f>—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. May 3. 1960 WONDERFi Today I've been perusing a publication of the National Dairy Council called "Newer Knowl edge of Cheese". It ofleis inter esting information - Cheese has been a popular food for thousands of ycais going Jar back into history eicn bc loic the time of Homer It was sciml at Caesar’s banquet tables and sened to Ins armies as part of their rations just as cheese sen os armies around the world at the piesent time Legend has it that cheese was “discoieied” several thousand years before Christ by an Arab ian tiaider who, starting on a journey, placed milk in a pouch made of a sheep’s stomach Dur ing the day's journey, the com bined action of the sun's heat and enzymes in the lining of the pouch changed the milk into cheese curds and whey Whey is the thin liquid that diains off when the lest of the milk turns to cheese Varieties Of Cheese And so since that time man> vaneties of cheese haie been pioduced ranging in texture fioni soft to hard and in flavor from mild to pungent and sharp Todaj processing is done in clean modem plants with equipment that contiols every step Still, whatever the cheese the basic process the coagulation of milk to produce curd by the se paiate or combined action of the enzyme renmn and lactic acid ■— remains the same Cheese has, of course, played » role in the economy of peoples and nations. Early nomadic tribes consideied cheese vital and it be- P. L. ROHRER & BRO., INC. Smoketown, Pa. Doctor in the Kitchen by Laurence M. Hursh, M.D, Consultant, National Dairy Council UL CHEESE came a prized medium of ex change because it provided milk in a solid and less perishable form It is said that the Crusaders brought back selects of cheese making that promoted the art rapidly in Europe After the fall of the'Roman Empire, during the Dark Ages, those secrets weic guarded in the monasteries. Trap pist Monks developed varieties of cheese that still are made As cheeses developed in various world localities they usually be came known by the name of that area as for example, Cheddar, Stilton, and Roquefort. The Cheese Industry Clieesemaking remained a farm and home operation until the middle of the nineteenth century. Its development into a great in dustiy as we know it today be gan in 1851 w hen the first cheese factoiy was started in Rome, N.Y. Toda\, cheesemakers in the United States have successfully manufactured virtually all for eign types of cheese such as Swiss Camembeit, Limburger, Blue and Parmesan Onginal American varieties include Brick, Colby, Monterey or Jack cheese, and others Cheese is a very versatile food. Its use extends from hors d’oeu vres to dessert, alone and in com bination with other foods. Peo ple of all ages like it. It is said there is a cheese for every taste and every pockethook. Three ounces of cheddar cheese has the same amount of protein as three ounces of boneless meat, fish, or poultry, or three eggs It is a rich source of all the nutrients of milk. Label Poultry In Pork Products Fair treatment to consumers will be the basis for pork pro ducers recommendations regard ing proposed use of poultry meat in sausage products Albert Gehlbach. Lincoln, Ill inois. National Pork Produceis Council president, said today that “we won’t fight the intro duction of poultry-added sausage pioducts, but we will insist and demand that the labeling of such pioducts be large and clear” The Agriculture Department hsl week announced a change in government standards which would permit the use of up to 15 pei cent poultry meats in hot dogs, frankfurters, bologna and other sausage pioducts Pievious standaids had requned them to be made up of led meats only Interested paities were given 45 days to file written comment on the proposal before it becomes official “The Department can expect to hear from each of our 23 member-state units,” Gehlbach said “Considerable discussion of this proposal took place at the Poik Council’s lecent conven tion in Omaha “Our people are not anti-poul tiy, and we’re not against new ideas But we are working hard at improving the pork image with consumers We’ve assured the housewife for generations that sausage products are entire ly red meat The label must tell the story if these" products- are now to be filled with anything else—poultry, soybean meal or seaweed,” Gehlbach said “Our first impulse is one of concern for loss of part of our market But we also recognize that a ‘poultryadded’ product may find consumer acceptance and increase our volume. So our v 2 s 397-3539 ” / < - V, S , /' Apply new Lasso either in granules or liquid and you’re done. Lasso needs no soil incorporation; just Vs - % inches of rain will turn on Lasso’s excellent grass control for your corn and soybeans. WHAT MAKES PRE-EMERGENT LASSO THE SUPERIOR CORN & SOYBEAN HERBICIDE? LOTS OF THINGS . . . Crop safety. New Lasso has been tested and tested. The results were always the same. No damage to feeder roots of corn and soybeans. Lasso doesn’t cut yields it increases them. Killing power. Lasso gives excellent control of grasses and some broadleaf weeds. No carryover. When Lasso’s done working, it breaks down harmlessly in the soil. So it can’t damage following crops, or ruin rotation plans. No incorporation necessary with Lasso, thus reducing the number of trips over the field and soil compaction. Minimum moisture is needed to put Lasso to work. Lasso works well on a wide range of soil types. That's why Lasso's best. Better get the best now at: LEBANON CHEMICAL CORP. Barnard Berger Lebanon, Pa. 272-7208 John Brubaker Lititz, Pa. 626-6575 Mistake Fresh For Bad Eggs Is on egg ever too fresh? Prob ably not. but it would seem so if Customers who have bought one had heard of grocers and eggs i n u, e pas t have not always housewives who rid themselves RO it en fresh eggs from the stores of "bad” eggs because they con- or t h C f arm> Now that stores and tamed some “whitish, stringy f arms gc t fresh eggs, the cuslo* things" near the yolk mers have noticed the still twist* cd. whitish protein strands at Relax— this is not a new and of lhc yolk and ar# exotic foi m of bad eggs. questioning it as being noi mal. The whitish stuff next to the yolk is a sign that the eggs arc very fiesh, and that pro ducers and processors are now doing a better job than ever of getting their products to you quickly Accoidmg to Wisconsin Exten sion poultry specialist sthe "whit ish things" near the yolk aie a fibrous filament of piotem that twists into pi eminent appear ance in freshly laid eggs When the eggs are stoied foi position will be this if the poul trj people want a piece of the sausage market, let them slap on a cleai label and sell then way in not sneak in under the long time meat appeal CUSTOM SPRAYING For Whifewashing Spray the modern way Use CARBOLA Spray Carbola dries white, disinfects, kills flies, up to 90% less cobwebs. No wet floors. MAYNARD L. BEITZEL Witmer. Pa. 392-7227 Pre-Emergent Corn & Soybean Herbicide awhile, the filaments Ktaduallf "unwind" and the whitish strand* disappear Into the rest of th* Eggs My Neighbors CS r*\ n, JD ll 1 if of wow i /s ill • £ ? fi “This is later, Bab." sx# Wayne Hetrick Lebanon, Pa. 272-1926 James Hudson Lincoln University, Pa 215-255-4881 'I \ &