HOME & LIVING B2 — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2022 Why older recipes are out of date By DANIEL NEMAN St. Louis Post-Dispatch It was ridiculous. I couldn’t lift the package of chicken breasts without a winch. There were only three breasts in the package — and if you want to be technical, it was only a breast and a half. Yet the thing weighed about three pounds. Three pounds is, tech- nically, the size of an entire fryer chicken. Fryers can be as small as 2-½ pounds (or as large as 4-½ pounds). We can assume that these partic- ular breasts came from a roaster, but still. The breasts were huge, and that was without skin and bones. There is nothing wrong with that, as far as it goes. More food means more people can be fed and, with luck, more leftovers. The problem comes when you are trying to cook to a recipe. I was on this particular hunt for chicken recently when I was going to make Chicken Kiev. I was using a recipe that dates back to 1975. It wasn’t that long ago in the grand scheme of things, but it was a dif- ferent epoch in terms of chicken evolution. Chickens back then were, for lack of a better term, normal. They were properly proportioned, at least for a chicken. I mean, chickens always look kind of funny, but at least they could stand up without threatening to topple over. When the great Craig Claiborne said to use one chicken breast per Chicken Kiev, he meant one that weighed perhaps 8 ounces, not 16. Cooking his recipe now means having to make adjustments; I sliced the breasts horizontally in half to come up with the proper size. For the sake of science, I tried to use a one-pound breast in the recipe. It was an utter failure. I couldn’t pound the chicken thin enough to use — Chicken Kiev requires a thin fi llet so it can be wrapped around a mound of herbed butter. When I fi nally got the chicken thin enough, it fell apart in shreds. And still, there was twice as much chicken as I needed. I don’t blame the Come Check Out Our New Location & New Menu! farmers. Farmers look to fi ll a need. Americans like chicken breasts much more than legs and thighs, so farmers, breeders and geneticists try to supply chickens with as much breast as possible. If it were only chickens, I’d keep my grumbling to myself. But a walk down the aisles of any grocery store reveals that food just isn’t the same size. Shallots used to be almost a secret ingredient used only by those in the know. When they weren’t popular, they were more or less the size of a dried fi g. But now, there are more and more people in the know, resulting in increased demand for shal- lots. Agricultural science has responded, and now shallots are twice as big as they used to be. Again, there is nothing inherently wrong with that. They still taste the same, you just get more shallot per shallot. But if you see a recipe from more than a few years ago calling for one shallot, you’ll be much happier if you cut one of today’s monster shallots in half. At least chicken breasts and shallots are getting bigger. Everything else is getting smaller, for obvious economic reasons. Cans of vegetables and fruit have contained 14 or 14-½ fl uid ounces for so long that it feels normal now. But those are odd numbers, or at least unusual, so I looked up pictures of old cans. Sure enough, they all started out at 16 ounces. Of course they did. Candy bars are a partic- ularly annoying example. The prices naturally keep going up, but the 3 Mus- keteers bar of my youth that weighed 2.06 ounces now weighs 1.92 ounces. The Hershey’s bar that was formerly 1.875 ounces (I assume it was originally 2 ounces) now checks in at 1.55 ounces. Kit Kat bars, which started out at 1-1/4 ounces, now weigh 1 ½ ounces. OK, I did not see that one coming. 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Corner of Main at Birch in Union Call 541-963-3161 or 541-523-3673 to place your ad. LA GRANDE LIONS CLUB Meets 2nd & 4th Monday of each month @ 12 PM Union County Senior Center 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande GET QUICK CASH WITH THE CLASSIFIEDS! Sell your unwanted car, prop- erty and household items more quickly and affordably with the classifieds. Just call us today to place your ad and get ready to start counting your cash. The Observer 541- 963-3161. The Baker City Herald 541-523-3673 Classified ads get great results. Place yours today! Baker County United “freedom rallies” 3rd Thursday each month 6 p.m. at the Sunridge 1 Sunridge Lane. The public is invited Kiwanis Club of Baker City Tuesday at 12:00 PM Sunrige Inn Restaurant 1 Sunridge Lane For more information call: (541) 523-6027 ROTARY CLUB of Baker City Meets every Monday Noon - 1 PM Baker Towers Meeting Room POWDER RIVER SPORTSMAN’S CLUB Meets 1st Tuesday of every month 8th & Broadway, Baker City 6 PM - Pistolettes 7 PM - Regular Membership Check out our classified ads. 114 Group Meetings NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS Monday, Thursday, & Friday at 8pm. Episcopal Church 2177 First St., Baker City AA MEETINGS - La Grande Wednesday Nights, 7-8:15pm. Fort Union Grange Hall, corner of McAlister & Gekeler Lanes. For more info, call 541-786-1222 AL-ANON Keep Coming Back Family Group Mondays, 7 pm at NKWest, 1208 Adams, La Grande, OR CELEBRATE RECOVERY Calvary Baptist Church Third & Broadway Baker City, OR EVERY THURSDAY 6:15 - 8:00 PM DO YOU HAVE....HURTS, HABITS and/or HANG UPS? 12 Step Biblical Support Harvest Church 3720 Birch St. Baker City Thurs., 6:30 - 8:30 PM LA GRANDE GAMBLERS ANONYMOUS Every Friday Night @ 5pm, 2107 Gekeler Ln, LG, Church of Christ basement. For more info please call 971-219-8411