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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1955)
2a Tr Bend Bulletin, . CHERRY STACKS with carnet sauce Is a good dessert for Easter " dinner or unv othrr frtlve occasion. Cheese-Filled Cherry Stacks Good at Any Spring Occasion yhe west coast states of Califor nia, Washington and Oregon pro dace almost all of the cherries that are canned. Lamberts, Bings and Royal Amies are the finest. .Here is a gay spring-like dessert, good for Easter dinner or any oth- eq festivity, from Emma States of Seattle, one of the best creators of western fruit dishes. ', Ganwt Sauce ; June No. 2 cun dark sweet Cher lies with juice (about 1 cup), 2 tablespoons cornstarch, 1-3 cup honey, 1 teaspoon grated orange -rijid, & tablespoons butter or mar garine, 14 teaspoon vanilla extract, Vc teaspoon lemon extract. prain and pit cherries. Combine cornstarch with a little cherry juice and add other Ingredients in -saucepan. Bring to a boil and .cook, stirring constantly for 2 mln--utcs. Add cherries and serve warm ;over pancake stacks. . - Cherry Stacks de Luxe ' (Sorve 6) ' 'One recipe prepared pancake ntix, using 2 cups mix and about 12; cups liquid, 1 8-ounce package cream cheese, cup powdered sugar, 1 or 2 tablespoons cream "or top milk. Wake 6 large pancakes and keep 'warm in oven. When ready to serve, stack cakes, spreading each with cream cheese mixture (made Jtoy softening cream cheese and mixing it with powdered sugar and 'top milk to a spreading consist en ,cy). Sprinkle top of stack with powdered sugar and top milk to "spreading consistency. Then sprln- .kle top with powdered sugar and fie 0r r r r j?psi Thursday, April 7, 1955 cut wedges for serving. Serve with de luxe cherry sauce. TOMORROW'S DINNER: Have creamed finnan haddie on toast, boiled potatoes with minced pars ley, buttered lima beans, hot cross buns or crisp rolls, butter, cherry stacks with garnet sauce, coffee, tea, milk. Yam Casseroles Easily Prepared Canned yams are handy to have on hand for quick meals. Here are two favorite recipes from Alma Fore of Grayson, La. This high school senior knows her yams so well, she won the Future Home maker of America recipe contest in her state. Candled Yams and AprlNits (Makes 6 servings) Two No. 2 cuns yams, 6 whole canned apricots, 18 whole cloves, 3 tablespoons butter or mrgarine, 1-3 cup apricot syrup, 1 tuhlc- spoon lemon juice Yi teaspoon salt. Drain yams and reserve 1-3 cup syrup. Stud apricots with cloves. Melt butter or margarine und add syrups, lemon juice ond : salt. Bring to boiling point over medi um heat. Add yams and apricots. Cook uncovered over low hcut; 15 with Only Medo-Land can offer these Collector Item glasses! Heavy base crystal with chip-resistant rolled rims plus four-color "baked-on" authentic, original artwork make these glasses a treasure you will want to own. They come filled with delicious, fresh, fluffy Cottage Cheese and cost you but a fraction of their worth if you bought them anywhere else". Start your set today because the offer is limited unci will not be repeated! Original Authentic Designs include: LEWIS AND CLARK REACH THE PACIFIC, 1805 FIRST S. P. RAILROAD ENGINE IN OREGON, 1887 THE "JAMES CLINTON", First Steamboat on the Willamette OREGON STATE FLAG, Bird and Flower FIRST DAIRY CATTLE AT FORT VANCOUVER, 1825 EARLY LOGGING IN OREGON WITH OXEN AT YOUR GROCER'S OR ASK YOUR MEDO-LAND DRIVER-SALESMAN! Gay Colored Eggs Fine Centerpiece Are you the kind of woman who likes to put all her eggs in one basket? Despite the o!d saying, it; can be a clever idea. A basket lull of brightly colored Easter eggs will make an original centerpiece for your holiday table, and will delight the family small fry. You can use your own fancy about the basket. It needn't be a regular basket, at all. A straw or wicker breadbasket or tray, or a fruit bowl, or even a pretty mix ing bowl from the kitchen will do. Fresh, green leaves make a beau tiful lining, but you can use paper grass, or, if you like, white or colored napkins attractively ar ranged can serve the same pur nose. The most important part of your centerpiece is the colored eggs. Nowadays, the makers of egg dyes recommend using a teaspoon ful of vinegar In each cup of dye. That's because the eggs are pro tected by a film of petroleum white oil, which has to be dis solved before the dye will take. This delicate film that you can't see, feel, taste, or smell seals the tiny pours of the eggshell so that foreign odors and flavors can't get through to spoil the egg. Eggs ore dinned In white oil while they're still form-fresh, and they stay fresh much longer than eggs that haven't been treated. Have fun coloring your Enster eggs and here's a tip for you. If you get raw eggs and hard, boiled eggs mixed up, as some times happens, just spin them to see which is which. A hardboilcd egg won't spin. minutes, stirring occasionally. Maple Almond (Milken 6 servings) Two No. 2 cans yams, drained, '4 cup slivered toasted almonds, cup maple or maple-flavored syrup, 3 tablespoons butter or mar garine. Arrange yams In greased Vi- quart cusscrole. Stud with almond' and pour syrup over yams. Dot with butter or margarine. Bake in moderate oven(325 degrees F.) 45 minutes. SUNDAY DINNER: Black bean soup with lemon slices, baked ham, English mustard, candied yams with apricots, buttered Brus sels sprouts, rye rolls, butter, ap ple pie with melted cheese, coffee, tea, milk. 2oz. of Medo Oregon' leading Winner of Sold Awards lor Oairjf Products !W lUaaiMar liHihi i Mif!firXi,tw,w',f,.y SPECIAL DESSERT for your Easter dinner? Try this fresh or. ange blitz tortf. NEA Foods Editor Suggests Fresh Orange Blitz Torte By GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Food and Markets Editor We traveled through Florida re cently from Miami on the east coast to Tampa on the west coast. All around Lakeland (near Tampa) we drove slowly through miles of orange groves. The trees were in bloom and the nir had the fragrance ot many weddings. With Easter in mind, we decided in that lovely atmosphere to create a special dessert using fresh or anges reminiscent of those blos soming in Florida groves. Frosh Orange Bliti Torte (Yield: 0-8 servings) One and one-third cups sifted all purpose flour, Vi teaspoon salt, VA teaspoons double - acting baking powder, 1-3 cup shortening, M cup sugur, 2 teaspoons grated orange rind, 4 eggs, separated, 1-3 cup milk, teaspoon cream of tartar, cup sugar, 6 medium fresh or anges, 1 cup heavy cream, whipped, 1 tablespoon sugar (op tional). Sift first three ingredients to gether (set aside for later use). Cream shortening, .'A cup sugar and orange rind together until fluffy, Beat in egg yolks, one at a time. Add flour mixture alter nately with milk. Line bottoms of two lightly greased, round 8-inch layer cake pans with waxed paper. Grease paper lightly. (Do not grease sides of pans.) Divide bat ter evenly between the 2 pans. Spread uniformly over the bot toms. Add cream of tartar to egg whites. Beat until they stand in soft peaks. Gradually beat in the cup sugar. Spread uniformly over the unbaked batter. Bake 25 minutes in a preheated very slow oven (250 degrees F.). Increase heat to moderate (350 de grees F.) Bake 20 minutes.- Re move from oven. Cool. (Meringue will settle, but this is at it should be.) Remove from pan. Before serving arrange fresh orange slices or sections and whipped cream (sweeten cream with 1 ta blespoon sugar if desired) between layers and over the top in short cake fashion. TOMORROW'S DINNER: Saute of pork chops and lima beans, whipped potatoes, rye bread, but ter, hearts of lettuce, dressing, fresh orange blitz torte, coffee, tea, milk. Russian May Have Been Spy MARACAIBO, Venezuela (UP) A Russian who hanged himself in Austria rather than return to Moscow might have been a mem ber of a Communist espionage ring sources said today. Boris Grankow, whose body was found in a Vienna hotel room yes terday, was not a member of any official Soviet Ynission In Vene zuela, the sources said. Venezuela broke off relations with the So viet Union in the summer of 1952. - icmcf Oranges Get .New Recognition Whole oranges can help preventpecially important In maintaining and trvnt nmanv nilmpnts from the health of the capillaries, the frostbite to polio. That s what eastern food editors learned re centy at a conference at the New York Academy of Sciences. The symposium sponsored by the Academy of Sciences wiih the cooperation of Sunkist Growers ol California and the National Drug Company of Philadelphia, brought out many facts we all can profit by in our family diets. Bioflavonoids, notably hesperi dins, are substances found highly concentrated In the meaty parts of oranges and lemons (the out standing dietary sources of biofla vonoids). When taken with vita min C, as in eating whole citrus, the bioflavonoids greatly increase the effectiveness of the vitamin. This, according to distinguished scientists at the conference, Is es- Bend Woman Offers Recipe For Angel Pie Mrs. L. M. Mathisen, 1071 Fed eral, sent The Bulletin her mother-in-law's recipe for Angel Pie, which Mrs. M says is simply de lectable. This seems to be the same pie that The Bulletin's wom en's department director encoun tered at the spring workshop of Oregon Press Women, in Salem, and described in a recent column, Angel Pie 4 eggs '4 tap. cream of tartar l'2 cup sugar 3 Tbsp. lemon juice 2 Tbsp. lemon rind, grated 2 cups chipping cream Beat egg whites until frothy, sprinkle with cream of tartar and beat till stiff. Gradually add 1 cup sugar, beating till well blend ed and stiff. , Spread in a well-greased 9-inch pie tin and bake at 275 degrees for 20 minutes. Increase heat to 300 degrees and bake for 40 min utes longer. Prepare filling while meringue cools. Combine beaten egg yolks with cup sugar, lemon juice and rind, cook in top of double boiler until thick. Cool. Whip cream and spread half of it on meringue shell. Put on lemon filling and top with rest of whipped cream. Chill for 3 or 4 hours, or 24 hours if possible. Serve very cold. 9Vfi& body's 62,000 miles of small blood essels. Mai - functioning of the capillaries, it was brought out, js involved in every disease. The edible portion of the orange, particularly the white parts and the pulp, contains a ten-fold con-' centrotion of hesperidin as com pared with strained orange juice, one researcher reported. Fifteen noted scientists, includ ing Nobel prize winner Dr. Albert Szent-Gyorgi, spoke. Here are a few reports: Dr. George J. Boines of Wil mington (Delaware) General Hos pital cited his experience with some 200 polio patients over four years. In virtually all, he found abnormally weak capillaries, and began daily doses of hesperidin and ascorbic acid immediately. Within a week, he reported, pa tients experienced a sense of well being and increased appetite; the affected limbs felt warmer to the touch in about two weeks; and normal capillary action was re stored in about five weeks. This capillary improvement, the doctor believes, contributed to the overall recovery of the patient Those same wonderful egg noodles are now enriched with important amounts of your daily requirements of vitamin 141, vitamin H2, iron and niacin. Each half cup (4 02.) contains only 100 calories. Uuy some today! Also try these other outstanding Porter-Scarpelli macaroni products Spaghetti, Saladettes, Macaroni, Sea Shells, Kurle-Q-Noodles and Lasagne. W! MONDAY'S DINNER: Cold sliced lamb, curried pineapple, scalloped potatoes witn omons, canned or fresh green beans, split and toasted rolls, butter, apple pie. cheese, coffee, tea, milk. a this is a COLLIE i 4l DOG & CAT FOOD IT'S EXTRA RICH IN MEAT... PICK UP 6 CANS NEXT TIME YOU SHOP