THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 21, 1912 THE PEOPLES -x'1 INSTITUTE OF DOMESTIC. k 1HE well-balanced meal is not not more expensive; it ia decidedly more nutritious and appetiz ing and is just as easily planned, after the principles of balanced rations are known. If you serve potatoes, beans, peas and white bread at one time, you vill be giving to your family an overdoes of starchy food and indigestion. 'After reading this article, you will not repeat this mistake. ' meal does not appeal to the diners, something is wrong. Look at th menu to discover the cause. Let an expert in dietetics lead you along . a way that will give startlingly beneficial results. . The balanced menu means variety. It also means that the different , tissues of the body, with their different elements of composition, are receiv ing their right proportion of nourishing food. Since the right food deter I mines growth and health, the importance of this page today is obvious. By Alice Dynes Feuling J ? Formerly head of Department of Horn J ...... . Economic, Iowa state College. FT HE present high cost of living has I aroused a keen interest in the , JL matter of diet and Its relative i v. Importance in the scheme of life. Our ancestors were content with the , plainest fare and grateful'f or food suf ficient In quantity to satisfy their hun ger. For meat they depended on game, 4 and the fruits, nuts and vegetables pro duced In their own vicinity constituted ' the remainder of their diet. As clvlllia . tion advanced, animals were raised and . vegetables cultivated tor food, and the supply became more plentiful; conse quently the diet grew more and more complicated until, in our time, it is cus tomary to provide a menu so elaborate " that It Is a physical impossibility for one to partake of the many dishes prepared. ' 'W have acquired the habit of demand ing that much more than we can eat be placed before us and choosing from this abundance such dishes as our fancy dictates;- We eat to please the palate, -Tather"thanta satisfy the "hunger or nourish, the body. . This custom arose when provisions , ' were plentiful and Inexpensive, and like - all habits when once formed, it Is diffi cult to break; but the high cost of food ' materials should be an effective warn ing against their superfluous use. In fact, those interested in the study of .iiuman nutrition have long advocated " careful study of the dietary and slmpll- ""Hcetthm -of th daily "menu, "for "hygienic . -as well as economlo reasons. - The national government has estab lished, as part of the experiment station. a subdivision for the investigation of " human nutrition. Here experts are work Li ing to solve the problem of feeding the . nation In the most efficient and econom-leal-mannerThe results -of : these - In-rr: VveUgetlons are published in pamphlet . form known as "Bulletins" and offered free of coat to all sufficiently Interested to send a request to the office of experi ment stations. Washington, D. C. With the aid of these bulletins and the help rwhich"ts nowm Treely given by domea- v tic-science teachers, lecturers and writ ers, every housewife may, H she so electa, become efficient in the field of i human nutrition, especially in the nu MENUS AND RECIPES FOR A WEEK FROM AN EXPERT IN COOKERY ' This department will be in charge of a different instructor every month. The plan will give the housewife the benefit of wide and varied experience, and will present topics of interest to all. By Wilhelmina Spohr ' - Of the Stout Institute, Menomlnle. Wis. ttN (WFBRING menus excluding meat " I - we are taking from the bill of fare JL the one food material around which all' th rest are usually centered and without which many will not consider they have had a square meal. It is not the Intention of these menus to offer arguments in favor of or against the use of meat, but rather to suggest a series Of meals including fooas of such quality and Jn sufficient quantity to take its place. Meat Is a protein food and If we do not use it we mu3t substitute other tissue-building and tissue-repairing food materials. These include milk, -ggg, cheese, cereals, legumes, nuts and fiBft. great enough variety to choose from and supplying the nitrogenous principle, but lacking in the flavor of the meat extractives. When milk is used in Its raw state the housewife Bhould be sure that It is of ood quality, both as regards its compo sition and its- cleanness. Children can not thrive on poor mill, nor can their bodies withstand all bacterial invasion through this medium. Buttermilk Is also a good- food and can be used by many in place of milk, although Its food value is only one-half as great. If eggs are used, only the fresh prod uct need be used at this season, and un less they - are well liked they would better be combined with other material. It is well to remember that all cooked gg and milk dishes deteriorate rapidly this warm weather, and If any portion , is left over and is to bo used later it should be kept very cold. Custard mix tures would better not stand overnight . Cheese dishes deserve a high place In cookery and are popular when made of good cheese. This is a com pact and concentrated nitrogenous food of high nutritive value, but in i a,tiirel raw te wentd-btter jot be used by children or persons rf sedentary habits. Because of Us i ompactness and its high fat and t rotein content it is better to corn line It with . carbohydrate material. Ii 4ht cookery of cheese it U well to common at you think. Yet it ia trition of her own family, which Is nec essarily her first care. When food waa plentiful and cheap, she did not feel called upon to econo mise In the amount of food or the num ber of courses offered. Indeed, In many Instances the homemaker prided her self upon being a "liberal provider" when she made her meals as elaborate as possible. If, therefore, . the Increase in the price of food materials gives an Incentive to the homemaker to provide simple menus, always offering a well balanced ration, then rhe much-bewailed evil will have served a good purpose and worked a much-needed reform. The homemaker will find more time for her family and friends, her reading, muslo and outdoor enjoyments. She will no longer waste time, money and energy upon elaborate menus, but will, in stead, direct her efforts toward the In troduction of a carefully balanced ra tion. A balanced ration is that combination of food materials which will provide the body with sufficient nourishment to- per form Its work with the least waste. In waste we consider waste of food ma terials; if more is consumed than is necessary, waste of energy in preparing and consuming the unnecessary food, and waste of money in its purchase. To avoid waste, therefore, we should eat Just enough food for our bodily needs and no more. In order to provide a balanced ration, it is necessary to un derstand food values, that we may be able to decide between essential., and . non-essentials,' "between necessities and luxuries. In order to preserve the bodily health, we must provide nutrition through food in the proper proportion to satisfy the needs of the body, namely, to build up bodily tissue and supply the energy for Jeat and work, -There Is a difference between food materials and : food as eaten; -All food materials consist of refuse and edible portions,.. TheSkMe- portions contain, water and nutrient 'in gredients; namely, protein, fat, carbo hydrates and'' mineral matters. "(1) A food is that which when taken into the body builds tissue or yields energy. (2) The most healthful food is that which Is best fitted to the wants of the user. (3) The cheapest food is that which fur nishes the largest amount of nourish ment at the least cost f.4) The best food , to remember that a low temperature is necessary, and when It is combined with a food that requires long cook ling, such as macaroni, potatoes or other vegetables, they should be .cooked before the cheese Is added. It is not considered difficult of diges tion when properly cooked nor when grated or properly masticated. Cot tage cheese is a great favorite dur ing the warm weather and lends it self to many attractive ways of serv ing. Many so-called vegetarians make very extensive use of nuts. The most commonly used at this season are the English walnut, almond and peanut, all rich In protein and fat, and because of this are better com bined with carbohydrate food. Here again we have a food that requires very thorough mastication or me chanical disintegration of some kind before entering the stomach, If di gestion and absorption are to take place. It Is well to blanch all nuts before using, for two reasons: The brown covering is not digestible and interferes with the digestion of the meat adhering to it; and, further, if the nuts are shelled when purchased, purely sanitary reasons impel us to give them a bath of boiling water and remove the skins, for they are fre quently taken from the shell by per sons suffering from loathsome dis eases. Nut meats should be stored in the coolest placo possible lest the fat they contain become rancid. Our close acquaintance with cereals in their many forms makes it seem neces sary to urge again the thorough cook ery of the raw products. We would better urge a greater variety of meth ods of preparation and attractiveness of service. Cereals offer possibilities for desserts as well as for breakfast dishes, and the breakfast dish varied bv ' the j84diUoa, ol . frah r even -dried f roite- aiul molded In Individual forms will often attract the wider child who sometimes shows a distajste for the plwln cooked cereal. The tireless cooker for the cookery of this class of foods will be found a convenience and a fuel saver "during the hot months. Is that which 1$ both the most healthful and cheapest." The food principles protein, fat, mineral matter and carbo hydratesneed a word of explanation. , Proteins contain nitrogen and are known as nitrogenous food. The mineral mat ter, fat and carbohydrates do not con tain nitrogen and are known as non nitrogenous foods. Protein is found In such foods as meat, fish, milk, cheese, eggs, peas and beans. This food builds bodily Tissue and supplies heat and en ergy. Fas are found In animal tissues, butter, cneese, the various oils, nuts and cereals. Their function In. the body is to produce heat and energy. Carbohy drates (starches and sugars) are found In vegetables, cereals, fruits, nuts, milk and cheese. They furnish heat and en ergv and also supply the necessary "bulk" In the diet. Carbohydrates may be substituted for fats as energy givers, but 2!4 pounds of carbohydrates are neceseary to give as much energy as one pound of fat. Mineral matter or ash Is furnished by such foods as meats, milk, cereals, lettuce, cress, celery, en dive, tomatoes, cucumbers, other "salad vegetables," fruits and nuts. Mineral matter (ash furnishes the organic salts and enters Into the composition of all bodily tissues and fluids. According to Atwater, the propor tion of nitrogenous to non-nitrogenous foods in the diet should be 1 to 3.6. To preserve the bodily balance. the daily ration for a man of average weight at light muscular work must contain twenty-eight-hundredths of a pound of pro tein and enough carbohydrates and fats to glye a total of 3500 calories of energy. Under -similar conditions, a woman requires eight-tenths as much food as the man, mi boy of 14 to 14, eight-tenths, and a girl 14 to 16. seven-eighths as much as the man; a child of 10 to 13 requires six-tenths; and a child of 6 to 9,. five-tenths. These figures may be used as a guide In the study of balanced rations. In general, the colder the climate the more food Is needed, for a large por tion must be used as fuel to supply the necessary bodily heat. More food is needed in cold weather than In warm; more for an outdoor than an Indoor worker; more for one at physical than for the same person at mental labor. - Given two . individuals of the same age and sex, equal In weight, one tall and spare and the other Bhort and stout, all other things being equal, the tali, spare person will require more food than his stout neighbor, because he has a greater surface ex posed to radiate the heat supplied by the food. This explains why the spare man -remains thin, although he is a hearty eater. ... The housewife,- tn making: her meno, '" will do well to consider the occupa tions in which the members of her family are engaged, as well as the climate, season of the year and the . Of the dried legumes which give us much protein, beans are possibly the only ones we will care to use, and their appearance should not be frequent dur ing the warm weather, unless fresh shell beans and lima beans may be obtained., Bhould one desire baked beans, it were better to purchase a can of a good brand than to bake them at home, as too much long-continued heat Is re quired to cook them well. Those who live where fresh fish may be obtained are fortunate, and fish dishes may be usedoten; but unless ona is sure that it is fresh fish It would better be omitted from the menu entirely, or a can of good salmon or other preserved fish be allowed to take Its place. MONDAY BREAKFAST Molded Rica with CruAhed Rupbenies and Crearh Balced Efcim 'Hashed Brown Porta toe Graham Mufttns Coffee LUNCHEON Nat Croquettes with Tometo Sauce Gelatin Fruit Salad with Whipped Cream Iced Tea DiNNHR Green Corn Custard with Broiled Tomatoes Baked Potato Cabbafe-Celery Salad Apple aierlngue Pie Cafe Noir TUESDAY BREAKFAST ' Siloed Peaches Wheat Cereal Cream and Sugar jHot BlscuM Blackberry Preserve Coffee LUNCHEON Onion Souffle Creamed Potatoes Sweat encumber Pickles Apple Sauce London Buns Hot Tea DJN'YER Cauliflower with Cheese Buttered Uma Bea.R Stuffed Tomato Salad Boiled Dressing Frown Puddlnf Sour Cream Cookies WEDNESDAY BREAKFAST Cantaloupe -Boiled Rice Top Milk and Sugar French Toaat Syrup -Coffee LUNCHEON Nut- a - VeetWe-1ir- Bweert Rolls Btewed Huckleberries ' Iced Tea DINNER Ecg and Noodle Scallop with Mushrooms Head Lettuce with Roquefort Cheese Dressing Railed Rolls Olivee Slue Plum Rwrtcake ; ' sudden warm or cold spelt When the ebUdren crave an undue amount, of sweets It la time to look to tba diet It will very likely be too low In carbo-; hydrates.-' Bhould an adult partake of his meals and yet And hlmalf hungry for something which -he canr not explain, -look again- to the diet The proper balance has not . been maintained. ... If only one food prin ciple la provided, - the needs of the body are not satisfied, the hunger Is not appeased, notwithstanding- that a . sufficient quantity of food has been consumed. Note the amount of pop corn that it-la possible to eat and yet. be hungry. The following- table from Atwater Illustrates a simple bal anced ration: Dally dietaries Food materials fumlihlnir SBOO calories or energy of the standard for worn. Amount Cost. Oounces. Cent 11 11.40 i iti I 124 3 S.50 Food materlsls. Beef round steak Butter Potatoes Bread 44 ZS.SO This table shows the exact weigftt of each food principle and Its energy-glv-tng equivalent In calories. The reader will note that this ration provides twen-ty-elght-hundredths of a pound of pro-, teln (nitrogenous food) andyabout four times as much non-nitrogenous food. The total fuel value Is about 3300 calories. A little observation will enable the house keeper to think of the balanced ration in terms which are familiar to her. She thinks of meat in "helpings." of bread in alices, thin or thick; of butter in squares, A slice of bread three-fourths of an Inch thick from a large loaf weighs two ounces. Four squares of butter (a slice five-eighths of an Inch thick, cut from the end of a pound brick) weighs one ounce. Six medlum slsed potatoes weigh one pound. A lib eral helping of meat without bone weighs four ounces. Six medium-sized potatoes weigh one pound. The balanced ration quoted above gives the follow ing for the three meals: Round steak, three helpings Butter, twenty-four squares., Potatoes, two. Bread, eleven thick or twenty-two thin slices. Animal foods, such as meat fish, milk, cheese and eggs, are the chief source of protein In our diet." On account of economic conditions, this has become an established custom in our country; but wo may use vegetables rich In protein with equal satisfaction. Beans, peas and lentils have long been regarded as "meat substitutes." To these we may add giacaroni and cheese, succotash and nuts. In any cose, we must maintain the correct proportion between the nitrog enous and non-nitrogenous foods, and give a sufficient supply of nitrogenous '-foods to build and repair tissue. It is unwise, however, to use protein to supply heat and energy, for fata and carbohydrates serve that purpose more economically. One pound of protein given ISO calorie One ponnd of carbohy drate given 1800 calorie) One pound of fat given 4220 calories Protein and carbohydrates give an equal amount of energy per pound, but carbohydrates are cheaper than protein. Fat gives 214 times as much heat per pound as either of the others. This ex plains the appetite for fats in a cold climate, where much heat Is necessary to supply the bodily warmth. In making menus the appe;lte Is a good guide If it nas not been perverted. Cua- fro oo . . V-n""'-' THURSDAY BREAKFAST Cold Molded Rfe, with Jelly and Cream fPoast Coffee Cake Coffee LUNCHEON Apple, Fritters Cottage Cheese Nut Bread Red Raspberry Jam Cookies Hot Tea DINNER Bpg Cutlets Mashed Potatoes Peppers -Stuffed with Tomato Cucumber and Onloo Salad Peach ice . Plain Cake FRIDAY . BREAKFAST Blueberries with Cream and Sugar Twin Mountain Muffins Creamed Eggs Coffee ! LUNCHEON Macaroni add Cheese. Sliced Tomatoes Left-over Coke Pears Iced Tea DINNER Cantaloupe Boiled Fish with Oil Pickles French Fried Potatoes Peach Cobbler with Thin Cream SATURDAY BREAKFAST Uncooked Cereal Top Milk and Sugar Flaked Fish In White Sauce Toast Coffee LUNCHEON Canned Baked Beans Pickled Bests . Graham Bread Berries Cookies DINNER Corn Fritters Scalloped Tomatoes Cottage Cheese and Nasturtium Leaf Salad Raised Rolls Raspberry Jelly Glorified Rice ; SUNDAY BREAKFAST ' Peaches and Pears Rice Cereal Thin Cream and Sugar Cinnamon Rolls Coffee DINNER Fruit Cocktail Fried Muskelonge, Hollandalse Sauce Creamed Cauliflower Lemon Ice Corn oa the Cob . String Buuw ad Ome Be lYench Waters Blueberry pie LUNCHEON ' Deviled Eggs Oueumber-MayonnalM Sandwiches Blueberry Cup Cakes Milk Molded Rice ' Presg the but boiled rice Into small 1 1 ' I ,' torn, (derived from appetite) has given .. ua some good combination of foods, For axantple: ' Tork and beani, 1 roaat , beef and potatoes, bacon and griddle cakes, rice and milk, macaroni and "checs9riflml and green pas." Each of .r these combination affprd a reasonably v satisfactory ration," -.In order to achieve success In menu making, a few fundamental principles should be kept in mind. The menu maker should familiarize herself with the composition and effects" of tho va- . rlous foods necessary to the balanced ration, , namely, protein, carbohydrates, K fats,-mineral salts, liquids and flavor. In general, furnish a liberal supply of food In the correct proportion. Beware of too much food, for It la apt. to; causa approximately the O.a pound of protein and dally dietary- of a man at moderate muscular ' . .Nutrients ' carbo- Fuel Total. Protein. Fats, hydrates, value. Pounds. Pounds. Pounds. Pounds. Calories. .? .11 .13 ... M .16 ... .It ... Sao .17 .02 ... .IB 320 .89 ' .11 .03 .75 1.7M in Taj w 15 1.46S Indigestion and Its attendant Ills, sine the body must discard the surplus aa waste. The menu must appease the hun ger, satisfy the palate and the esthetlo taste, and also provide sufficient nutri ents In the proper proportion. Begin with simple menus. The main dish, usually the meat or protein dish, la taken as the central figure and the re mainder of the food is built around this to glvo a complete whole.- A bland meat (such as veal) requires a "snappy" sauce or vegetable. A' salad ' gives the necessary touch of color and also helps supply the mineral matter, which the veal lacks. A fruit dessert is suitable with this dinner. To illustrate: DINNER MENU Roast Veal Browned Potatoes Fried Onions Brown Oravv Ovsn Catsup vr arm xwu Butter nch Tin Tomato Salsd on Cress French Dreselnr franca appics Whipped Cream Coffee A mature meat (beef roast) gives the necessary strong note, and in such menu the vegetable need not be of pro nounced flavor and a pudding may supply the necessary sweet. The bouil lon, salad and dessert furnish color. For example, note the following: DINNER M3DNTJ Tomato Bouillon Roaat Beef Mashed Potatoes Brown Grary Bread Corn on Cob Butter Tlll Pickles lettuce Salad French Dressing- Strawberry Ehort Cake Coffee The following are typical examples of Unsatisfactory Menus (Not Balanced Rattonn) I. DINNER ' Cream of Potato Soup Wafers Sttwed Chicken Biscuit Cream Gravy Bleed Potatoes Escalloped Corn i SaHed Nuts Pineapple Balad Mayonnaise ice Cream Ancel Cake Coffee A cream soup should never be served before a heavy dinner. The menu Is too high In carbohydrates and lacking In .arlety. It Is not pleasing to the eye. 'because It has no pronounced color. Mayonnaise, like cream soup, is out of place in a five-course dinner. H.-DINNER Baked Chicken Bread Stuffing Cauliflower Cream Dressing Lettuce Apple Pie Cheese 0offe This menu lacks color. It could be Improved by serving currant Jelly or cranberries with the chicken and sub stituting ' tomato, cucumber and green pepper salad" for the pale lettuce salad. ...The - following menus-. Illustrate ha I- anced rations, which not only furnish nutriment in the proper proportion, but also satisfy the appetite and please the palate and the esthetlo sense: buttered cups and in a few minutes turn out and serve hot. Any well-cooked cereal may be molded. A layer of cereal and a layer of fruit with a layer of cereal on top is a nice surprise to chil dren. Green Corn Custard To 1 cup of young corn, cut or grated from the cob, add 4 well-beaten eggs and lVf: cups of milk. Season with salt and pepper. Turn into a buttered mold and set Into a dish of hot water. Bake until firm, turn from the mold and sur round with border of broiled or sauted tomatoes. BToiled Tomatoea ' Cut slightly green dr very firm toma toes in half without removing skin and dip into melted butter, season, dip into sifted' crumbs and broil until nicely browned and softened. Corn Fritters One pint of corn pulp, 1 cup flour, 1 teaapoon baking power, 2 teaspoons salt, 2 eggs. Add the sifted dry ingredients to the corn, then the beaten yolks and fold in the stiff whites last. Drop Into fresh hot lard. Drain on paper. Serve' on a napkin-covered dish. Corn Fritters No. 2 To 1 pint of grated corn add enough rolled cracker crumbs to h,old the mix ture together. Add 1 teaspoon of bak ing powder, salt and pepper, and drop by spoonfuls into hot fat. Fry a deli cate brown. Nut Croquettes One cup English' walnuts or pecans, 2 cups mashed potatoes, yolks of 2 egg's, 1 teaspoon minced onion, l tablespoon chopped parsley, a dash of pepper, teaspoon nutmeg. Mix the chopped or ground nuts, potato and egg. together, add seasonings and shape into cones or cylinders. Egg, crumb and fry in deep fat. Serve with white sauce or tomato sauce. Nut and Vegetable Pie One cup fresh lima beans (the dry ones will do), j cup almond3and.pear "HTItS"Tmxed. I CtlD thin wh!i sa'uce. 2 hard boiled eggs, 2 or 3 small onions sliced, 6 medium alzed potatoes, sea soning of salt and pepper. Wash one--half of the potatoes, cook the beans end potatoes and Wanch the nuts. Place a lsyer of beans lrr the bottom of the baklA dish, then a layer of nuts and egg, followed by a layer of diced po rip ;': ii! it . ; I. Uf ;' " "The larger person "WHO SWEEPS A ROOM" FOR years the housework, with all Its attendant drudgery, has been scorned by the thoughtless, and even now Is unrecognized in the census list. Housekeeping was regarded as a necessary evil, and women worked in the home because it was expected of them. There was hidden away a disgust for drudgery, for the woman's Work that Is never done. "Only a housekeeper", was a polite phrase for a disagreeable dnty. Things have changed. We are recognizing the truth of the pregnant verse: x "Who sweeps a room aa for thy law, Makes that and the action fine." We are changing the attitude toward the noble work of keeping the . homes of the land. We have called In science, who has held up the light on cause and effect and now shows the easy way to successful work In the home. There is no disgrace, no disgust, no disappointment In housekeeping these days. Institutions like this page have helped to modify the view of the great work. The People's Institute of Domestic Scltenct'la showing the success and its resultant joy that Should characterize 'the work In every hope. Are you a member? Next week .ata and Clieewe as Subetttwtea for Meat," by Mrs. Mary U Wade, of Chicago, will be a timely- pfferlng on this page. Satisfactory Menus (Balanced Rations) LUNCHEON Cream of Besn Soup Toasted Cheese Sandwiches Etewed Apricots Cocoa BREAKFAST Oranges Cheese Omelet Potato Balls Buttered Toast Blackberry Jam ColTee DINNER - Clear Soup Baked Trout Mashed Potatoes , Bread Butter Cucumber and Tomato Salad Crackers HHcsd Peacfies' " " Whipped Cream Coffee The raw materials of the above din ner, for a family of five, would cost about $1.50. If this is to be the stand ard, it will mean an average outlay of about- tlftSO per week f ordtnnerr aiona" To this rlrst cost must be added the items-of service and fuel for cooking. This Is a high price for the nutriment afforded; indeed, it contains a liberal contribution to the "god of things as they are." While this dinner answers both the requirements of a balanced ration and satisfies the prevalent social demands, a much simpler meal, equally nourishing, could be provided at less expense. The variety of balanced rations which may be devised is almost unlimited. Much depends upon the availability of the tatoes. Repeat until the materials have been used. Pour over all the white sauce. Cover the top with the mashed potato, brush over with egg and milk and bake for 30 minutes in a hot oven. Apple Meringue Pie Choose rlpo, Juicy apples. Pare and cook until tender, season with nutmeg and lemon, sweeten to taste, Press through a sieve and fill a nicely baked shell with the mixture. Cover with a meringue made by beating to a stiff froth 2 or 3 egg whites and adding a tablespoon of powdered sugar to each white. Flavor to taate,. Bake in a mod erate oven until meringue la firm. Cheese Souffle Two tablespoons butter, 8 table spoons flour, Vj cup milk, hi teaspoon salt, a dash of paprika, i cup grated cheese, 3 eggs. Make a white sauce of the butter, flour and milk in a double boiler. Add seasonings and grated cheese and stir until the cheese melts. Remove from the hot water and ndd the well-beaten yolks of eggs. Allow the mixture to cool, then cut and fold In the stiffly beaten whites. Turn Into a buttered baklmg dish and bake in a moderate oven very slowly. It is well to stand any custard or souffle mixture In a pan of hot water to avoid cooking too quickly. This mixture may be baked and served in Individual molds or ramekins. ' Stuffed Tomato Salad Choose small tomatoea, remove the skins and pulp. Fill with either diced cucumber and onion or with cabbage , and green pepper salad. Serve on fresh nasturtium leaves, using blossoms for garnish. Frozen Pudding One quart milk, 4 eggs, cup sugar, pound each of dates, figs and nuts, vanilla. Make a - soft custard of the milk, eggs and sugar. When cool freeae, adding the fruits when half frozen. MSourjCreain,!ppkief, One cup shortening, 1 cup sour cream, 2 cups light brown sugar, eggs, 1 tea spoon soda. Flour, to maker dough soft enough to handle. Flavor as desired. This makes a soft cooky.. Glorified Bice . Two tablespoons doe,' washed and cooked In salted water and well drained. t v lltlf -S :V-2 : fe'-VC f f i requires more food" varioifft food materials, the standards of family life and the skill of the menu maker. An extremely simple) but well balanced ration may be evolved from which one family will receive quite as much nutriment upon an outlay of $10 per week for all three meals as another family, will receive from their food at the above rate of 110 for dinners alone. Thte requires a knowledge of the taste and dietetic requirements of the family, as well as a careful study of market conditions and comparative food values. It Is well .worth while ta give to the selection of food the same careful con- vmciBiivii iiibc is siren w vuiur VU3I- ness affairs." the success of which Is largely dependent upon proper nutrition. In electing to provide a simple dleW the housekeeper does not necessarily choose to employ inferior materials. money alone. For example, it is some - times more economical to buy a good steak or roast than a cheaper cut of meat which requires more fuel and work for its preparation, although the two meats when served afford equal nutri tion. It is the privilege of the enlightened housekeeper to create the fashion of simple dietaries. While nothing of real value will be lost thereby,, there will be an appreciable decrease in household "vriuro,- tt -increase tn mounj tot ins houtekeeper and a marked Improvement in the well-being of the family. One-fourth box gelatin soaked In cup cold water, 1 cup of cream whipped, M cup sugar. Any kind of fruit, dates, prunes, peaches, cherries, etc. Dissolve the hydrated gelatin over hot water. Whip the cream and add to it the su gar, rice and gelatin. Turn Into a mold rinsed with cold water. Part of the fruit may be added to the mixture, or It may be arranged attractively on the serving dish. Serve with soft custard or whipped cream. Fresh fruits, such as berries, peaches or plums, are more ap propriate at this time of the year. Hard-Cooked Sgg and Noodle Scallop Boil eggs until hard. Cook noodles ia boiling water until tender. Arrange al ternating layers of noodles and sliced eggs in buttered baking dish, covering each layer with 4hin white sauce. Have a layer of mushrooms in the middle. Cover the top with buttered crumbs and grated cheese. Bake until very hot Egg Cutlets or Croquette Make a thick white sauce of 3 table . spoons butter tablespoons flour and K .cup milk. Season highly. While still hot stir lp 1 well-beaten egg. Add the finely chopped Whites of 4 hard cooked eggs and the yolks forced through a sieve. A little chopped pickle, green pepper 0r parsley may be added. Cool. Shape Into egg shapes and flatten out to represent cutlets or not, as de sired; dip into raw egg.nd line crumbs and fry a delicate brown. Serve in nest of parsley or shredded lettuce. F Peach Ice OneTquart fresh peach pulp, I oupe sugar, 2 cups water, 2 lemons. 1 oup cream whipped. Put soft peaches through a colander. Make a syrup of the sugar and watei and add to the peach pulp. Add the juice of the lemons. Freeze to a slush and then add the whipped cream. , Onion Souffle ' Use - white-otilonsrCoolftintlt-tgndeT Make a white sauce of 2 tablespoons butter. 2 'tablespoons flour and H pup milk. Add the yolks of t eggs just be fore removing from the fire, y, cup stale breadcrumbs and 1 cup finely chopped cooked onion. AHdw to cool. Fold In the stiffly beaten whites of 1 eggs and turn Into abuttered baking dish,. Cook slew qr sun serve at once, 7-