A22-Lancaster Fanning, Saturday. December 2, 2000 Today, WITF-TY Offers A Taste Of Pennsylvania Dutch Goodness HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) WITF-TV, the region’s public television station, cele brates the foods that Central Pennsylvania is known for with Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking: Wonderful Good, a new WITF production. From chicken potpie to Schnitz and Knepp (Apples and Dumplings), cooks from throughout the region share their recipes and memories of some of the most popular Pennsylvania Dutch comfort foods. This one hour program premieres today, Dec. 2, at 2 p.m. and is rebroad Workshops Offered For Entrepreneurs, Food Processors GENEVA, N.Y. The North east Center for Food Entrepre- neurship (NECFE) is holding a series of hands-on workshops for food manufacturers, small scale processors of specialty foods, farmers interested in value added processing and anyone in terested in starting a small-scale food manufacturing business. The first workshop, entitled “Good Manufacturing Practices for the Production of Shelf- Stable Acid, Acidified (Pickled) and Dehydrated Foods,” was of fered at the Food Research Labo ratory at Cornell University’s New York State Agricultural Ex periment Station, in Geneva, N.Y., Oct. 6. It provided current and future small processors with the basic elements needed to un derstand the main processing steps, critical control points, and record-keeping to safely manu- Service - Rental - New & Used Units In Stock cast at 3:30 p.m. Viewers will step into the kitchen of five local Pennsylva nia Dutch cooks as they pass down their traditions from one generation to the next. Betty Groff, a noted Pennsyl vania Dutch cookbook author and owner of Groffs Farm Res taurant in Mount Joy, shows her niece how to make the original Pennsylvania Dutch one-dish meal, pig stomach. Marie Steinmetz, a costumed interpreter at the Landis Valley Museum and lifelong resident of Kleinfeltersville in Lebanon Small-Scale facture specialty food products for the marketplace. Future workshops include “Fermented Sausage and Jerky,” in Ithaca, N.Y., Dec. 8; “Next- Level Entrepreneurship Training for Small and Specialty Food Producers,” Jan. 9-10, Jan. 23-24, and Feb. 20-21 in Geneva, N.Y.; “A Taste of Specialty Foods,” presented at the 2001 Farmers’ Direct Marketing Con ference in Owego, N.Y., on Feb ruary 5; and “Food Safety for the Entrepreneur,” offered March 22 in Burlington, Vt. For more information or to preregister for the workshops, contact Judy Anderson, (315) 787-2273, FAX 315-787-2284 or e-mail her at jla2@cornell.edu. Registration is limited to 40 peo ple. The fee is $5O. Agricultural Generators KATSjt^HT / ipowmm v vsomm / In Stock! WjM^MWMWsrsWws <<*>'!<■- -V * -V* > * > , * < >1 / ' ** Power Generation Systems Specialists County, teaches her daughter how to make a Dutch County fa vorite, chicken com soup. Mary Landis of New Cumber land joins her daughter and granddaughter in making an al most forgotten Pennsylvania Dutch winter dish, Schnitz and Knepp or Apples and Dump lings. Rolling out noodles for chick en potpie, Grace Shirk shares her mother’s recipe with her grand son Jim Shirk on the farm in Goodville, Lancaster County, that has been in their family since 1758. Gelbvieh Unveils Smart Cross™ Program LOUISVILLE, Ky. During its recent 2001 National Con vention in Louisville, Ky., the American Gelbvieh Association unveiled its most aggressive marketing campaign to date. This campaign centers on the Smart Cross™ Program, a new crossbreeding plan developed by the American Gelbvieh Associa tion. “In today’s beef industry, we saw a need for a simple crossbreeding plan that would get more producers into the profit center,” says Don Schiefelbein, AGA Executive Director. “Smart Cross” 1 pro vides commercial producers with a plan that will help them make money.” At the heart of Smart Cross™ is the philosophy that Continen tal Cross British cattle are the most profitable in the cow-calf, feeder and packer segments. Re search has shown cattle with 50 STOCK REDUCTION SALE 8- 25 K.W. 540 input speed 2- 40 K.W. 540 input speed 6- 50 K.W. 540 input speed 2- 50 K.W. 1000 input speed 2- 75 K.W. 1000 input speed 3-100 K.W. 1000 input speed All available with trailers and Power shafts Call for special Pricing!!!!!! 330 Fonderwhite Road, Lebanon,PA 17042 Arlene Delp of Dallastown passes along her 30 years of ex perience in making pies for York’s Central Market to show her granddaughter and a friend how to make lemon sponge pie. Each cook recalls the joy of tak ing the time to prepare a good meal and eating together as a family. The program also features the original Pennsylvania Dutch cooking traditions preserved and presented at the Landis Valley Museum in Lancaster. A living history village, the Landis Valley Museum interprets Pennsylvania percent Continental genetics and SO percent British are feed efficient and produce quality carcasses. Smart Cross™ pro vides producers with a plan to get them to the 50-50 blend of Continental and British. The three breeds included are Gelbvieh, Balancers™, and Angus (Red or Black). Smart Cross™ shows producers what breed of bull to use on vari ous types of cows in order to get the profit center. For example, if a commercial producers has a highly British cowherd, it is rec ommended to use a purebred Gelbvieh bull. If a producer has a highly Continental cowherd, Smart Cross™ recommends using a purebred Angus or Red Angus or a Balancer™ bull to bring the progeny back to the 50-50 blend of genetics. Balancers” are registered seedstock composed of regis tered purebred Gelbvieh and KATOLITE P.T.O. GENERATORS German rural life, including the open hearth-cooking program taught by foodways specialist Tom Martin. The museum pub lished a cookbook this year fo cusing on regional cuisine titled “Pennsylvania German Foods and Traditions.” Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking: Wonderful Good takes an in depth look at a beloved regional cuisine. The program will also be rebroadcast on WITF-TV Sun day, Dec. 10 at 2 p.m. Angus or Red Angus on both sides of the pedigree. Balanc ers” can quickly bring a mixed breed cowherd to the profit center. An eight-page handbook is available free to producers and explains the Smart Cross” Pro gram in detail. For your copy, call (303) 465-2333 or email info@gelbvieh.org. “Smart Cross” is right for the industry and will bring profit to all segments,” says Schiefelbein. “The American Gelbvieh Asso ciation has always been at the leading edge of the beef industry when it comes to commercially focused programs. This is infor mation that will work for all beef producers.” E|H DiscwerMfcwer Call Leonard Martin 717-273-4544 Fax 717-273-5186