Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, August 22, 1998, Image 50

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    .Kids Korner
Kids In The Kitchen And Other Places At Ag Progress
Who better to teach kids to cook than kids themselves? From left, Connie Port, 9;
Dana Wiker, 8; and Amy Port, 11, demonstrate how to make a raspberry-apple
milkshake.
“It’s the best,” Dana Wiker, center, said of the milkshake creation.
Christopher Cooper, 6, and his brother Nicholas, 11, from
Danville said their grandfather Stanley Crone has lots of
stories to tell about everything he sees during Ag Progress
Days.
Chris Sutton, 5, steals a
moment with the talking cow.
LOU ANN GOOD
Lancaster Fanning Staff
ROCK SPRING (Centre Co.)
When sisters Amy and Connie
Port from Pennsylvania Furnace
hurried to Ag Progress Days on
Tuesday, they never expected to
demonstrate cooking before a
crowd. But When Dana Wiker, 9,
needed help in the kitchen, Amy,
11, and Connie, 9, offered to help.
After a 30 minute demonstration
before the audience at the Family
Center, they were glad they had
helped cook.
“I really liked making raspberry
milkshake. It tasted really good,”
Connie said.
“I liked the apple crisp the best,”
said Amy.
She likes it so well that she
intends to make more at home to
share with her family.
Dana, who is the daughter of
Nancy Wiker, said that she gets
lots of experience cooking. Her
mother who works as a consumer
science educator at Lancaster
County Extension teaches cooking
classes as part of her job.
It’s not surprising that Dana is
an expert cook since she has her
own live-in cooking teacher.
Lucky for the people in the
audience—they got to sample the
girls’ cooking.
Here are some recipes shared
during the cooking sessions held
throughout the three-day event.
RASPBERRY-APPLE
MILK SHAKE
1 cup milk
2 tablespoons frozen apple juice
concentrate
8-ounces raspberry yogurt
Mix milk and apple juice con
centrate'in ajar with a tight fitting
lid.
Stir yogurt with a spoon, then
add it to the milk. Shake until
smooth and well blended. Makes 2
servings.
Children could color while their parents participated in
adult learning during Ag Progress. From left, lan, 6, and
Neva, 19 months, are the children of Dale and Kate Thom
sen of Breezewood.
l/'f’
m"
»* .
BUTTERFLY BITES
1 stalk celery
6 large thin pretzel twists
3 pretzel sticks
3 tablespoon pimento spread or
cheese filling
9 raisins
Wash celery and cut into three
3-inch pieces. Fill with soft pimen
to spread.
Add raisins for decorations, two
pretzel twists for wings and pretzel
sticks for antennae. Makes three
butterflies.
APPLE CRISP
4 medium apples, peeled and
sliced
3 /« cup flour
V* cup brown sugar
‘A cup quick or regular oats
■A cup chopped walnuts
I'A teaspoon cinnamon
'A cup margarine, softened
Heat oven to 375 degrees.
Spread apple slices in ungreased
8-inch square pan.
Mix remaining ingredients with
a fork or in a ziplock bag. Sprinkle
over apples.
Bake uncovered until topping is
brown and apples are tender, about
30 minutes. Makes 6 servings.