Page 2 SECTION II THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. RaTem, Oregon Thursday, February 18. 1954 Cornbeef and. Cab bage Mighty Good PC. IP. if y-r vr, ,(4 T' "v. r. r . ..." - Irish or not, the traditional "boiled dinner" of corned beef and cabbage makes a mighty satislying meal. Dress up the cured brisket with a brown sugar glaze and a clove or two for decoration, and this wholesome, appealing dish be comes fine fare for a super par ty. This old fashioned favorite now has new-fashioned convenience in packaging, which will make it especially popular with home makers. The corned beef briskets, cut in two to four pound pieces to suit your family's needs, arc packaged in a neat transparent wrapping which seals in the flavor and quality of the brisket. The handy package bears a well- known brand name to assure you of a consistently fine flavored, quality product, and cooking di ' rcctioni as a guide to fine eating. Corned beef brisket should be water cooked, allowing plenty of time to develop its full-flavored, tender goodness. Although this meat is the basis for "boiled din ner," it should not be boiled, but covered with water and gently simmered until done. To glaze th.3 brisket, remove it from the broth and spread tin. fat cover ing with prepared mustard and sprinkle with brown sugar. Add a shamrock of whole cloves to do honor to good St. Patrick, l'lace the meal in a shallow pan and bake in a hot over (400 de grees F.) for about 20 minutes to melt the glaze. While the corned beef is browning to a golden color, cook wedges of red and green cabbage in the flavor giving broth in which the meat vat cooked. The rosy slices of flavorful corned beef with the wedges of cabbage will present a colorful platter that not only looks won derful, but tastes wonderful, too. Parsley potatoes, hot buttery rolls' and a fruit salad will help make this a truly memorable meal. Corned Beef and Cabbage (Yield: 8 Servings) ' Cooking time: About 4 hours. 4 pounds corned beef 1 head cabbage Cover the corned beef with water in a kettle and simmer slowlv about 4 hours or until ten der. Do not boil. Cut the cabbage into 8 wedges. About 15 minutes before the corned beef is done, add cabbage. Cook uncovered 10 to IS minutes. PI-RK IP SPREADS Sandwich time can be a bore unless you perk up your spread ideas every so often. Try blending honey with cream cheese, peanut butter, or chop ped dried fruits and nuts for sandwich spreads. Carrots Vichy Dress The lowly carrot can be a dish of elegance if a little time and imagination are used. Here's a recipe: Carrots Vichy Ingredients: 1 quart thin round carrot slices (about Va-inch thick) 1 chicken bouillon cube (dissolv ed in 1 cup hot water), V cup lightly packed parsley sprigs, 1 teaspoon sugar, salt and pepper (to taste). Method: Put carrots, bouillon, parsley, sugar, salt and pepper in saucepan: bring to a boil. Re duce heat but cook rapidly, cov ered, until carrots are very ten der and most of liquid has evap orated about IS minutes. Re move parsley sprigs if desired. Serve hot. Makes 4 servings. BIGGEST LITTLE MARKET IN TOWN Where Your Dollar Gets Time and a Half Aged Cheese I por( L0j Roast p, q I COTTAGE "1 ;:l?c Rib or Loin End W-Jl i9c Fischcr't Ground Beef fogf fog, j siced 6 ibs. i.uu 69c ib Best in the West "YERS Swi,t'' 0' Aou,', SAUSAGE rnifCrif " t CO RIB STEAK 3 ,b, 1.00 rRYERS sri 55c ,b Pure Pork R. I. REDS Delicious GARDEN-FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES POTATOES BANANAS GRAPEFRUIT POTATOES 10,b, 29c 2,b, 29c 8 bb;945c 50,, 69c U. S. No. 1 Golden Ripe Arilona Swect Sl N- 2 771 CHILI SHRIMP Tomato Juice ,rT ,WI,h 25C 39C con 2 con, 25c IOC can BanS "W Cottoge Brand Cot. Brond-46 ox. . Dcnnison'l Cot. Brond 303 5uc niPAIIiri MILK-TALL G'een ens BISQUICK TUNA - 2..., 29c 39c OQc con Copitol 303 Site Lorgo Siie " All Popular Brands , Rcg. si . RICE Margarine NUCOA M,XnniSe 5lt'59c 2'bl45c . JC Quart California White Pcorl Sweet Sixteen On- I hot "master BROADWAY GROCERY town, our BREAD BROADWAY and MARKET STREET EGGS 4:30 P M- Every Dy Store Hours, 8 a.m. till 8 p.m. Every Doy Except Tues. and Sot. Including Sundays Direct from the H'i Tomorrow's Bread Todoy ou$c Every Day Prices Good Friday, Saturdoy, Sunday Lent Starts Soon; Fish Dishes More in Demand Honey Drop Cookies Crisp and Crunchy Fish dishes will be coming into their own soon with Lent start ing in early March. Today are presented two fish dishes, one using oysters, the otner shrimp. Oysters Rockefeller 1 pint oysters 1 cup conked spinach 1 small onion 2 sprigs parsley Patties of Lamb Good If you've resolved to be a wise food buyer, here's a suggestion for you. Plan a tasty and quick broiler meal around ground lamb patties. To prepare the patties combine 1 pound of ground lamb with 1 teaspoon salt, V teaspoon pep per, Vt teaspoon marjoram, V cup soft bread crumbs and V cup milk. Mix thoroughly, then shape into four patties, about 1 inch thick. In the meantime brown 2 ta blespoons of grated onion in lard or drippings. Then add 2 cups boiled rice and 1 can of tomato soup. Season with salt and pep per and spread the rice mixture in your broiler pan. Drain 1 No. 303 can of green beans or 1 pack age of cooked frozen green beans and arrange around the edge of the rice. Place the patties on the broiler rack over the rice and beans. Then insert the broiler pan so the top of the patties is about 2 inches from the heat. When one side is browned, 10 to 12 minutes, turn and continue broiling until the other side is brown, about 8 minutes. Complete your meal with a cit rus fruit salad, French bread and a simple dessert. Dress up Sherbet Sherbet is a popular dessert. And well it might be. It gives just the right finishing touch to a heavy meal. Next time you serve a lemon or orange sherbet, dress it up with just a touch of honey placed at the peak of the sherbet scoop. It's delicious! Sweet Treat Apple or plum butter, when served with the meal, add that extra polish that brands a homemakcr as a goud cook. For fun mix a little honey into the apple or plum butter before you serve it; it will be a sweet treai for your family. 1 bav leaf Salt, celery salt, Tabasco and cayenne to taste 3 tablespoons of butter or margarine Yi cup fine bread crumbs Lemon slices Arrange oysters in a greased, shallow baking dish or on an oven-proof platter. Put spinach, onion, parsley and bay leaf through food chopper, using fin est blade; season well; cook mix ture in butter for 5 minutes; add bread crumbs. Spread this mix ture over oysters. Bake in a noi oven (450) about 10 minutes. Garnish with lemon slices. Serves three. Shrimp-Egg Casserole 1 pound small raw prawns 2 tablespoons of butter or margarine 2 tablespoons of minced parsley Y teaspoon each of salt and paprika 6 hard cooked eggs l'j cups sour cream Mr. cup grated American cheese Shell and clean prawns. Melt butter in saucepan, add the prawns and parsley. Simmer over low heat for about 5 minutes, then season with salt and paprika. Slice the eggs and arrange alter nate layers of shrimp and sliced eggs in a small shallow casserole. Spread with the sour cream and sprinkle with the grated cheese. Brown in a very hot oven (450), but do not allow to bubble and boil or shrimp will toughen and sour cream separate. Serves 6. TTora urn nmA pnnkies that Will lar their ingredients in cluding nutmcats, dates and rice cereal. Honey Drop Cookies i '.3 cup cup shortening Yi cup honey 2 eggs, well beaten i- run sour cream li cups sifted flour 1 teaspoon DaKing powacr 1 cup popped rice cereal 'i teaspoon soda 4 teaspoon salt V: cup chopped nutmeats K run choDDed dates Yt teaspoon nutmeg or 1 teaspoon vanilla Blend shortening and honey. Stir in eggs and sour cream. Sift together flour, baking powder, soda and salt; stir into first mix ture. Stir 'in nutmeats, dates, flavoring and rice cereal. Drop by teaspoonfuls onto lightly greased baking sheets. Bake in moderate oven (375 F.) about 20 minutes. Yield: 2 dozen cookies, 4 inches in diameter. y7 ' FROM THI f AMOUS Q&v M.C.P. KITCHEN lABORATORYggg Many Ways With Oranges Are Listed This season's crop of oranges is heavy in the smaller sizes. They offer .excellent buys. Slice them, section them or chunk them. Oranges are delicious in salads no matter how they're used. For a colorful family-style salad bowl, combine chunks of juicy oranges with red-skinned apples and bananas. Orange sections ar ranged on a plate and topped with coconut are popular with everyone. Or arrange five or six thin orange cartwheel slices with a few slices of sweet onion rings scattered over and pass French dressing. BltEAKKAST EYE OPENER Fruit cup appetizer is a favor ite. Try combining tart cher ries with diced oranges, then sweetening with a drizzle of honey for a new eye-opener at the beginning of a meal. IkkxM inn it rst . THINK OF IT1 WONDERFUL BERRY JAM MADE ANYTIME . . . FOR 15c A CLASS! I WITH FROZEN BERRIES . . . AND V.V I ' i WITHOUT COOKING . . . with iiffluiog oe- . CSS) t M.CP. Um md Jelir PECTIN! But, you ur . . . frozen bertitf we pensiv. They e . . . yet, this fine, economical M.CP. recipe (below) makes more thin 13 Vi lb.) (lueu for leu than lSe a giant And what extra af Int i, h., ALL the natural betnr Hire and color became cooking and boiling are eliminated! Make Mme today! Uncooked Berry Jam Recipe (Uainc Frozen Strawberries or Red Raapberriea) 3 - 16 oa., or 4 - 11 oi., or S - 10 o. paekaf ea 1. Partially thaw the frozen berries and put tbem in 2 or 4 quart kettle. Uiint a potato masher, crush berries thoroughly to ob tain enough liquid to dissolve the pectin. Place kettle over slow tire and warm to 100'F. (or temperature you'd use for baby's milk). No hotter, please! Remove from fire. 2. Sifr 1 package (3V5-01.) M.CP. Jam and Jelly Pectin into thawed berries, stirring vigorously. Set aside for at least 20 minutes, stirring occasionally to assnre that pectin Is fully dissolved. 3. Stir in 1 cup lighr corn syrup, and stir well. 4. Now, stir in 6 level cups beet or cane sugar (previously and accurately measured). Mix well. J. With Red Raspberries the jam is ready to eat when sugar is dis solved. With Strawberries, add V cup lemon juice after sugar it dissolved; mix well. Makes 5 full pints or 13 ( H lb.) glasses. NOTEt If jam is to be kept for a time, put in pint jars or paper canons, well covered (no paraffin needed), and chill for 24 hours in deep freeze, or freezing or ice cube compartment of refrigerator. Then, store as you would milk, and use as desired. Never store these jama . i i r ti mi . I i .1. . on paniry sncii, ncj win vi -reji .,.vu. iuiii.iiui CUT OUT AND KEEP THIS RECIPE! (It's not in the folder in the M.CP. Pectin pack age. Or, write Mutual Citrus Products Co., Ana heim, California, for complete uncooked jam recipe folder.) -Copr. 19M u cr- - YOU CAN MAKE FINE GRAPE OR APPLE JELLIES, TOO, ANYTIME YOU LIKE! JUST USE BOTTLED JUICES ... and ihe easy recipes on back page of the Recipe Folder in the package of M.CP. Jam and Jelly PECTIN. A batch of fresh-made, homemade jelly is a big "lift" to the family larder ... and the M.CP. Pectin tecipes take only a tew minutes .time, a minimum or enorr, ana ut little. Surprise your family wirh delicious grape or apple jelly made the easy M.CP. way . . . with bottled juices! 6 .-"t SUGAR (mi iO1 UuffiH. .1 uVJ ikjfei SU6AR ml Better 'n ever puffs of wheat... sugar-toasted and candy-sweet! Not to Mothers i It'a a real sweet trick ; : I a cereal that'a o much fun to eat that your small ones won't object to its being good for them, too! And Smacks ore wonderful for kids because every delicious mouthful is charged with wheat's powerful food values and sugar's healthful energy. Your grocer's got 'em now! SMrACKlN'GOOD for Breakfast or Snacks