NOVEL BEAN DISH Prepare baked beans in your favorite manner, and during the last half hour of the baking period, add 1 cup sherry flavoring for each pound of beans used. Try them with small pieces of raw smoked ham rather than salt pork or bacon. ii BEANS LIKED BY ALL BAKED BEANS -are liked by all, so serve them more often. Keep a half dozen or more cans of different varieties of beans on your pantry shelf for emer- gencies, and occasionally make up a batch of old fashioned baked beans yourself, TEXAS BEAN PIE Ingredients: 32 pound kidney ‘beans, 1 pound diced or chopped round steak, 8 tablespoons shcrtening, 1 small onion, 1 clove garlic, 1 tablespoon chili po-vder, 1 tablespoon Worcester- shire sauce, 1 ¢an tomatoes, % cup cornmeal. f'aute steak in the shortening until brown, add the beans, which have been soaked over- ight, onion, garlic, chili, Wor- ceziershire sauce and salted er to cover. Simmer slowly i” il the beans are tender. Add 1 V U the tomatoes and cornmeal and ceck until thick, Turn the mix- tura into a shallow casserole. Sprinkle with grated cheese and Lalie until cheese is bubbly and brown. Serves 6. sorry. You can call him Da, Da if ‘you like.” “Dr. Stewart,” Mrs, Moore turned toward the doctor, “do vou think Elizabeth will be old enough at Thanksgiving time to be taken on quite a long trip?” “How long?” asked fhe doe- tor. . “Well,” replied Mrs. Moore, ‘we would have to drive about ':v® hundred miles. We would talg® it in easy stages.” ould I go?” broke in Hat- tiesAnn, ®Yes,” her mother replied “X iy i Su TOWN WEEKLY MAGAZINE SECTION hm TREAT YOUR FAMILY INEXPENSIVELY---WITH CHICKEN AT THIS time of year the price of poultry begins to take a sharp rise. The broiler has practically left the market and, except for the cold storage chickens which do not have the flavor of the fresh-killed poul- try, we can obtain only the fry- ing and roasting chicken, which is apt to be too expensive for family fare. However,” it is possible to serve chicken at the family dinner without too great ex- pense. Older chickens may be used, if cooked properly, and will be ‘enjoyed by all. The fol- lowing recipes, with the excep- tion of the Chicken Parisienne, which demands a roasting chick- en, are every bit as delicious when prepared with older or cold storage poultry. In buying, choose a chicken which is ‘plump breasted, with thighs, back and breast well covered: with fat, and all bones well covered with flesh. Avoid the chicken with long, bony body and long legs. A young chicken - should: have soft, smooth skin without blotches. by JUDITH WILSON CHICKEN PARISIENNE Ingredients: One 8% pound roasting chicken, 2 pounds fresh spinach, % pound small mush- rooms, 1 tablespoon minced onion, 1% cups cream, 1 cup light cream, 4 tablespoons but- ter, 3 tablespoons flour, % cup grated cheese, salt, pepper, paprika. Steam the chicken until ten- der and with a very sharp knife slice the breast and leg meat. Wash the spinach thoroughly and cook without adding water. Drain thoroughly. Peel the mushrooms and slice part of them, leaving a few small whole ones for garnishing. Saute the mushrooms and onion in butter. Make a sauce from the butter, flour, milk and cream. Season to taste. I like a dash of cay- enne, Pour a little of the sauce into shallow baking dish or individ- ual baking dishes and cover with CHICKEN A LA KING To make this delicious dish, warm 4 ounces sweet butter in a flat saucepan or chafing dish, into which cook for 2 minutes 1 ounce julienne of green pepper, adding 4 sliced mushrooms next and cooking for another 2 min- utes. Mix very well with 2 cups minced breast of fowl. Season. Add 1 dessert spoon flour, already dissolved and pour in 1 cup heavy cream. Let boil 2 minutes, stirring constantly. Off the fire add 1 egg yolk, mix well, season to taste. Serve. piping hot om crisp toast, EE EEE O11 PETER AND SUE Continued From Page 4 thought we might drive out to see Grandma.” “Oh, - boy!” Hattie-Ann clap- ped her hands in excitement. “Oh, boy! Way out to where Grandma Moore lives!” “But the baby—" Mrs. Moore again turned toward Dr. Stew= art. “If she’s perfectly well and eontinues to gain as she’s been gaining, and if you can plan the trip go it won’t be upsetting to her, I should think—oh, well,” he broke off, “that’s two months off. There is plenty of time te talk i over before then.” . EYE OPENER To prepare this dish, cat large juicy grapefruit in halves and remove the seeds. Then remove the sections of grapefruit with a sharp knife. Scoop out the membranes leaving the shell clean. Flute the edge or cut im notches. Refill with the grapefruit sec- tions, sweetened to taste. Chill thoroughly. Top with & maraschine cherry and serve as an appetizer er a8 @ breakfast fruits gome of the sauted mushrooms and onions, then the spinach, chopped fine. Reheat the chicke en slices in the remaining sauce, arrange over the spinach and garnish with the whole mushe room caps. Sprinkle with cheese and brown lightly under the broiler or in a very hot oven. Served with crusty rolls and sweet butter, this dish makes a whole meal. And perhaps you will have enough odds and ‘ends left over to make the followings CREAMY CHICKEN HASH Ingredients: 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons flour, % cup cream, % cup chicken stock (made from bones and scraps), 2 cups cooked chicken finely minced, ¥ teaspoon salt, pepper to taste, 2 eggs, 2 teaspoons sherry flavoring. Melt the butter, blend in the flour and add the chicken stock and cream, stirring constantly until the sauce is smooth and thickened. Add the chicken and season well with salt, pepper and cayenne if wanted. Pour the chicken mixture over the slighte ly beaten eggs and flavoring, Mix well. Pour into a shallow baking dish and pipe freshly mashed potatoes through a paste ry bag around the edge of the dish. 3 CHICKEN CELERY PATTIES Ingredients: 32 cup butter oe other shortening, % cup flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 cups diced cold chicken, 2 cups diced cooked celery, paprika and pepper to taste, 4 cups milk, 12 baked patty shelgs. Heat the shortening, blend in the flour and seasonings, then add the milk, stirring constante ly. When the sauce is smooth and thickened, add the chicken and celery and heat thoroughly. Serve in crisp patty shells, gare nished with sprigs of parsley or thin strips of pimiento. This makes a nice par’; dish. The proportions given will serve 12, CHICKEN STEW Cut chicken in pieces for serving. Add boiling water to cover partially, Cover kettle, *Cook slowly 2% hours. Season. Add 8 small onions and 6 medie um carrots and continue cooks ing until meat and vegetables are tender. Serve with a sauce made from the stock