Cookbook (Continued from Page B 2) 6-ounce can tomato paste 1 cup wine vinegar 2 tablespoons mustard 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce Vi cup packed brown sugar Onion salt to taste Several drops Tabasco sauce Dissolve the bouillon cubes in boiling water in a saucepan. Add the ketchup, tomato paste, wine vinegar, mustard, Worcestershire sauce, brown sugar, onion salt, and Tabasco sauce, and mix well. Bring to a boil and reduce the heat. Simmer until smooth. Yield: V/i quarts sauce. Dutch Goose 5 carrots, sliced 4 potatoes, cut into pieces 1 large onion, cut into pieces 2 large ribs celery, sliced 2 tablespoons butter 7-8 bread slices, torn 1 pound sausage 1 pint oysters and liquor 'A cup raisins 1 pig stomach 1 tablespoon butter Saffron to taste Parboil the carrots and pota toes in a small amount of water in a saucepan. Saute the onion and celery in 2 tablespoon butter in a skillet. Add the bread. Brown the sausage in a skillet, stirring until crumbly and drain. Com bine the carrots, potatoes, onion mixture, sausage, oysters, and raisins in a large bowl and mix well. Stuff into pig stomach. Rub with 1 tablespoon butter and saf fron. Place in a baking pan. Place any leftover stuffing around the stomach. Bake at 350 degrees for two hours. Yield: 4 servings. Showcases Chester County Bounty Linguine With 1 pound linguine, cooked, for 5 minutes. Add the clams. White Clam Sauce drained Cook until heated through. Do 2 (8-ounce) minced clams Sprigs fresh parsley ... . . ... 1 large onion, chopped Grated Parmesan cheese not 1)011 or the c,ams Wlll become 1 garlic clove, minced Drain the clams, reserving the tough. Arrange the pasta on a 3 tablespoons chopped fresh liquid. Saute the onion, garlic, warm serving platter. Pour the parsley and 3 tablespoons parsley in the clam sauce over the pasta. Gar- A cup olive oil o u ve 0 n in a saucepan until the . . ... . , Vi teaspoon salt onion is transparent. Season with P y '/< teaspoon pepper salt and pepper. Add the wine Serve with Parmesan cheese. 'A cup dry white wine (option- an( j reserve d c lam liquid. Simmer Yield: 6 servings, al) Joyce Hershey holds a copy of the 224-page hardcover cookbook she edited to show case the rich heritage of agriculture in Chester County. The recipes are divided into chapters featuring Chester County commodities, and includes historical photographs and narrative. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 21,2002-1 Pumpkin Rates A High Score LEESPORT (Berks Co.) Beta-carotene, the pre cursor to Vitamin A, and a substance efficiently con verted by the body to Vita min A, has been evaluated in many health studies. Beta-carotene is impor tant for good vision, healthy skin, a strong im mune system, and bone and tooth development. Although most dark, leafy green vegetables; red, yellow, and orange vege tables and fruits; and citrus fruits contain beta-caro tene, the richest fruit-vege table source is pumpkin. Cook your own pumpkin or use canned solid pack pumpkin. The amount of beta-carotene in Vi cup of pumpkin far exceeds the U.S. Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) and also offers 10 percent of the RDA pf potassium as well as some Vitamin C, iron, riboflavin, calcium, protein, phosphorus, and magne sium. One-half cup of freshly cooked pumpkin is only 25 calories; for solid pack pumpkin, 40 calories. Both contain very little so dium but are a source of di etary fiber. One-half cup of cooked pumpkin has 1.3 grams of fiber; solid pack pumpkin has 5 grams of fiber. ■b;