88-Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, October 3, 1998 If you are looking fora recipe but cant find It, send your recipe request to Lou Ann Good, Cook’s Question Corner, In care of Lancaster Farming, P.O. Box 609, Ephrata, PA 17522. There’s no need to send an SASE. If we receive an answer to your question, we will publish It as soon as pos sible. Sometimes we receive numerous answers to the same request, and cannot print each one. Answers to recipe requests should be sent to the same address. QUESTION Dolly Getz, Manheim, is looking for a recipe For Friendship Brownies, which are chocolate and nuts and the dry ingredients layered in a quart jar to be given as gifts. The receiver adds the liquid ingredients and bakes in 9-inch square pan when ready to use. She would also like other recipes prepared like this for cookies, muffins, etc. QUESTION Deirdre from New York wants a recipe for chocolate spice cake. QUESTION —Helen Hertzler, Morgantown, wants a recipe for pizza crust in which the dry ingredients can be mixed and stored until ready to use and then warm water added, which is similar to store-bought packs of pizza crust mix. QUESTION—A reader from Annville would like recipes for food that can be given as gifts. Examples: oil, vinegar, and herb mixtures to seal in bottles, candies, cake in a jar, cookies, etc. She would also like a small cookie that contains anise and is rolled in confectioners' sugar, which is similar to those made by Archway. QUESTION Robina Watson, Blackwood, N.J., needs recipes for sugarless muffins for a diabetic. QUESTION Shirley Miller wants recipes using ground cherries and asked where the scarce berries can be found. QUESTION A reader wants recipes for black bread and for pumpernickel bread. QUESTION Richard Kophazy, Moorestownship, wants recipes using eggplant. QUESTION Donna Beyerbach, Oakdale, would like a recipe for zucchini cake that is canned in a jar. QUESTION —Debra Allgyer, Womelsdorf, wanted a recipe for Elephant Ears, which are warm with melted butter and a sugar/cinnamon mixture sprinkled on top and are often sold at fairs. QUESTION —Lois Eby, Greencastle, would like a recipe for hard pretzels. QUESTION —L.A. Martin, Canandaigua, N.Y., would like a recipe for seafood salad using imitation crab meat, celery, mayonnaise, and onions. QUESTION A Shippensburg reader would like a recipe on making cottage cheese that is soft and creamy like the store-bought variety. QUESTION A Shippensburg reader would like a recipe for corn crackles. QUESTION Toni Levan, Galeton, would like a good recipe for garlic pickles. QUESTION Betty Lou Gambler, Concord, writes that her mother purchased a pickle compound at the former People’s Drug Store during the 1940 s and 19505. There were four pack ages in one recipe and contained rock salt, saccharine, clove oil, and an acid of some kind that was mixed into 1 gallon of cold vinegar and poured over pickles. The pickles were ready to eat within several days and tasted delicious. She has tried many stores and has not been able to locate the pickling compound. Can any one help her? QUESTION Barbara from Kutztown would like a recipe for the sauce that is used to dip steamed dumplings into at a Chinese restaurant. 1 cup sugar 1 egg 3 tablespoons butter Vi teaspoon salt t'/icups milk 1 Vj cups flour 3 cups sliced peaches Put peaches in a greased baking dish. Mix together sugar, egg, butter, salt, milk, and flour. Spread dough over the peach es. Bake 45 minutes at 375 degrees. QUESTION J. Gramiccioni, Stockton, N.J., wants to know where to purchase real Italian vinegar without preserva tives. Her father brought some from Italy, but she can’t find it over here. Does anyone know how it can be made or purchased? QUESTION Estella Fink would like a recipe to make chili beans. Cook’s QUESTION A reader from Orange County, N.Y. would like a recipe for Half Sour Pickles, she believes the cucumbers are soaked in brine overnight and can be eaten the following QUESTION—A reader from Finger Lakes, N.Y., would like a recipe to can together sliced onions and green bell oeoDers (not pickled). QUESTION—A Snyder County reader would like a recipe for white chocolate mousse cake. QUESTION A reader wants a recipe for cherry nut filling for homemade candy. QUESTION A reader wants a recipe for the bretzel QUESTION Rose Diehl, Bloomsburg, wants recipes for turkey scrapple and turkey bologna. ANSWER Shirley Schwoerer, Wysox has had a bumper crop of coriander this year but is not sure how to use it. She wanted recipes and suggestions for using this. Thanks to Betty Light, Lebanon, who writes that coriander seed can be used in the following ways: Beverages Crush 1 coriander seed, place in coffee cup and fill cup with hot coffee. Fruit —Add corinader seed to apples, pears, and dried fruit while cooking. Marinades —Add coriander seeds to marinades. Heat and pour over meat. Let stand several hours in refrigerator. Good for beef, lamb, and pork roasts, kebobs, fish and poultry. Soup stock —Add'/«teaspoon coriander seed to soup stock while it is cooking. Texas Coriander Cake Cake: 1 package yellow cake mix 4-serving package instant vanilla pudding mix 3 eggs 1 cup vegetable oil 1 teaspoon coriander 1 teaspoon cinnamon 2 small jars apricot baby food 1 cup pecans Glaze: Juice of 1 lemon V 4 cup granulated sugar Vz cup butter Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Grease and flour tube or bundt pan. Mix all ingredients together and pour into prepared pan. Bake 50 to 60 minutes. To make glaze, mix together lemon juice, ’/* cup sugar, and y« cup butter in a small saucepan, bring to a boil. Poke holes in warm cake and pour glaze over all the cake. Yields 10 to 12 servings. ANSWER Here's another recipe for a thirst quencher from Doris Dibert, Everett. 12-ounce can frozen lemonade concentrate 12-ounce can frozen orange concentrate 2 cups hot tea 1 cup sugar 7 cups water Mix together all ingredients in large container (a 5-quart ice cream bucket works well). Freeze, stirring occasionally as it freezes to keep slushy. To serve, dip into cups or glasses; add fruit juices or soda to fill cup. Serve with a spoon. ANSWER Richard Kophazy, Moorestownship, wanted a recipe for Eggplant Parmesan. Thanks to Anna Martin, Den ver, for a recipe. Eggplant Parmesan 1 medium eggplant 2 eggs, well beaten IVt -2 cups bread crumbs 2 packages shredded mozzarella cheese 'A cup grated Cheddar cheese Salt, pepper, garlic powder (not garlic salt), about % teaspoon of each 1 29-ounce can tomato sauce Pare eggplant. Slice in % -inch slices. Beat eggs, add salt, pepper, and garlic powder. Dip sliced eggplant into egg mix ture, then dip into bread crumbs. Fry eggplant slices; then blot in paper towels. Layer tomato sauce, eggplant, mozzarella cheese, and Cheddar cheese in casserole. Top with more tomato sauce and cheese. Bake until tomato sauce bubbles around edges and cheese is melted. Cut into squares and serve. Serves 8. ANSWER—Richard Kophazy, Moorestownship, wanted a recipe for peach cobbler. Thanks to Anna Joyce Martin, East Earl, for sending a recipe. Ice Tea Slush Peach Cobbler Cool Weather Encourages Cabbage Family Growth HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) The cabbage family veg etable crops: broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, collards, and kale prefer cool growing conditions. Thus they do best in the cool conditions of either fall or spring. In Pennsylvania, broccoli and cauliflower in particular do best in the fall. Growers are just starting to harvest these nutri tious vegetable crops that are also believed to help prevent gastrointestinal tract cancers. Cabbage is less sensitive to hot weather and is harvested throughout the summer and fall. Cabbage by itself ranks as the fifth most important Pennsylvania vegetable crop in terms of acreage. Over 2,000 acres are grown each year and are harvested from late June into December. Pennsylvania ranks 13th in the nation in the production of cabbage. About 400 acres each of col lards and kale are grown along with roughly 350 acres of broc coli and 230 acres of cauliflower. While many growers across the state grow broccoli and cauli flower in small acreages, the production of collards and kale is concentrated among a few growers with large acreages in southeast Pennsylvania. The cabbage family is also known as the Cruciferae family because their flowers are shaped like a cross According to the Wellness Encyclopedia of Food and Nutrition of the University of California at Berkeley, crucif erous vegetables contain indoles nitrogen compounds that seem to protect against cancers of the stomach and large intes tine They also are generally high in fiber and antioxidants like vitamin C and carotenoids Antioxidants neutralize the action of free radicals unsta ble oxygen molecules which promote cancer. Cruciferous veg etables also contain compounds that stimulate the release of anticancer enzymes. Some people object to the odor produced by cooking crucif erous vegetables. The odor is caused by the release of sulfur compounds while these vegeta bles cook. While boiling crucifer ous vegetables in large amounts of water in an open pot will min imize the characteristic strong cabbage taste, it maximizes the loss of nutrients. Steaming, microwaving or quick cooking in small amounts of water minimizes the nutrient loss in the cooking process. Of course, broccoli, cabbage, and cauliflower can all be enjoyed raw by themselves or in salads. Dietary experts recommend including cruciferous vegetables in the diet regularly, at least several times a week. They also recommend a daily serving of a vegetable (or fruit) high in vita min A, one high in vitamin C, and one high in fiber. Broccoli fulfills all three requirements while cabbage and cauliflower fulfill the vitamin C and fiber requirement. The following recipes are 5 ways to include cole crops in your meal: (Turn to Page B 9) • *■ * * * * ♦- *