828-Lancasttr Fanning, Saturday, Fabruary 12, 1994 Happy Heart (Continued from Pag* B 8) STRAWBERRY CHIFFON PIE 1 cup toasted wheat germ VA tablespoons sugar 3 tablespoons vegetable oil 210-ounce packages frozen sliced strawberries, thawed 1 envelope unflavored gelatin 'A cup cold water 2 teaspoons grated orange peel 2 egg whites Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Combine wheat germ, sugar, and vegetable oil. Press firmly into a 9-inch pie pan. Bake until golden, about 8 minutes. Cool. Drain strawber ries, reserving 1 cup liquid. In a medium bowl, sprinkle gelatin over water; stir well. Bring reserved strawberry liquid to a boil. Add to gelatin mixture along with orange peel, stirring until gelatin is dissolved. Chill until mixture begins to thicken and mounds slightly on a spoon, 20 to 30 minutes. Beat egg whites until soft peaks form. Fold into gelatin mixture along with reserved strawberries. Spoon into prepared crust. Chill until firm, about 3 hours. Serves 6. Per portion: 0 mg cholesterol, 244 calories, 31 mg sodium. BAKED ZITI AND VEGETABLES 16-ounce package ziti or penne macaroni 2 medium green peppers 2 medium carrots 2 medium celery stalks 1 medium onion 1 tablespoon salad oil 28-ounce can crushed tomatoes 3 cups spicy-hot vegetable juice 1 tablespoon sugar l'/i teaspoon salt Vi teaspoon dried oregano leaves 8-ounce package shredded mozzarella cheese 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese Prepare macaroni as directed on package. Cut green peppers, carrots, celery, and onion into Vi -inch pieces. In nonsuck 12-inch skillet over medium-high heal, in hot vegetable oil, cook vegetables until lightly browned. Stir in '/a cup water; continue cooking over medium heat unul vegetables are tender-crisp. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Drain macaroni in colan der, set aside. In same saucepot, add cooked vegetables; stir in crushed tomatoes, vegetable juice, sugar, salt, and oregano over high heat, heat to a boil. Remove saucepot from heat; stir in cooked macaroni. Reserve 1 cup shred ded mozzarella cheese for topping. Into macaroni mixture, add parmesan cheese for lopping. Into macaroni mixture, add parmesan and remaining mozzarella cheese. Spoon mixture into a shallow 4-quart casserole. Sprinkle with reserved mozzarella cheese. Cover casserole and bake 30 minutes or unul cheese melts and mixture is hot and bubb ly. Makes 6 servings. FAT-FREE BANANA CRUNCH MUFFINS 1 cup all-purpose flour 'A cup wheat and barley cereal nuggets A cup sugar 'A teaspoon baking powder '/< teaspoon salt 2 meduim-size ripe bananas, mashed 'A cup plain nonfat yogurt 'A cup thawed frozen egg substitute 'A teaspoon vanilla extract Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Place muffin cups in muf fin pans. In a medium bowl, mix flour, cereal nuggets, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and salt In a large bowl, mix bananas, yogurt, egg substitute, and vanilla. Stir flour mixture into the large bowl. Stir until flour mix ture is moist. Spoon into muffin pans. Bake for 20 minutes. Remove muffins from pan to cool. HEART HAPPY VALENTINE JELL-0 1 large package strawberry or cherry Jell-0 'A cup cherries or fresh strawberries, sliced 1 cup vanilla yogurt (healthy heart) OR vanilla ice cream, slightly softened Yogurt or whipped topping for garnish Mix Jell-0 as per box directions. Divide mixture in half. Line Jell-0 mold or glass dish with fruit and half of Jell-O. Fold yogurt or ice cream into half that remains. Layer on lop of first layer. Refrigerate until serving time. Garnish with yogurt or whipped topping and Valentine heart Beaver-Lawrence Dairy Promotion Committee Beaver-Lawrence Dairy Promotion Committee NEWARK, Del. Not all of die people who send samples to the University of Delaware Soil Laboratory these days are looking for fertilizer recommendations. Some of the lab’s biggest custom ers are archaeologists seeking clues to the past. Indeed, the num ber of archaeological samples pro cessed in the lab over the past three years is almost equal to the number of fertilizer samples, according to Karen Gartley, soil testing program coordinator. A number of archaeological firms in Delaware and surround ing states use the university’s soil lab services, Gartley says. “For example, we recently received 1,500 soil samples collected from excavations at Historic St. Mary’s City, a colonial site in Maryland.” They’ve also tested thousands of samples from Delaware archaeological digs for the univer sity’s Center for Archaeological Research. “The use of soil tests for archaeological research is still relatively new in this country, though the idea is catching on,” says Keith Dorns, staff archaeolo gist and manager center’s laboratory. “When we first started doing this, no one at the soil lab was SEE ONE OF THESE DEALERS FOR A DEMONSTRATION: I ADAMSTOWN CARROLL’S EQUIPMENT DEERFIELD AG & ENFIELD ’’JSUSS 8 ' *1 EQUIPMENT INC. 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Old Stmtridge Village archaeologists were probably the first ones in the United States to do this in the early 1980 s,” he says. “In Europe they’ve been using them since the early 1970 s to help interpret early Iron Age sites.” The center ran its first samples through the university soil lab back in 1984-85 while investigat ihg the 19th century Wilson-Slack farm site near the intersection of Chestnut Hill Road-Route 4 and Route 72 in Newark. The main elements tested for archaeological purposes are pH, calcium, magnesium, phosphorus and potassium. “Soil samples are used to help figure out what's going on at a site,” Doms explains. “For exam ple. post holes tell us where a fence was, but they don’t tell us anything about what the fence was for. Was it around a garden? The soil’s likely to be higher in cal cium. Was it around a pig sty? There’ll be high phosphates in the soil. “Normally we take two sets of samples—one from the plow lay er and one from undisturbed sub soil and compare them to see what differences exist.” he con- Ktkt DUNKLE & EVERGREEN GUTSHALL'S INC. GRIEB INC. TRACTOR CO., INC. RD #2 Box 74-A Mill Hall, PA Übanon, PA Loyavllla, PA 717-728-3115 717-272-4641 tinues. “At many of the sites wc’tj excavating, there’s no standing structure and the land has been fanned for many years. There’s usually a very close approximati ion between the plow zone and the subsoil. It’s the discrepancies that are interesting. “This is a learning process," Dorns says. “We’re still exploring the uses of soil tests. Most of the archaeology that has brought us in contact with the soil lab is in ful fillment of regulations of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966. Most of the work it commissioned by DeIDOT and relates to highway construction, where federal moneys are: involved, so an environmental impact report must be filed. Thu includes cultural as well as physi cal and environmental impact, The center also does pure research archeology.” Over the past 12 years, the cen ter has excavated a number of ten ant farms, two general stores, a blacksmith shop, a wheelwright shop, a colonial tavern, one owner-operated farm and four urban dwellings, as well as 10 pie historic sites. Most of the sod samples collected from those sna were tested in the College of Agri cultural Sciences. AFH3