„V\ .'ab.'J-S BB—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 22,1983 Vegetables enhance a meal (Continued from Page 86) vigorously. Return all to saucepan, sitrring constantly. Continue to cook and stir until mixture is thickened and smooth. Ladle immediately into heated shallow ramekins or soup bowls. Arrange several mushroom slices on top of each fonduta. Stand 3 toast triangles, point side, up around the side of each ramekin. Serve at once with fresh vegetables. Mrs. Clarence Jeffries, Norristown GREEN BEANS ITALIENNE 2 pkg. (9-oz. each) frozen green beans 1 green pepper, thinly sliced in rings 1/21. Italian seasoning 1/4 c. butter, softened 1/4 c. shredded Monterey Jack cheese 1/4 c. grated Parmesan cheese Place beans, green pepper rings and Italian seasoning in saucepan containing small amount of salted water. Cover and cook 10 minutes. Drain well. Toss with butter and cheeses. Serves 6 to 8. ZUCCHINI BREAD 3 large eggs 2 c. sugar Ic. oil 2 c. grated zucchini 31. vanilla Mix above together well, then add: 3 c. flour It. salt 11. baking soda 1/21. baking powder 31. cinnamon Stir well till blended. Pour into greased pans and bake 1 hour or until done at 350 degrees. Makes 2 loaves. Catherine Barnhart, Butler 749 FEWER PARTS A 100-FOOT LENGTH OF BERG GUTTER CHAIN HAS 749 FEWER PARTS THAN MOST OTHER BARN CLEANERS Gutter Oam is a senes of one piece links nnukcd *■ nd tnd which makes it ln remove links and tlim nates the nud lor dli those p.ns rwts md hells The heavy concentration ol metal n ih** and a! the pull points gives the Berg Chun Link more poll strength than ordinary links Ini nnkj are 7'-inches lung 2' 4 inches wid> md inch lh ck and weigh over two pounds farh lUK is forged from special alloy forging left m <• Mng.k piert N’u wur y about corrosion [Jf SEE YOUR LOCAL BERG DEALER SAMPSON SILO RO2. Box 6i Cochranton, Pa 814 425-7581 DONALD UPPERMAN 1126 N Franklin St Chanibersburg, Pa 717 264 6007 ROVCNOALE SUPPLY 1 Watsontown PA 177/7 717 538 5521 DOMBACH EQUIPMENT INC. McAtUsterville, Pa 17049 717 463-2191 SKILLET CABBAGE 4 c. chopped cabbage 1 c. chopped celery 1 c. chopped onion 1 c. chopped green pepper 11. sugar IT. bacon fat or butter salt to taste Put everything m the electric skillet and set at 350 degrees or place in skillet on top of stove. After vegetables start cooking, continue for 5 minutes. Mrs. David Smith, Altoona KALE IN SOUR CREAM 4 c. cooked kale IT. butter 11. sugar 1/21. salt pepper 11. lemon juice 1 c. sour cream Place the cooked kale in a saucepan, add the rest of the ingredients except the sour cream, cover and heat thoroughly over a low flame. Stir in sour cream gradually, working from the center, and serve as soon as the cream is hot. FRIED PARSNIPS 6 medium-sized parsnips 3/4 c. salted cracker crumbs 1 egg, slightly beaten 2 T. water fat for frying Wash the parsnips, pare and quarter lengthwise. Boil in salted water until just tender. Drain and cool. Dip the parsnips in crumbs, then in the egg com bined with water, and again in crumbs. Heat shortening 1/4 inch deep in a frying pan. Fry the parsnip sticks until they are crisp and brown on all sides. DUIIOb tV£«YTHIN(i HCTTER FOR BARNS JOHN RIEPPEL, BUILDER RDi, Bo* 307 F Mansfield, Pa 717 662 2550 —“ ROBERT GUT SHALL RDI. CECIL ft. FERGUSON Wo-iielsdorl, Pa 19bb7 RD2 Box 62 1 1 7 933 4blb Perryopohs PA Ib4/J 412 73b 2104 AARON ZIMMERMAN CHESTER INGRAM KUI, on 2 Belieionte, Pa it>B2J (HublersDurg) 814-38? 2798 Martin Miller, York \ i f% R. UMAR HACKMAN RO2, Mitlhnburg. Pa 17844 717-524-4901 AREA KtHKESENTAIIVL WHIPPED TURN IP PUFF 2 c. turnips, cooked and mashed 3/4 c. soft bread crumbs 3 T. butter melted IT. sugar It.salt . dash pepper 2 slightly beaten eggs Mix all ingredients together well. Turn into greased, 1-quart casserole. Bake at 375 degrees for 40 minutes. Mrs. Allen Meakle, Baltimore GARDEN SKILLET 1 small head cauliflower, broken into pieces 1 c. water 1/3 c. zucchini, sliced thin 11/2 c. green pepper strips It. chopped onion 1 to 11/21. salt 1/3 c. butter 11. each basil and oregano 1/21. garlic powder 1/41. pepper 2 med. tomatoes, cut in 8 wedges each 2 to 3 Parmesan cheese, grated In heavy 10-inch skillet, combine cauliflower and water. Bring to a boil; cook covered until crisp tender, 8 to 10 minutes. Drain. Add butter, zucchini, green pepper, onion, and seasonings. Cook un covered over medium heat, tossing occasionally, until zucchini is crisp-tender. Add tomatoes and cheese. Remove from heat. Stir DO YOU NEED CASH FLOW? f&r Sell Your Surplus Farm Machinery, Small Tools, Accessories, Loads of Hay and Straw, Corn Fodder, etc., by bringing to our PUBLIC CONSIGNMENT AUCTION to be held on SAT. FEBRUARY 19.1903 at BINKLEY & HURST BROS. INC.. 133 Rothsville P.S. - Want a complete dispersal and don’t want the headache of an auction? Call us for a special rate on everything: Machinery - Small Tools, FREE ADVERTISING ON ALL CONSIGNMENTS CALLED INTO OUR OFFICE BY MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1983 NOTICE! Hauling Services Available... Call 717-626-4705 Growing plants from single cells helps scientists COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Tomorrow’s Improved Food and ornamental crops may result from a basic research tool that is moving from the laboratory to the field. “Tissue culture” is a technique that involves regenerating an entire plant from a single cell or groups of plant cells. The technique not only offers scientists a new tool to create genetically improved plants but helps them to maintain uniformity among plants of a particular type. Botanists at the University of Maryland have used tissue culture techniques to develop tomato tissue that will exist on a diet of 60 percent seawater. They plan to take this fragile tissue and attempt to regenerate it into whole tomato producing plants. If successful, botanist Paul Bottino says the possibility of someday irrigating plants with cheap, abundant seawater may become a reality. Bottino’s area of research specialization is the use of sub stances that will bring about “beneficial mutations" in plant tissue. Mutations such as the odd plant Station Road, Lititz, PA here or there that can grow in submarginal soil types, occur only occasionally in nature. The odds of nature producing the right mutation in ashort period of time are more than one in a million, says Bottino. His use of chemical mutagens - mutation-causing agents • speeds up the process. Horticulturists also are using tissue culture techniques to im prove ornamental and fruit producing plants. Dennis Stimart is using the technique to study dormancy characteristics of lily cultivars. In another experiment, he is studying the technique’s potential to produce fast-growing trees that are tolerant to adverse conditions, such as strip-minded areas. Harry Jan Swartz has found that tissue culture improves the propagation of thornless black berries over traditional nursery industry methods. i Thornless blackberry plants’ propagated from tissue culture, he says, were more vigorous, gave greater fruit yields and were more uniform in nearly all respects than plants propagated by an older tecf \e called "tip layering.”