88-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 4, 2003 If you are looking for a recipe but can’t 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 a self-ad dressed stamped envelope. If we receive an answer to your question, we will publish it as soon as possible. Check your recipe to make sure you copy the right amounts and complete instructions for making the reci pe. Sometimes we receive numerous answers to the same request, but cannot print each one. Answers to recipe requests should be sent to the same address. You may also e-mail questions and answers to LGOOD.EPH@LNPNEWS.COM ANSWER Jenna Burns, Telford, is hoping to find a recipe for “Poor Man’s Fruit Cake,” which was a relative’s recipe that was lost. The only thing that she knows about it is that it has boiled white raisins and was baked in a tube pan. QUESTION R. Emerson, Gordonville, wants to know where to buy a black diamond water melon. QUESTION Mrs. Simon Yoder, Garrett, re quests a recipe for pickled green tomatoes with dill. QUESTION Joane Merkel writes that her husband wants a recipe to make elderberry wine. QUESTION Norma Breininger, New Tripoli, wants a recipe to make wet walnuts similar to those used in making ice cream sundaes. QUESTION - Pat Elligson-Millers, Md., Is looking for a recipe for cooked cabbage slaw in which the cabbage is chopped, cooked, drain ed, and tossed in a creamy yellow cooked sweet and sour dressing. QUESTION A Lancaster County reader wants recipes for cream of mushroom soup that tastes like Campbell’s condensed mush room soup. QUESTION Rita Oshman, Bloomsburg, would like the recipe for canned tomato juice cocktail that was published last year. She lost the recipe. QUESTION Luci Essig, Bernville, wants recipes to make trifles. QUESTION Peggy Chirico, Canadensis, wants a recipe to make pumpkin butter that tastes like the kind made by Baumans. QUESTION Ruth Klingler, Selinsgrove, re quests recipes for vegetable breads. QUESTION A steady reader wants a recipe for “snails,” such as the ones sold at The Pie Shoppe, Laughlintown. “Snails” are cookies made with pie dough and rolled in cinnamon and sugar. QUESTION A Fleetwood reader is looking for a recipe to duplicate a cake purchased at the outdoor Farmer’s Market, Coudersport. It is a yellow cake with an orange marmalade glaze made in a 4x7-inch pan. The vendor called it a “sitting cake” because once you started eating it, you could not stop until it was gone. “How true,” the reader reports. QUESTION Margaret Grieff, Sidman, wants Recipe Topics If you have recipes for topics listed below, please share them with us. We welcome your recipes, but that you include accurate measurements, a complete list of ingredients, and clear instructions with each recipe you submit. Be sure to include your name and address. Recipes should reach our office one week before the publishing date listed below. Send your recipes to Lou Ann Good, Lancaster Farming, P.O. Box 609, Ephrata, PA 17522. October 11 National Veal Month 18 Autumn Flavors 25 Pumpkin, Squash Recipes November 1 New Green On The Scene a recipe for fillings and dough to make “Hot Pockets.” QUESTION Brenda Martin, Reinholds, wants a recipe to make soy sauce. QUESTION Joyce Shoemaker, Mount Joy, wants a recipe for corn fries that taste like those served at Oregon Dairy Restaurant. She writes that the corn fries look like French fries. ANSWER Marion Capp wants recipes using cooked red cabbage. Thanks to Frances Homa, Alpha, N.J., for sending in the following recipe. Hot Red Cabbage 2 tablespoons salad oil 1 medium head red cabbage (4 cups shredded) 2 medium apples, chopped 2 cups hot water % cups vinegar 3 tablespoons sugar Vi teaspoon salt Heat oil and add remaining ingredients. Cook until the apples are tender. Makes six servings. ANSWER Esther Steinhauer, Clayton, Del., was looking for a recipe for quince jam and ad vice on how to process it. She also would like other good recipes using quinces. Thanks again to Frances Homa, Alpha, N.J., for sending in the recipe. 2 quinces 2 apples 2 quarts water 3 pounds sugar Grate quinces and apples and put them in water and sugar. Bring the mixture to a boil and continue boiling the liquid for a half hour. Pour into glass container. ANSWER Sylvia King, Lancaster, wanted rec ipes for cookies in a jar and also bars in a jar. Here are a few ideas from Rachel Click, New Holland. Oatmeal Raisin Cookie 1 cup flour 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon cinnamon Vi teaspoon nutmeg Vi teaspoon salt % cup brown sugar Vi cup sugar % cup raisins 2 cups oatmeal Combine the first five ingredients in a bowl and set aside. In a quart jar, layer sugar, rai sins, and oatmeal, packing well. Top with flour mixture. To use: 3 A cup butter 1 egg 1 teaspoon vanilla Cream butter, add mix, egg, and vanilla, and mix well. Bake at 350 degrees. White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Cookies I V* cups sugar Vz cup chopped macadamia nuts 3 (1.4 ounce) white crunch candy bars, coarsely chopped (press this layer firmly) 2 cups flour Vz teaspoon baking soda Vz teaspoon salt Layer ingredients in order, given in a one quart wide-mouth canning jar. Press each layer firmly in place before adding next ingredient. Baking instructions: Empty cookie mix into a large mixing bowl. Thoroughly blend mix. Add: Vz cup butter, softened 1 egg, slightly beaten 1 teaspoon vanilla Mix until completely blended. Dough be comes stiff; you will need to finish mixing with your hands to smooth dough. Shape into walnut-size balls. Place two inch es apart on sprayed baking sheets. Bake at 375 degrees 12 to 14 minutes until tops are very lightly browned. Cool five minutes Apple Harvest Festival Set For Adams County BIGLERVILLE (Adams Co.) This weekend and next, Oct. 4-5 and 11-12, the South Mountain Fair grounds, Arendtsville, will be alive with sights, scents, and sounds of the 39th National Apple Harvest Festival. The fairgrounds are tucked into the heart of apple country 10 miles northwest of historic Gettysburg. The National Apple Harvest Festival is sponsored by Upper Adams Jaycees. Admission: Adults $7; Senior Citi zens (62 and above) $6; Children under 12 are free. Park ing is included. Group rates and shuttle bus service are available. Pets are not allowed on festival grounds. For information, contact The National Apple Harvest Festival, P.O. Box 38, Biglerville, PA 17307, phone (717) 677-9413; fax (717) 677-4961; e-mail: applehar vest@cvn.net or www.appleharvest.com. Quince Honey on baking sheet. Remove cookies to racks to finish cooling. Makes 2Va dozen cookies. Sand Art Brownies Layer in quart jar: Vs teaspoon salt Va cup and Va cup flour Vs cup cocoa Va cup flour Vs cup brown sugar Vs granulated sugar Va cup chocolate chips Va cup vanilla chips Va cup chopped walnuts Put lid on top. Cover lid with fabric and rib bon. Attach the following note with the jar: Combine the contents of this jar with: 1 teaspoon vanilla Vs cup vegetable oil 3 eggs Pour batter into greased pan and bake at 350 degrees for 32 to 37 minutes in a 7XII-inch pan or 27-32 minutes in a 9X9-inch pan. Oatmeal Chip Cookie Mix In A Jar Vs cup all-purpose flour Va teaspoon baking soda Va teaspoon ground cinnamon Va teaspoon salt Vs cup packed brown sugar Vs cup granulated sugar % cup chocolate or butterscotch chips 1 Va cups quick or old-fashioned oats Va cup chopped nuts Combine flour, baking soda, cinnamon and salt in a small bowl. Place flour mixture in one quart jar. Layer remaining ingredients in order listed above, pressing firmly after each layer. Seal with lid. Attach following directions: Vfe cup softened butter 1 large egg Vz teaspoon vanilla Beat butter, egg, and vanilla in large mixing bowl until blended. Add cookie mix; mix well. Drop by rounded tablespoons unto ungreased baking sheets. Bake in preheated 375 degree oven for 8 to 10 minutes. Cool on baking sheets for 2 minutes; remove to wire rack. ANSWER Bea Johnson, Rising Sun, Md., writes that she remembers her grandmother making apple dumplings, but she did not use a whole cored apple. Instead, she peeled and sliced the apples to put them in the crust. Bea would like the recipe. Debbie Reynolds, Wrightsville, sent in a recipe that her husband attests is “the best.” Apple Dumplings Dough: 2 cups flour % cup butter-flavored vegetable shortening pinch salt 1 teaspoon sugar 5-6 tablespoons water until dough holds to gether Roll a portion of the dough on a floured sur face. Cut an area to the size dumplings you like. Core, peel, and slice apples and put as many slices as you like in the center. Dot with butter and sprinkle with a mixture of cinnamon and sugar. Fold up edges and seal with a dab of water. Sprinkle with more cinnamon and sugar. Carefully transfer to a cookie sheet. Bake at 350 degrees for approximately 40 minutes, until crust is golden. Eat warm or cold with vanilla milk. 1 glass milk 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 teaspoon sugar Fiber Recipes (Continued from Page B 6) Peel and cut yams into 'A-inch slices, and steam Ar range layer of yams on bottom of oiled, small baking dish. Dot with margarine. Top with layer of prunes. Al ternate layers until all is used. Blend the rest of the in gredients together and pour over potatoes and prunes Bake at 350 degrees for about 35 minutes. Makes 3 serv ings. BEAN BURRITOS 116-ounce can pinto beans 1 tablespoon oil 1 package (10) flour tortillas Vi cup chopped onions 1 cup grated American or Longhorn cheese Chopped lettuce Salsa or taco sauce Mash drained beans and heat in oil until hot. Simmer and stir over low heat until thick. Heat flour tortillas until warm and soft. Spread about 2 tablespoons of beans on the tortilla. Add cheese, onions, lettuce and salsa if desired. Fold one side of the tortilla un about JL inch, then roll. Makes 5 servings. one Vanilla Milk