculty of Mis-generation that won them the stons in the Selly Oak Colleges vote.
ready preparation of mit Most of the Woot them were
Stating that he had no desire to
utter a fierce denunciation of
stomary TRO AT TH
wealth, which he had seen conse- Delicious teacakes can be made crated to the service of God and as follows. Add half a teaspoon-humanity, he continued ful of salt to a pound of plain "There is a section of the comL, flour, rub in two ounces of butter (munity which is a danger to the finely. Cream half an ounce of State a section much advertised, compressed yeast with a little cas especially in the 'democratic' press tor sugar and pour on to it halfwhose life seems to consist of a pint of tepid milk in which an cocktail STA sherry parties, j The Methodist Church, was at Mrs. Pankhurst, led the procession, egg has been beaten. Make into
cabarets, and midnight revelries.
old, and matry of women who, with Mrs," Pankhurst, had been imprisoned during the break-down of the Lord's Day suffragette agitation, Dame Chris- tabel Pankhurst, the daughter of thould banish complacency.
the cross-roads. If they cast aside and Nurse. Pine, who nursed Mr. those characteristics that made Pankhurst through her hunger- a' dough with the four and knead "There are decadent bright well. Then leave in a warm place young things who are the fore churches into social clube, their "drum Major of the suffragette them great, if they turned their strikes, and Mrs, Mary Leigh, the for forty-five minutes. Add an
runners of gloom and disaster.
days might well be numbered. band in pre-war days, were there. ourice of castor, sugar, four ounces
"Let these people be warned. of currants of sultánes, and a t-
With all the strength I podring Dame Elhei Smyth was not Every he said, "I warn cur churches there, but when, at the end of the tle grated lemon peel. Make the We live in stern times. dough" "into" small rounds, put" a
patriot must seek to build a comagajust the substitution of worldly church service, the organ blared Loured tin, and leave for a fur-munity based on brotherhood and weapons for those which are out the war-songs of the suffra
humanity."
spiritual
ther fifteen minutes. Then bake in a hot oven for fifteen minutes. The Methodist Church, he said, 1.The Remove from the oven, brush the was not moving forward. tons with milk, sprinkle with sugar, dedine in numbers the during and put back again for a few min-1 tide of materialism, the prevalence been utes until the tops are glazed. of, a new pageniem, and the
She: #0
settes the "Marselllaise and Dame Ethel "March of the women-one saw a reminisce
Dame Ethel's work in their cause.
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