B—Lancaster Farming, Friday, May 10, 1957 ✓ For the Farm Wife and Want to Have Your Own Barbeque? Here Is the Recommended Sauce This has been Barbecued Chic ken Week. If you have never eaten barbecued chicken you are really mising a treat. Until a few years ago we had not eaten too much of this^ delicacy, but in the past few years it has become quite popular. From early spring until late fall organizations all over the county are havmg_their annual “barbecues”; very few weeks go by that you cannot find barbecued chicken to eat. If you would like to make chicken this tasty way in your own kitchen, here is a recipe for a barbecue sauce that you might like to try. This recipe is approved by the Poultry and Egg National Board, Chicago. BARBECUE SAUCE FOR CHICKEN 1 teaspoon salt ~ Vz teaspoon pepper 1 1 tablespoon sugar Vz clove garlic or Vz teaspoon garlic salt 1 cup catsup 1 medium onion, finely chop ped Vz cup water 1 i cup lemon juice or vinegar 1 tablespoon Worcestershire .Sauce V* cup butter or margarine Blend salt, pepper, paprika and sugar Add remaining ingredients Remove from heat Makes 2Vz cups To make barbecued chicken place golden-browned chicken one layer deep in a shallow baking 'Come asYou Are...and k from YoarCar' If you have been overlooking this modern facility, use it the next time you call; test, for yourself its ease and convenience. Use Our Convenient DRIVE-IN WINDOW One-half block ■ from Penn Square on South Queen Street. —Rear of Main Bank. Serving Lancaster from Center Square since 1889" MILLERSVILLE BRANCH Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Maximum Insurance $lO,OOO per depositor a Family pan. Spoon Barbecue Sauce over chicken, using one-half cup for each pound of chicken. Bake in a slow oven (325 degrees) until chicken is tender, 45 to 60 minu tes. Turn once to crisp evenly. Baste occasionally while cooking. * A dessert that would go well' with chicken is Orange Charlotte Russe. This deSsert can 'be pre pared ahead of time and kept in the refrigerator until ready to be served. _ _ ORANGE CHARLOTTE RUSSE 1 tablespoon unflavored gela tul V* cup cold water J 2 cup hot water 1 cup sugar V 4 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 cup orange sections and juice 1 cup whipping cream 12 lady fingers Soften gelatin in cold water Add hot water and stir until thoroughly dissolved Add sugar and salt and stir well Add lemon juice, orange juice and sections and chill until it begins to thic ken Beat until light, then fold in cream that has been whipped un til stiff Pour into a bowl lined with lady fingers or stale sponge cake Chill in refrigerator until ready to use Serves six or eight REQUEST Mrs Levi H Martin, R 2 Ephra la would like to have a recipe for Chess pie. She doesn’t want a recipe for cheese pie but Chess This might be a good slogan for our Drive-In window. It expresses one purpose of this spe cial window: to make ne-stop banking easy. FREE PARKING 25 S. Queen St.—Swan Parking Lot—Vine & S. Queen Sts. Stoner Park ing Lot—S. W. Corner Vine & Queen Sts. 302 N. GEORGE ST pie. Can any of you ladies help her out? H M »I* Mrs. Martin also sends along a recipe for GLORIFIED RICE; 2 cups cooked rice 1 cup pineapple cubed 1 cup whipping cream 24 marshmallows cup sugar 1 cup chopped apples. We have a request and a freez ing hint from Mrs. 'Manpn N. Hertzog, R 1 Stevens. She says in her letter: I like Lancaster Farming a lot, especially the recipes and pat terns. Let’s have some recipes on canning and freezing. Will some one please send' in an old recipe for bread filling. My'grandmother used to make it; she served it in' a dish. It was not baked in a cas serole, neither was it in the chic ken. When I freeze chickens I cut them up to save'space. The back, neck and ribs I cook and take off (he bones. Then I pack it in plas tic boxes and freeze, ready to use for chicken corn soup or chicken pie, using only half the space. I also use marshmallow jars with plastic lids for cooked chicken I'iot too much breth in a glass jar, then it wil not freeze over. - Take advantage of today’s low egg prides; this is a good time to use eggs in mam dishes and des serts. Omelets, souffles, creamed eggs and sliced hard-cooked eggs with sliced ham and" cheese sauce are just a few of the mam egg dishes to feature at family sup pers. A popular dessert is Whole-Egg Sponge Cake. You_can make sponge cakes from unseparated eggs. Just be sure to omit the salt or add it with the dry ingredients, add the lemon juice to the eggs just before you beat them, and beat the eggs until they foim soft peaks' WHOLE-EGG SPONGE CAKE 6 eggs 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 packed teaspoon grated lem on rind 1 cup sugar 1 cup pastry or cake flour z h teaspoon salt Break eggs into large bowl of electric mixer Add the lemon WILLOW STREET the giant freezer SPACE YOO WANTS T 2L Q -‘f K -'' REen «s SPAv-e YOU NEEDS WESTINGHOUSE See Our Display at The Home and Garden Show May 14 * lB, Guernsey Pavilion you can be sure... if irfe Westin^housc juice and grated rind* Beat the' mixture at 1 highest sped until soft peaks can be formed (12 to 16 minutes) While the"'eggs are being beaten, sift together flour and salt. If a loose-bottom pan is not used, the cake wil be more easily removed if the pan is lightly grdasgd and, floured. Continue beating the eggs at highest speed (after soft peaks can be formed) and pour the sugar in a fine stream over them, ■taking 2% to 3 minutes to add all the sugar. Change mixer to lowest speed and sift the flour and salt over the surface of the mixture as the howl turns, taking 2 x h. to 3 minutes to add all the flour. Scrape thes ides of the bowL and beat at lowest speed for one-half minute. Pour the batter into a 1(T -inch tube pan and bake 50 minu tes .at 325 degrees. [ As soon as baked, invert the [cake pan and set it on a rack to cool. Prop it up, if necessary, so that the air can circulate between, [the cake and the table top. Cool to room'temperature before re moving the cake from the pan. HOW DO FATS COMPARE IN PASTRY? Butter,' margarine, lard, hydrogenated fat and oil how do they compare in pastry. Test which have been made comparing these fats have found that butter and margarine give a crisp, crackery pastry. Although the flavor is pastry is not so tender and desirable as that made with lard or hydrogen ated fat. Lard, on the other hand, makes a flaky and tender pastry. Be cause it has-greater shortening power, less of it is needed than of other fats to make a pastry of equal tenderness Oil gives .a tender crust but is less flaky. These tests also proved that good products could be made by using one-third cup of hydrogen ated fat, one-fourth' cup of oil or onethird cup minus one table spoon of lard for each cup of sift ed all-purpose flour Due to new methods of process ing and freezing, oysters are no longer left to the “R” months. We can now eat them all year round. (Continued on page 9) I#IU mV Vila I li« COPE & WEAVER N.EW Printed Pattern ONE SIZE MEDIUM 9361 Printed Pattern Pi inted Pattern 9361—includes' 3 styles—papei pattern one piece. Cut complete apion at one lime. Misses’ medium size Each apion, 1 yaid 31 inch Send Thnly-five cents in coins foi tins pattern—add 5 cents for each pattern if you wish Ist class inailiim Send io 170 Newspaper Paltenji-Dept 232 West ISili St. New Yoi U II N Y P'int plainly NAME, ADDttESS with ZONE. SIZE and STYLE NUMBER The Mennonlte Hoar Each Sunday Lancaster WLAN 12:30 P. M. Norristown -WNAR 8:00 A. M. ■'Hanover-WHVR 1:00 P. M. Puts 700 lbs. of food at your fingertips!' SPECIAL PRICE NOW ONLY $439.95 ic “Fortran of Cold’*... all ilvo wails fofrigarattdl ic Four'Big Roach-In Compartments! ■fc Flvo Dotp-Door Shelves! -- ir Below-zero qulck-freezlngl if Only 31 inches wide! Sizet from 9 to MQ cu. fL in upright or chetl-tpye modelt. fric** atari oa< $259.95 S*vo now ... See ft now il PH. Lane. EX3-Z824 0 *ce