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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Just-Wed Cook Book, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Just-Wed Cook Book
- A Present from The Merchants of Reno, Nevada
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: March 24, 2016 [EBook #51542]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE JUST-WED COOK BOOK ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Emmy, MWS and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- The
- Just-Wed
- Cook Book
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- _We may live without poetry, music and art;
- We may live without conscience, and live without hearts;
- We may live without friends, we may live without books;
- But civilized man cannot live without cooks._
- —_OWEN MEREDITH._
-
-
- _A Present_
- _from_
- _The Merchants of Reno, Nevada_
- _1917_
-
- * * * * *
-
-Nevada Credit Co.
-
-_The Leading Home Furnishers of the State_
-
-_WE ALWAYS SELL FOR LESS_
-
-_CASH or CREDIT_
-
-
- Everything in Furniture and Home Furnishings of Quality
- and Dependability.
-
- Give Us a Trial.
-
-[Illustration: GEO. PYATT
-
-Prop. and Gen. Mgr.]
-
- Homes Furnished Complete for Cash or Small Weekly or
- Monthly Payments.
-
- We Guarantee to Please.
-
-
-_We make a specialty in furnishing homes for Newlyweds._
-
- _Cor. Fourth and Virginia Sts._ _Reno, Nevada_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- The
- Just-Wed
- Cook Book
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- _THIS BOOK is presented free to the Bride and Groom,
- with the compliments of the advertisers therein, who
- make such presentation possible. We recommend them
- in their respective lines and they will accord you
- the fairest kind of treatment. Your patronage will be
- highly appreciated by them._
-
- _Look for the Directory with new recipes. It will be
- mailed you monthly, free._
-
-
-_Compiled by E. F. KIESSLING_
-
- _Published by
- The Just-Wed Cook Book Co.
- RENO, NEVADA_
-
- * * * * *
-
- Before }
- ——AND—— } Marriage
- After }
-
- _Let Quality Be Your Slogan_
- _As it is the Cheapest in the End_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This store specializes in QUALITY Merchandise
-
- _La Vogue Suits_
- _Gossard Corsets_
- _Mdmme. Mariette Corsets_
- _Radmoor Hosiery_
- _Waists_
- _Neckwear_
- _Etc._
-
-You will find our Prices as low, considering UNIQUE QUALITY will
-permit, Our Cash Basis enables us to offer unusual Values at all times.
-
- Phone
- 661
-
-[Illustration: Unique
-
-135 VIRGINIA STREET]
-
- Reno
- Nevada
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- Page.
-
- Bread, Muffins, Rolls, Fritters, Waffles, etc. 11 to 19
-
- Cakes 23 to 32
-
- Candy 94
-
- Eggs 82 to 84
-
- Fillings, Frostings, and Icings 33
-
- Fish 63 to 66
-
- Household Hints 98
-
- Ice Cream, Ices and Frozen Dainties 44
-
- Index to Advertisements 4
-
- Jams and Jellies 91 to 92
-
- Pickles and Spiced Fruits 89 to 90
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- Pies 40 to 42
-
- Puddings 34 to 38
-
- Poultry and Game 67 to 69
-
- Sauces for Puddings 39
-
- Sauces for Meats, etc. 80 to 81
-
- Salads 57 to 61
-
- Shellfish 66
-
- Soups 47 to 52
-
- Stuffings 70
-
- Title Page 1
-
- Vegetables 85 to 88
-
- Weights and Measures 96 to 100
-
- When to serve Beverages 21
-
-
-
-
-Index to Advertisers
-
-
- A
- Alpine Winery 20
- Family Wines.
-
- Anderson’s 8
- Turkish Baths.
-
-
- B
- Barnes Bros. 7
- Groceries, Delicatessen, etc.
-
- Barker’s Bakery 54
- Bakery Goods.
-
- Becker’s 46
- The Popular Family Cafe.
-
- Bonham Realty and Trust Co. Inside Back Cover
- High Class Real Estate.
-
- Booth’s Studio 6
- Kodak Finishing.
-
-
- C
- California Market 73
- Choice Meats, Poultry, etc.
-
- Chism’s Ice Cream Bottom of Pages
-
- Commercial Hardware Co. Back Cover
- Stoves, Kitchen Utensils, etc.
-
- Crescent Creamery 56
- Blue Ribbon Butter.
-
-
- E
- Elderkin—“The Piano Shop” 22
- Expert Piano Tuning.
-
- Eagle Express 54
- Quick Service.
-
-
- F
- French Dyers and Cleaners 26
-
-
- G
- Gilcrease Co. 95
- Maxwell Car.
-
- Goldstein, S. 101
- Ladies’ Tailor and Furrier.
-
-
- J
- Jersey Farm Milk Co. 98
- Pasteurized Milk and Cream.
-
-
- K
- Kwong Chung Co. 93
- Chinese Merchant.
-
-
- L
- Lewis & Lukey 97
- Gents’ Furnishings.
-
- Lincoln Garage 45
- Chalmers Car.
-
-
- M
- Meacham’s American Grocery Co. 53
- Groceries, Coffees, Teas, Spices, etc.
-
- Motor Aid 102
- Cyclery and Repairing.
-
- Murray, J. J. 8
- Sign and Pictorial Painter.
-
- Mutual Creamery 43
- Blanchard Ice Cream.
-
-
- N
- Nevada Credit Co. Inside Front Cover
- Home Furnishers.
-
- Nevada Imp. and Supply Co. 101
- Farm Implements, etc.
-
- Nevada Press 22
- Printers.
-
- Nevada Tea Store 58
- Coffees, Teas, Spices, etc.
-
- Nevada Transfer Co. 51
- Hauling, Packing, Storage, etc.
-
-
- P
- Paige Car 55
- The Real Car.
-
- Palace Dry Goods House 35
- Reno’s Big Modern Store.
-
- Palace Postal Card House 98
-
- Parker’s Harp Orchestra 6
- Music for all occasions.
-
- Peoples’ Fish Market 62
- All kinds of Fresh Fish.
-
- Pesce, Emilio C. Center of Pages
- Jeweler and Watchmaker.
-
- Petritsch, Dr. J. F. 6
- Specialist.
-
-
- R
- Reno Brewing Co. 48-49
- Sierra and Royal Beers.
-
- Reno Drug Co. 5
- Drugs and Prescriptions.
-
- Reno News Co. 9
- Newspapers and Stationery.
-
- Riverside Mill Co. 10
- Flour and Cereal Products.
-
- Rock Springs Coal Yards 36
- Coal and Wood for Fuel.
-
-
- S
- Saturno Hotel 93
- Choice Apartments.
-
- Semenza & Co. 9
- Groceries, Wines, Liquors, etc.
-
- Sierra Vulcanizing Works 93
-
- Smitten, Dr. George M. 98
- Dentist.
-
- Stever, Chas. 54
- Sporting Goods, etc.
-
-
- U
- Unique Store 2
- Ladies’ Suits, Gowns, Millinery, etc.
-
-
- W
- Western Music Co. Bottom of Pages
- Kimball and Player Pianos.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Reno Drug Co._
-
-_Corner 2nd and Center Streets_
-
-_Nevada’s Most Modern Pharmacy_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_Prescriptions a Specialty_
-
-_For Prompt Delivery Phone 310_
-
- * * * * *
-
- Hours 9-12 A. M. Phone 523
- 2-5 and 6-8 P. M. Res. 1383-W
- Sunday by Appointment
-
-Dr. J. F. Petritsch
-
- Special Attention Given to
- Nerve, Spine and Chronic Diseases
-
- Rooms 4-5, Thoma Bigelow Bldg. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-Parker’s Harp Orchestra
-
-_Music for All Occasions_
-
- _E. EARL PARKER,
- Director_
-
- _Expert Piano Tuning_
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _P. O. Box
- 267_
-
- _Phone
- 942 J_
-
- * * * * *
-
-Booth Studio
-
-L. T. BOOTH, Manager
-
-KODAK DEVELOPING AND FINISHING EXCLUSIVELY
-
- Your Photo on Post Cards 4 for 50c
-
- Bring or Send Your Films Prints Ready Following Day
-
- Room 10, Byington Bldg. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-If You Wish to
-
-BE HAPPY
-
-Save Money on Your
-
-GROCERIES
-
-DELICATESSEN
-
- Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
- Home-Made Bread, Pies,
- Cakes and Pastry
- Fresh Butter and Eggs
-
- We Specialize in
- DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED TEAS, COFFEE, SPICES AND
- EXTRACTS
-
-The BEST 30c Coffee in Town
-
-ALL LEADING BRANDS OF COCOA AND CHOCOLATE
-
- BARNES BROTHERS
- GROCERS
-
- PHONE 274
- 141-143 North Virginia Street RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: MURRAY’S SIGNS ARE CLASSY SIGNS]
-
-J. J. Murray
-
-The Old Reliable Sign and Pictorial Painter
-
- Gold Leaf
- Silver Leaf
- Silk Banners
- Cloth and Board
- Electric
-
-SIGNS
-
-In Fact All Kinds of Signs
-
-Window Cards a Specialty
-
- Studio 234 Sierra St. Phone 1162-J
- RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-Anderson’s Turkish Baths
-
-SWEDISH MASSAGE
-
- Separate Departments for Ladies and Gentlemen
- Lady and Gentlemen Attendants
- Graduate Nurses
-
-Phone 1107-W for Appointments
-
- Equipped With the Gardner Reducing Machine
- Thoma Bigelow Bldg. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-Reno News Company
-
-Headquarters for All
-
-Eastern and Western Papers
-
-Complete Line of Periodicals, Stationery and Notions
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Agents for Oliver Typewriters and Supplies
-
- 36 West Second Street Phone 492
- RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-Semenza & Company
-
-Groceries, Hardware, Fruits Vegetables
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Liquors and Cigars
-
-[Illustration]
-
-IMPORTED GOODS A SPECIALTY
-
-A Trial Order is All We Ask
-
- Phone 230 25-27 East Second Street
- RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-GOLD MEDAL FLOUR
-
-COSTS LESS -:- WORTH MORE
-
-[Illustration: RIVERSIDE MILLS BEST Patent GOLD MEDAL No. 1 HARD WHEAT
-RIVERSIDE MILL CO. RENO, NEVADA. GOLD MEDAL]
-
-Sold with a money back guarantee.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Full Weight
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Sagebrush Sodas are just right.
-
-[Illustration: Sagebrush Sodas]
-
-Riverside Mill Co.
-
-Reno, Nevada
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-BREAD,
-
-MUFFINS, ROLLS, WAFFLES, FRITTERS, ETC.
-
-
-WARNING
-
-The making of bread is, to a large degree, a chemical operation, and
-should be carried on with as much accuracy as a chemist would use in
-his laboratory. The flour should be weighed or measured. The other
-ingredients should also be weighed or measured accurately.
-
-Temperature is a particularly important factor in making good bread.
-=Do not let sponge or dough get chilled.=
-
-When potatoes are used, be sure that they are sound, white and mealy,
-and in the fall, when the new crop is on the market, be careful that
-the potatoes are fully ripe. More failures in bread making are due to
-the use of potatoes which are thought to be ripe, but which are not
-fully matured, than any other one thing.
-
-In making cake, a difference may be noted if the eggs are large or
-small, if small use either more eggs or more water or milk.
-
-
-RECIPE FOR BREAD
-
-(University of Nevada Method)
-
-Warm Gold Medal Flour in oven.
-
- 2 cups milk, scalded,
- 2 cups potato water,
- 2 medium potatoes, mashed very fine,
- 1 cake Fleishmann’s compressed yeast in ½ cup luke warm water,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- 1 tablespoonful sugar,
- 1 teaspoonful lard.
-
-Add Gold Medal flour until mixture has appearance of cake batter; beat
-with wooden spoon until very light. Let stand.
-
-Add Gold Medal flour and knead until smooth, brush butter over top of
-dough, cover and let raise to twice original size.
-
-Mould into loaves and let raise twenty minutes.
-
-Put in very hot oven for ten minutes, then bake in slow oven forty-five
-minutes.
-
-
-WHITE BREAD
-
-Quick Method
-
- 1 quart Gold Medal Flour sifted,
- 1 cup or ½ pint milk or water,
- 1 cake compressed yeast,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- 2 teaspoonfuls sugar,
- 1 tablespoonful melted butter.
-
-Dissolve yeast by breaking into a cup and adding 1 teaspoon sugar, mix
-and let it stand 3 minutes. Sift flour in a bowl, make well in center,
-and add water, salt, sugar, butter and yeast, mix and knead well, put
-in a warm place to raise 1½ hours, or until light. Turn out on molding
-board, knead lightly, shape into loaves, put in well buttered pans, let
-raise ¾ hour. Bake 45 minutes.
-
-
-BREAD
-
-Cook 2 medium sized potatoes in 1 quart water. Use the water. Must be
-1 quart to scald 1 teacup Gold Medal flour. Mash potatoes and add to
-the flour, using more flour if necessary. Soak 1 cake of yeast in a
-cup of warm water. When this is cold, stir into the mixture already
-prepared. Let it stand over night, stirring occasionally. Set in a warm
-place. Next morning add 1 heaping teaspoonful of lard, 2 of sugar and 1
-teaspoonful of salt. If necessary ½ teaspoonful of soda. Stir in flour
-until proper consistency; knead hard. Put to rise and knead lightly the
-second time; put in pans to rise again. Bake in a moderate oven. This
-also makes nice light rolls.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-ROYAL BEER
-
-If purchased by the Wife will keep Husband Home.
-
-RENO BREWING CO.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-WHOLE WHEAT BREAD
-
- 1 pint milk,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- 1 pint water,
- ½ cup sugar,
- 1 compressed yeast cake.
-
-Scald the milk and add the water. When luke warm add salt, sugar, yeast
-cake (dissolved in 2 tablespoons water) and sufficient Gold Medal
-Whole Wheat flour to make a batter that will drop from the spoon. Beat
-continuously for 5 minutes. Cover and let stand in a warm place for 3
-hours; then add sufficient Whole Wheat flour to make a dough. Knead at
-once into loaves. Put in small greased pans, cover and stand in warm
-place for an hour. Bake in a moderately quick oven 45 minutes.
-
-
-GRAHAM BREAD
-
- 2 quarts Gold Medal Graham Flour,
- 2 cups potato water,
- 1 yeast cake,
- 1 quart Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 tablespoonful salt,
- 1 small cup molasses or sugar,
- 1 tablespoonful melted lard.
-
-Dissolve yeast cake in lukewarm water. Mix all ingredients into as
-stiff a dough as can be stirred with a spoon, adding lukewarm water to
-make it the proper consistency. Let it stand over night. In the morning
-stir it down with a spoon thoroughly. Have bread tins greased. Fill
-each one about ½ full and let rise to the top of the pans. Bake in
-moderate oven 1 hour for good-sized loaves.
-
-
-RYE BREAD
-
- 1 pint milk,
- 1 pint water,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- 1 compressed yeast cake.
-
-Scald the milk, add the water and salt, and when the mixture is
-luke-warm add the yeast, moistened in two tablespoons warm water. Add
-sufficient Rye Flour to make a batter, and beat thoroughly for ten
-minutes. Cover and stand in a warm place for 2½ hours. Knead this dough
-quickly until it loses its stickiness. Divide it into three or four
-loaves, put each loaf in a square pan; cover and stand for an hour in
-the same warm place, about 75 Fahr., until it has doubled in bulk,
-brush the top quickly with warm water and put it in a hot oven. When
-brown, reduce the heat and bake ¾ of an hour. Turn each loaf from the
-pan; stand on a board covered with a cloth but do not cover the loaves.
-It is better to tip the board so that the air may circulate around the
-entire loaf. This makes a nice crisp crust.
-
-
-MUFFINS
-
-Break 2 eggs in a dish, salt them, and add 2 cups sweet milk, 2 cups
-flour, piece butter half the size of an egg melted. Leave in lumps
-after stirring and bake in hot iron gem pans.
-
-
-ROLLS
-
-To 1 pint bread sponge add ½ cup water, 1 egg, ¼ cup butter, rubbing
-butter and sugar together. Let rise after mixing; roll out; rise again
-and bake.
-
-
-TEA ROLLS
-
-One cup scalded milk, ¼ cup sugar, 1 teaspoonful salt, ¼ cup melted
-butter, 2 eggs, 1 cake yeast foam dissolved in ¼ cup luke-warm water,
-1 pinch nutmeg, 3½ cups flour. When the milk is luke-warm add 2 cups
-flour, beat well and add the dissolved yeast foam. Let rise, then add
-the butter, sugar, salt, nutmeg and the well-beaten eggs. To this add
-enough of your flour to make a soft dough. Knead well and let rise in a
-warm place. Shape into small rolls. Put into a buttered pan, let rise,
-and bake in a brisk oven for 15 minutes.
-
-
-RAISIN BREAD
-
-Dissolve a tablespoon each of butter and lard in a cup of hot milk
-then add a cup of either cold water or milk to the hot milk to make
-lukewarm. Sift a quart of Gold Medal Flour with one teaspoon of salt,
-three tablespoons of sugar, make a hole in center of flour and stir in
-half a cake of compressed yeast, which has been dissolved in a little
-lukewarm water; add part of your milk, stirring in the flour, then
-break in one or two eggs and the rest of the milk; beat up the dough
-lightly, which must be a stiff batter. Let it raise all night in a warm
-place and well covered. In the morning add a cupful each of raisins and
-currants, two tablespoons of sugar and either some nutmeg or caraway
-seeds or lemon peel. Make into two loaves, working very little; let
-rise very light and bake three-quarters of an hour.
-
-
-NUT BREAD
-
- 1 egg,
- ½ cup milk,
- 4 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 cup chopped nuts,
- 1 cup sugar,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- 4 tablespoonfuls baking powder,
- 1 cup chopped raisins.
-
-Beat eggs and sugar and stir in the milk. Have the flour, salt and
-baking powder sifted and pour into it the milk mixture, adding the nuts
-and raisins. Form into loaves when kneaded smooth, put in deep, well
-greased pans, let raise twenty minutes in a warm place and bake forty
-to fifty minutes.
-
-Either the nuts or the raisins may be omitted.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-NUT BREAD
-
- 1 cup milk,
- 1 dissolved yeast cake,
- 1½ quarts Whole Wheat Flour,
- 1 cup boiling water,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- 1 quart coarsely chopped walnuts,
- 2 tablespoonfuls molasses.
-
-When milk and water are lukewarm add yeast cake (dissolved in ¼ cup
-water), salt and flour. Beat. Let rise to double the size, then add the
-walnuts and molasses. Put in pan and let rise double.
-
-
-HOMEMADE PRIZE RAISIN BREAD
-
-Make a sponge of 1 cake of compressed yeast with 1 tablespoonful sugar
-dissolved in ½ cup lukewarm water. To 1 cup of scalded milk add 1 cup
-of hot water and when lukewarm add the yeast and 2 cups white flour
-and beat for five minutes. Let rise until very light. Then add 3
-tablespoonfuls each of sugar and Crisco creamed together, 1 teaspoonful
-salt and 1½ cups Seeded Raisins cut in halves. Stir in flour until
-stiff, then knead until dough is smooth and elastic, using 6 to 8 cups
-of Gold Medal Flour. Cover to let rise and when light, double in bulk,
-mould into loaves, and when again light bake about one hour.
-
-
-FRUIT AND NUT ROLLS
-
-Sift together 2 cups Gold Medal Flour, ½ teaspoonful salt and 3
-teaspoonfuls baking powder. Work 3 or 4 tablespoonfuls butter into
-flour and add about ¾ cup milk to make soft dough. Knead lightly and
-roll out thin into oblong sheet. Brush dough with 2 tablespoonfuls
-melted butter; sprinkle over with 2 tablespoonfuls sugar, ¾ teaspoonful
-cinnamon, ½ cup chopped nuts and ½ cup finely cut Seeded Raisins. Roll
-up snugly, cut off half-inch slices and lay cut side up on buttered and
-floured baking sheet. Let stand ten minutes, then bake in hot oven.
-
- * * * * *
-
-SIERRA BEER FOR HEALTH—Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-FRENCH ROLLS
-
-Made by rolling dough between the hands into small oval shapes about
-a finger long, tapering at each end, and put together in pairs; or
-rolling into egg-shaped pieces and cutting them half through the
-middle. Another shape is first a ball, then cut it half through each
-way, top to bottom, and right to left. Long rolls are shaped and cut
-across in slanting cuts; or the whole mass of dough is rolled under the
-hand and made into a large ring, pinching the ends together; then cut
-half way through, two inches apart, with a pair of scissors. A knife
-dipped in melted Cottolene keeps these cuts from coming together.
-
-
-WHOLE WHEAT GEMS
-
-Mix with 2 cups of Gold Medal Whole Wheat Flour 1 tablespoonful sugar,
-½ teaspoonful salt, 1 cup milk, well beaten yolks of two eggs, one cup
-water. Into this mixture add the beaten whites of the two eggs. Bake in
-hissing hot gem pans thirty minutes.
-
-
-GENUINE PARKER HOUSE ROLLS
-
- 3 tablespoonfuls butter,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- ½ cup lukewarm water,
- 1 yeast cake,
- 2 cups fresh milk,
- 1 tablespoonful sugar,
- Whites two eggs,
- 6 cups Gold Medal Flour.
-
-Scald the milk and add to it the sugar, salt and butter. Let it stand
-until lukewarm then add three cups of flour and beat for five minutes.
-Add the dissolved yeast cake and let it stand until very light and
-frothy; then the remaining flour. Let it rise again until it is twice
-its original bulk, place on your molding board, knead lightly and roll
-into a sheet half an inch thick. Take a large biscuit cutter and cut
-the dough into rounds, brush with melted butter, fold over and press
-the edges together. Place in a buttered pan one inch apart. Let them
-rise until very light and bake in a hot oven 15 minutes.
-
-
-BOSTON MUFFINS
-
- 1½ pints Gold Medal Flour,
- ½ pint Corn Meal,
- 1 tablespoonful sugar,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 1 tablespoonful butter,
- 3 eggs,
- 1 pint (full measure) milk,
- 1 teaspoonful extract cinnamon (which may be omitted without detriment).
-
-Sift together Gold Medal Flour, corn meal, sugar, salt, and powder; rub
-in butter or lard; add eggs, beaten, milk, and extract cinnamon. Mix
-into batter a little stiffer than ordinary griddle-cake batter. Have
-griddle heated regularly all over; grease it, lay on it muffin-rings,
-also greased; half fill them with batter. As soon as risen to tops
-of rings, turn them over gently with cake-turner; bake nice brown on
-either side. They should bake in 7 or 8 minutes.
-
-
-POP-OVER ROLLS
-
- 3 eggs,
- 9 ounces Gold Medal Flour,
- Little salt,
- 1 pint milk.
-
-Put the eggs, salt and flour into a bowl; mix in the milk and pour into
-deep moulds. The moulds must be 2 inches high. Fill half full and bake
-in a hot oven 25 minutes.
-
- * * * * *
-
- HARMONY IN THE HOME
- THAT HAS A PIANO
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-ENGLISH MUFFINS
-
- 1 quart Gold Medal Flour,
- ½ teaspoonful sugar,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- 2 large teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 1¼ pints milk.
-
-Sift together Gold Medal Flour, sugar, salt, and powder; add milk,
-and mix into smooth batter trifle stiffer than for griddle cakes.
-Have griddle heated regularly all over, grease it, and lay on muffin
-rings; half fill them, and when risen well up to top of rings, turn
-over gently with cake-turner. They should not be too brown—just a buff
-color. When all cooked, pull each open in half, toast delicately,
-butter well, serve on folded napkin, piled high and very hot.
-
-
-RICE MUFFINS
-
- 2 cups cold boiled rice,
- 1 pint Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- 1 tablespoonful sugar,
- 1½ teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- ½ pint milk,
- 3 eggs.
-
-Dilute rice, made free from lumps, with milk and beaten eggs; sift
-together Gold Medal Flour, sugar, salt, and powder; add to rice
-preparation, mix into smooth, rather firm batter; muffin-pans to be
-cold and well greased, then fill ⅔; bake in hot oven 15 minutes. One
-cup cold boiled hominy may be substituted for rice.
-
-
-SOFT WAFFLES
-
- 1 quart Gold Medal Flour,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- 1 teaspoonful sugar,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 1 large tablespoonful butter,
- 2 eggs,
- 1½ pints milk.
-
-Sift together Gold Medal Flour, salt, sugar and powder; rub in butter
-cold; add beaten eggs and milk; mix into smooth, consistent batter that
-will run easily and limpid from mouth of pitcher. Have waffle-iron hot
-and carefully greased each time; fill 2-3, close it up; when brown turn
-over. Sift sugar on them, serve hot.
-
-
-RICE WAFFLES
-
-Into a batter as directed for soft waffles stir 1 cup of rice, free
-from lumps; cook as directed in same recipe.
-
-
-VIRGINIA WAFFLES
-
-Cook ½ cup white Corn Meal in 1½ cups boiling water 30 minutes, adding
-1½ teaspoonfuls salt. Add 1½ cups milk, 2 tablespoonfuls sugar, 2
-tablespoonfuls melted butter, 2 cups Gold Medal Flour mixed with 2
-heaping teaspoonfuls baking powder, and 2 eggs, whites and yolks beaten
-separately. Cook in hot, well-greased waffle-iron.
-
-
-GERMAN WAFFLES
-
- 1 quart Gold Medal Flour,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- 3 tablespoonfuls sugar,
- 2 large teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 2 tablespoonfuls lard,
- Rind of 1 lemon, grated,
- 1 teaspoonful extract of cinnamon,
- 4 eggs,
- 1 pint thin cream.
-
-Sift together Gold Medal Flour, sugar, salt, and powder; rub in lard
-cold; add beaten eggs, lemon rind, extract, and milk. Mix into smooth,
-rather thick batter. Bake in hot waffle-iron, serve with sugar flavored
-with extract of lemon.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER Small Percentage of Alcohol,
- Large Percentage of Extracts
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-SWEET MUFFINS
-
- 1 cup sugar,
- 1 egg,
- 1 tablespoonful melted butter,
- 1 pint sweet milk,
- 3 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 1 teaspoonful salt.
-
-Mix and sift dry ingredients; add milk and beaten egg and butter. Beat
-hard, bake in greased muffin-pans.
-
-
-CORN BREAD
-
- 2 tablespoonfuls melted lard,
- 1 tablespoonful sugar,
- 2 eggs,
- 1 pint sour milk,
- Corn Meal for stiff batter,
- 1 teaspoonful baking powder,
- 1 tablespoonful Gold Medal Flour.
-
-Mix together milk, beaten eggs and sugar; stir these into the flour
-and corn meal; then add melted lard. Dissolve the soda in a few drops
-of boiling water; add it and beat hard for several minutes. Have
-ready heated greased dripping pans; pour in the batter and bake in a
-moderately quick oven from 20 to 30 minutes.
-
-
-CORN BREAD
-
- 1 egg,
- Pinch of salt,
- 1 tablespoonful sugar (oval),
- 1 cup sour milk,
- 1 tablespoonful Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 tablespoonful melted butter,
- 1 teaspoonful soda.
-
-Beat egg well, add salt, sugar, Gold Medal Flour, stir in melted
-butter and add soda to sour milk. While foaming pour into the other
-ingredients and stir in enough corn meal to make batter grainy. Turn
-into hot buttered pans and bake twenty minutes.
-
-
-JOKERS
-
- 1½ cups Graham Flour,
- 2 teaspoonfuls yeast powder,
- 1½ cups Gold Medal Flour,
- Pinch of salt.
-
-Milk enough to make a stiffer batter than muffins. Put in last, 2 eggs,
-well beaten. Bake in quick oven.
-
-
-TEA GEMS
-
- 1 pint milk,
- 4 eggs,
- 2 cups Corn Meal,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 1 cupful Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 tablespoonful butter.
-
-Separate the eggs; beat the yolks and add the milk, salt and butter
-(melted). Add the corn meal, baking powder and flour sifted together.
-Beat rapidly for about two minutes. Then fold in the well-beaten
-whites of the eggs and bake in greased gem pans in a quick oven for a
-half-hour.
-
-
-ENGLISH BUNS
-
- 1 quart Gold Medal Flour,
- 4 eggs,
- ½ cup butter,
- 1½ cakes compressed yeast,
- ½ cup lukewarm water,
- 5 tablespoonfuls sugar,
- ½ cup nut meats,
- ½ cup chopped raisins.
-
-Pour flour in bowl, break eggs in whole, add butter (melted), yeast
-which has been dissolved by breaking into a cup and mixing with 1
-tablespoonful sugar, lukewarm water. Stir until all are mixed, beat
-well, put in warm place to rise 1½ hours. Then sprinkle sugar, fruit
-and nuts over top, mix very lightly with spoon. Drop into well buttered
-gem pans, let rise one-half hour. Bake 25 minutes.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
- START RIGHT
- BUY A PIANO
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-TEA BISCUITS
-
-Sift one quart of Gold Medal Flour with one teaspoonful of salt and
-4 rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Into this rub 1 large
-tablespoonful of Califene until it is of the consistency of cornmeal.
-Then add just enough sweet milk to make a dough easily handled. Roll
-out ½ inch thick, place in greased pan and bake for about fifteen
-minutes in a very hot oven.
-
-
-CREAM BISCUIT (Baking Powder)
-
-Sift together one pint of Gold Medal Pastry Flour, three teaspoonfuls
-of baking powder, and half a spoonful of salt. Moisten with cream
-as soft as can be handled. Roll out on a well floured board, cut in
-small biscuits and place in a pan, brushing over with melted butter
-or cream before baking. Have oven very hot, and bake ten or fifteen
-minutes, according to size. For milk biscuits use two tablespoonfuls of
-Cottolene to shorten. Mixture like this made softer and baked in gem
-pans gives an easy and satisfactory drop biscuit.
-
-
-OLD-FASHIONED GINGER BREAD
-
- 4 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 cup sugar,
- 1 teaspoonful ginger,
- 1 teaspoonful cinnamon,
- 1 teaspoonful soda,
- ¾ cup molasses,
- 2 eggs,
- 1 cup milk,
- ¾ cup of oiled butter.
-
-Mix dry ingredients and add molasses, milk, eggs and melted butter.
-Beat smooth and bake in a sheet for about one hour.
-
-
-MILK BREAD
-
- 1 pint milk, scalded and cooled,
- 1 tablespoonful sugar,
- ½ cup yeast,
- 1 tablespoonful butter melted in hot milk,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- 6 or 7 cups Gold Medal Flour.
-
-Measure the milk after scalding and put in the mixing bowl; add the
-butter, sugar and salt; when cool add the yeast, then stir in the
-flour, adding it gradually; knead till smooth and elastic. Cover, let
-it rise till light; cut it down; divide into four parts; shape into
-loaves or biscuit; let it rise in the pans. Bake 40 to 50 minutes.
-
-
-WATER BREAD
-
- 2 quarts sifted Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- 1 tablespoonful sugar,
- ½ cup liquid yeast, or
- 1 cake compressed yeast dissolved in ½ cup water,
- 1 pint lukewarm water,
- 1 tablespoonful butter, or drippings, or lard.
-
-Sift the flour and fill the measure lightly, not heaping, nor shaken
-down. Turn it into a large bowl holding about 4 quarts. Reserve 1
-cup flour to add at the last if needed, and to use on the board. Mix
-the salt and sugar with the flour; rub in the shortening until fine,
-like meal. Mix the yeast with the water. If compressed yeast be used,
-dissolve ¼ of a cake in half a cup of water. This is in addition to
-the pint of water to be used in mixing. Pour the liquid mixture into
-the center of the flour, mixing it well with a broad knife or a strong
-spoon. Knead it half an hour, or till smooth and fine grained. Cover
-and let it rise until it doubles its bulk. Cut it down; let it rise
-again; divide into four parts, then shape into loaves putting 2 in each
-pan, or reserve some for biscuit. Cover and let it rise again to the
-top of the pan. Bake in a hot oven nearly an hour.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-SIERRA BEER Closer to a Temperance Drink Than Any Other Beer. Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-BUCKWHEAT CAKES
-
- Do You Like ’Em?
- Well, I Guess!
- Who Don’t?
-
-Listen—This is the real thing. “Like Mother Made.” Remember?
-
- 1 cup Self-Rising Buckwheat and Wheat Flour Mixture,
- 1½ cups milk,
- 1 tablespoonful syrup.
-
-Grease pan with half lard and butter. Serve quickly on hot plate.
-
-
-GENERAL GRIDDLE CAKES
-
-One cup and cold cooked cereal, mash fine to free from lumps, add 1
-beaten egg, yolk and white separate, ½ teaspoonful baking powder, beat
-thoroughly. Drop by spoonfuls on hot griddle and serve, when brown,
-with syrup.
-
-
-GRIDDLE CORN CAKES
-
- 2 cups Yellow or White Corn Meal,
- Boiling water,
- 1 egg beaten,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- 1 tablespoonful sugar,
- Cold milk.
-
-Add salt to corn meal, pour on boiling water to form a thick drop
-batter; add maple syrup and sufficient cold milk to make a thick pour
-batter. Drop by tablespoonfuls on a well-greased hot griddle and cook
-as griddle cakes. Serve immediately.
-
-
-GRIDDLE CAKES WITH EGGS
-
- 3 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 1 teaspoonful salt.
-
-Mix well together, add 2 well-beaten eggs and sufficient sweet milk to
-make a thin drop batter. Bake at once on a hot, well-greased griddle.
-Make them thin.
-
-
-GENEVA GRIDDLE CAKES
-
- 1½ pints Gold Medal Flour,
- 4 tablespoonfuls sugar,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- 1½ teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 2 tablespoonfuls butter,
- 4 eggs,
- Nearly ½ pint milk.
-
-Rub butter and sugar to white, light cream; add yolks of eggs, 1 at a
-time. Sift Gold Medal Flour, salt, and powder together; add to butter,
-etc., with milk and egg whites whipped to dry froth; mix together into
-a smooth batter. Bake in small cakes; as soon as brown, turn and brown
-the other side. Have buttered baking-tin; fast as browned, lay them on
-it, and spread raspberry jam over them; then bake more, which lay on
-others already done. Repeat this until you have used jam twice, then
-bake another batch, which use to cover them. Sift sugar plentifully
-over them, place in a moderate oven to finish cooking.
-
-
-CINNAMON BUNS
-
-Scald a pint of milk; add a quarter pound of butter, 2 tablespoonfuls
-of sugar and 1 yeast cake, dissolved; add 2 eggs, well beaten, and
-sufficient Gold Medal Flour to make a soft dough. Knead lightly; put
-aside in a warm place. When very light roll into a sheet; spread with
-butter and dust with sugar and then with currants. Cut into buns. Stand
-them in a greased pan, and when very light bake in a moderate oven
-three-quarters of an hour.
-
-
-QUICK COFFEE CAKE
-
-Sift together twice, 1 pint of Gold Medal Flour, ⅓ cup of sugar, 3
-teaspoonfuls of baking powder and ½ teaspoonful each of salt and ground
-cinnamon. Mix to a soft dough with about half a cup of milk stirred
-into a well beaten egg. Add 3 tablespoonfuls of melted Cottolene,
-spread in a shallow pan, sprinkle with sugar mixed with cinnamon, and
-bake in a moderate oven.
-
-
-BRAN OR GRAHAM BREAD
-
- 1 pint Gold Medal Flour sifted,
- ¾ pint bran or graham flour,
- 1 cup lukewarm water,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- 2 teaspoonfuls sugar,
- 1 tablespoonful melted butter,
- 1 cake compressed yeast.
-
-Dissolve yeast by breaking into a cup and adding 1 teaspoonful sugar,
-let stand 3 minutes. Sift flour into a bowl, add graham flour or
-bran, make well in center; add salt, sugar, butter, water, yeast. Mix
-and knead well, put in warm place to rise 1½ hours, or until light.
-Turn on moulding board, knead lightly, shape into loaves, put in a
-well-buttered pan, let rise ¾ hour. Bake 45 minutes.
-
-
-CORN FRITTERS
-
-To 1 pint scraped corn add ½ cup milk, ½ cup Gold Medal Flour, 1
-tablespoonful melted butter, 2 beaten eggs, 1 teaspoonful salt, ⅓
-teaspoonful pepper, 1 teaspoonful baking powder. Beat well, and fry in
-small spoonfuls as directed.
-
-
-CLAM FRITTERS
-
-Wash and dry 25 good-sized clams or 2 strings soft-shell clams,
-discarding black part. Chop fine. Make a plain fritter batter, using
-the clam liquor (or that and milk) in place of milk. Stir in the
-chopped clams, season well with salt and pepper, and fry as directed.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-HOMINY FRITTERS
-
- 2 cups hominy (boiled),
- 2 eggs well beaten,
- ½ level teaspoonful salt,
- ½ cup milk,
- ½ cup Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 teaspoonful baking powder.
-
-Cook all the above in a double boiler; pour out in biscuit tin and
-allow to cool. Cut and fry in deep fat. Good with wild game.
-
-
-FRITTER BATTER
-
- 2 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 egg,
- ½ level teaspoonful salt,
- 1 cup milk.
-
- (For frying fish, vegetables or fruits)
-
-Mix the above to a smooth batter and coat the article for frying; if
-for fruit add a little sugar.
-
-
-FRUIT FRITTERS
-
-Any kind of fruit may be made into fritters, as directed for apple
-fritters. Whole canned fruits, drained from syrup, may also be used.
-Apples and other fruits may also be prepared, coarsely chopped, stirred
-into a plain fritter batter, and dropped by small spoonfuls into
-smoking hot fat, finishing as already directed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-WINES
-
-_Family Trade a Specialty. Prompt Delivery._
-
-_All Kinds of Liquors—Imported, Domestic._
-
-For your daily table use as well as for your Special Social
-Entertainment must be the Highest Quality.
-
-GOOD WINE will add as much to the success of a well appointed table as
-the combined efforts of a good cook and a charming Hostess.
-
-Being ourselves wine makers of long experience, and with the largest
-stock of wines at your disposal, we believe we are in the best position
-to serve you and serve you correctly.
-
-ALPINE WINERY
-
- Telephone Main 1348
- 116 N. Center Street RENO, NEVADA
-
- _Largest Wine Dealers
- in Nevada_
-
- _Wholesale and
- Retail_
-
- * * * * *
-
-ROYAL BEER
-
-If purchased by the Wife will keep Husband Home.
-
-RENO BREWING CO.
-
- * * * * *
-
-KIMBALL
-
-WESTERN MUSIC CO.
-
-PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS
-
- 12-14 EAST FOURTH ST. RENO, NEV.
-
-KIMBALL
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-“EAT, DRINK AND BE MERRY”
-
-WHEN TO SERVE BEVERAGES
-
-
-Appetizer—Dry, pale sherry, plain or with a dash of bitters; vermouth;
-or a cocktail.
-
-With Oysters—Rhine wine, Moselle, dry Sauternes, Chablis, or Capri
-(cool).
-
-With Soups—Sherry or Madeira (cool).
-
-With Fish—Sauternes, Chablis, Rhine wine, Mouselle or Capri (cool).
-
-With Entrees—Claret or Chianti (temperature of room).
-
-With Roast—Claret, Burgundy or Chianti (temperature of room).
-
-With Game—Champagne (cold), old vintage champagne (cool).
-
-With Pastry—Madiera (cool).
-
-With Cheese—Port (temperature of room).
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-With Fruit—Tokay, Malaga or Muscat (temperature of room).
-
-With Coffee—Brandy or Cordial (temperature of room).
-
-If you do not wish to serve such a variety, use the following, viz.:
-Either Sherry, or Sherry and Bitters, Vermouth, or a cocktail as an
-appetizer; either Rhine wine, Moselle, Sauternes, Chablis or Capri with
-oysters and fish.
-
-Either Sherry or Maleira with soup.
-
-Either Champagne, Claret, Burgundy, Chianti or Whiskey highball
-throughout the meal.
-
-Either Brandy, Cordial or Port after dinner.
-
-Either Ale or Stout with oysters, fish, cold meats, steaks, chops or
-bread and cheese.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- A Home Complete
- _Has a Piano in it. Has Yours?_
-
-IF NOT, see us. New and good used Pianos and Players always on hand.
-They are right in quality and price and terms to suit.
-
- Mail orders given prompt attention.
-
- TUNING, REPAIRING AND
- REBUILDING A SPECIALTY
-
- THE PIANO SHOP
-
- 27 WEST FIRST STREET
- Opposite T. & D. Theatre
-
- RENO, NEVADA
- P. O. Address, Box 171
-
- * * * * *
-
- The Nevada Press
-
- RENO, NEVADA
-
- AUSTIN JACKSON L. O. CANNON
- LESSEES
-
- PRINTING
- BOOKBINDING, SEALS
- CERTIFICATES, ETC.
-
- SPECIAL RULED
- BLANK BOOKS
-
- STEEL DIE EMBOSSING
- A SPECIALTY
-
- Gazette Building :: Reno, Nevada
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-CAKES
-
-AND HOW TO MAKE THEM
-
-
-BRIDES CAKE LOAF
-
- ½ cup butter,
- 2 cups sugar,
- 1 cup milk,
- 1 cup corn starch,
- 2 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 teaspoonful vanilla,
- Whites of 8 eggs,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder.
-
-Sift all dry ingredients before measuring. Cream the butter and sugar
-well, then add the whites of 2 eggs, unbeaten, and cream or beat well.
-Add the flavoring, then add a little of the milk, sift in a little
-of Gold Medal Flour which has been measured and sifted with baking
-powder and corn starch. Beat, then add a little more milk and flour
-and so on until all is used. Lastly, fold in lightly the whites of the
-remaining 6 eggs which have been beaten light and dry. Bake one hour in
-a moderate oven, and when cold, ice with marshmallow icing.
-
-
-BROWN STONE CAKE
-
-One and one-half cupfuls sugar cream with one-half cupful butter, add
-one-half cupful sweet milk; three tablespoonfuls chocolate (rounding)
-dissolved in one-half cupful of warm water, four well beaten eggs, one
-teaspoonful baking powder, two cupfuls flour; flavor with vanilla, bake
-in long pan.—Mrs. Cora Dixon.
-
-
-FROSTING
-
-Two small teacupfuls of powdered sugar creamed with butter size of an
-egg, thin with cream, add the beaten white of one egg and one cup of
-walnuts chopped fine.—Mrs. Cora Dixon.
-
-
-WEDDING CAKE
-
- 1 pound butter,
- 1 pound sugar,
- 12 eggs,
- 1 pound Gold Medal Flour,
- 2 teaspoonfuls each of cinnamon and mace,
- 1 teaspoonful each of nutmeg and allspice,
- ½ teaspoonful cloves,
- 2 pounds raisins,
- 2 pounds currants,
- 1 pound citron,
- 1 pound almonds,
- 1 wineglass brandy,
- 1 lemon.
-
-Line the pans with three thicknesses of paper; butter the top layer.
-Seed and chop the raisins, wash and dry the currants, cut the citron in
-uniform slices, about one-eighth of an inch thick, blanch the almonds
-and chop fine. Mix all the fruit but the citron with the dough, insert
-pieces of citron after dough is poured into pan.
-
-
-POUND CAKE
-
- 1 pound butter,
- 1 pound sugar,
- 10 eggs,
- 1 pound Gold Medal Flour,
- ½ wine glass wine,
- ½ wine glass brandy.
-
-Cream the butter; add the sugar, yolks of the eggs, wine, brandy,
-whites of the eggs, and the flour. Place currants into one-quarter
-of the dough, and almonds, blanched and pounded in rose water, into
-another part; leave the remainder plain. Fill very small round tins
-three-quarter full. Into half of those containing the plain dough put
-small pieces of citron, three in each, inserting the citron upright a
-little way into the dough. Sift sugar over the tops of those containing
-the citron and almond before putting them into the oven. Bake 20
-minutes. Frost the plain and currant cakes. Pound cake is lighter when
-baked in small cakes than in loaves.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-WHIPPED CREAM CAKE
-
- 2 cups sugar,
- ½ cup butter,
- 2 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- Yolks 8 eggs,
- 1 teaspoonful lemon extract,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 1 cup corn starch.
-
-Sift all dry materials before measuring. Cream sugar and butter well,
-add gradually the yolks that have been beaten, beating all until very
-light and creamy, then add the flavoring. Then alternate milk and Gold
-Medal Flour that has been mixed with the corn starch and baking powder.
-Bake in well-buttered layer pans, when cold put between the layers,
-rich dry whipped cream, sweetened, using powdered sugar and flavoring.
-Add ½ cup more sugar to remaining cream and use as icing, allowing 2
-hours to harden.
-
-
-LADY BALTIMORE CAKE
-
- 1 cup butter,
- 2 cups granulated sugar,
- 1 cup milk,
- 3½ cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 3 level teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 1 teaspoonful rosewater,
- Whites of 6 eggs beaten dry.
-
-Cream the butter and beat in the sugar gradually. Sift together the
-flour and baking powder and add to the butter and sugar alternately
-with the milk and rose water. Lastly, add the egg whites. Bake in three
-layer cake pans. Put the layers together with the following frosting:
-
-
-FROSTING FOR LADY BALTIMORE CAKE
-
- 3 cups granulated sugar,
- 1 cup boiling water,
- Whites of 3 eggs,
- 1 cup chopped raisins,
- 1 cup chopped nutmeats,
- 5 figs cut in thin slices.
-
-Stir the sugar and water until the sugar is dissolved, then let boil
-without stirring until the syrup from a spoon will spin a long thread,
-pour upon the whites of the eggs, beaten dry, beating constantly
-meanwhile. Continue the beating until the frosting is cold. Add the
-fruit and spread upon the cake.
-
-
-DEVIL CAKE
-
- ½ cup butter,
- 1 cup sugar,
- Yolks of 3 eggs,
- ¾ cup powdered sugar,
- ½ cup milk,
- 1 teaspoonful vanilla,
- ½ teaspoonful cinnamon,
- ¼ teaspoonful cloves,
- 2 level teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 3 ounces, chocolate, melted,
- 1¾ cups sifted Gold Medal Flour,
- Whites of 3 eggs beaten dry.
-
-Cream the butter and add the cup of sugar. Beat the yolks, add the
-¾ cup of sugar and beat the two sugar mixtures together. Add the
-chocolate, then the flour, sifted three times with the baking powder
-and spices, then the milk, extract and whites of eggs. Bake in two
-layers and put together with a fruit icing. Spread white icing above.
-
-
-FROSTING FOR DEVIL CAKE
-
- 1½ cups sugar,
- ¾ cup water,
- Whites of 2 eggs, beaten dry,
- ¼ cup each Sultana raisins, glace cherries and pecan nut meats.
-
-Boil the sugar and water until the syrup spins a thread, and gradually
-beat it into the whites of eggs. When cold put a few spoonfuls over the
-fruit and nuts and put between the layers. Spread the rest on top of
-the cake.
-
-
-TO MIX CAKES CONTAINING NO BUTTER
-
-Beat the egg yolks until very light and thick. Add the sugar gradually,
-beating till very light and spongy. Add the flavoring and liquid,
-if used. Have the whites of eggs whipped to a stiff froth. Add them
-alternately with the sifted Gold Medal Flour (mixed with baking
-powder), and cut both in very lightly and quickly.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
- START RIGHT
- BUY A PIANO
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER Small Percentage of Alcohol,
- Large Percentage of Extracts
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-TO MIX CAKES CONTAINING BUTTER
-
-Cream the butter, beating till light. Gradually add the sugar, beating
-till light and creamy. Add the yolks of eggs beaten till light, then
-the flavoring. Beat in alternately the liquid and Gold Medal Flour,
-the latter mixed with salt and baking powder. Lastly, add the beaten
-whites, and fruit, if used.
-
-
-CREAM PUFFS
-
- ½ pint milk,
- 5 ounces sifted Gold Medal Flour,
- 5 eggs,
- ¼ pound butter.
-
-Put the milk and butter in a sauce pan on the fire. When butter is all
-melted and boiling stir in the flour. When partly cool add 5 eggs, one
-at a time. Put the mixture in a bag with large tube and lay out into
-about the size of large sponge drops, on a buttered pan; brush with
-egg. Bake in hot oven. When done cut open on one side and fill with
-whipped cream, sweetened. Flavor to suit.
-
-
-CREAM PUFF FILLING
-
- 1 quart milk,
- ¾ pound sugar,
- 6 ounces Gold Medal Flour,
- ½ pint of yolks,
- Flavor to taste.
-
-Put the milk on the stove; when it comes to a boil put in the sugar,
-flour and eggs, after beating them together thoroughly. Be careful not
-to let it burn.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-SPONGE CAKE
-
-Four eggs beaten separately; then beat together 2 cups sugar slowly
-beaten in, 2 cups Gold Medal Flour, 1 teaspoonful baking powder, a
-pinch of salt; last of all 1 cup boiling water, 1 teaspoonful lemon.
-Heat the pan.
-
-
-MAMMY BELDON CAKE
-
-One cup sugar, ¾ cup butter, 4 eggs, 1½ cups milk. Cream butter and
-sugar together, beat and add yolks of eggs, then milk, 3 cups Gold
-Medal Flour, thoroughly mixed with 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder, 1
-teaspoonful vanilla, beat 20 minutes, beat whites of eggs to a stiff
-froth and add stirring in gently. Bake in layers or 40 minutes as a
-whole.
-
-
-FILLING FOR ABOVE
-
-Take about 24 marshmallows, chopped fine, 1 teacupful sugar, boiled
-until thread; stirring briskly, into marshmallows until cool, flavor to
-taste, spread between layers. Sprinkle with assorted colored sugar for
-rainbow effect.—Mrs. E. F. Kiessling, Reno, Nev.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- French Cleaners
- and Parisian
- Dye Works Co.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- All Kinds of
- Dyeing, Cleaning and
- Repairing
-
- Party Dresses, Fancy Gowns
- and Men’s Clothing
- Our Specialty
-
- [Illustration]
-
- THREE TELEPHONES
-
- Main 814====Main 58====Main 663
-
- 233 E. Plaza Street RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sierra Beer for Health Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-SPICE CAKE
-
-Three eggs, one cup of sugar, one cup of syrup, one cup butter, one cup
-sweet milk, two teaspoonfuls baking powder, one teaspoonful spices,
-flour; do not stir too thick.—Mrs. Cora Dixon.
-
-
-WHIPPED CREAM CAKE
-
- 2 cups sugar,
- ½ cup butter,
- 2 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- Yolks 8 eggs,
- 1 teaspoon lemon extract,
- 2 teaspoons baking powder,
- 1 cup corn starch.
-
-Sift all dry materials before measuring. Cream sugar and butter well,
-add gradually the yolks that have been beaten, beating all until very
-light and creamy, then add the flavoring. Then alternate milk and Gold
-Medal Flour that has been mixed with the corn starch and baking powder.
-Bake in well buttered layer pans, when cold put between the layers,
-rich dry whipped cream, sweetened, using powdered sugar and flavoring.
-Add ½ cup more sugar to remaining cream and use as icing, allowing 2
-hours to harden.
-
-
-LAYER CAKE (Plain)
-
- 1 cup sugar,
- ¼ cup butter,
- 2 good cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 cup sweet milk,
- 1 teaspoonful vanilla,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder.
-
-Melt the butter, add sugar, beat till creamy, add one egg at a time,
-beating well, then pour in milk, and sifted baking powder and flour.
-Add vanilla and stir quickly. Bake in four well-greased layer tins.
-Usually requires ten minutes to bake. Use any good filling.
-
-
-FUDGE CAKE
-
- ½ cup butter,
- 1 cup sugar,
- 1 cup milk,
- ¼ cup chocolate,
- ¼ cup walnuts,
- 2 eggs,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 2 heaping cups Gold Medal Flour.
-
-Melt butter in pan over steam, cream the sugar and butter together,
-add eggs, beating well, add milk. Sift in flour, baking powder and
-ground chocolate, put in broken nuts, stir batter quickly. Bake in
-well-greased cake tins.
-
-
-POUND LOAF CAKE
-
- 1 cup butter,
- 1 cup milk,
- 1½ cups sugar,
- 2 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 5 eggs,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 2 teaspoonfuls vanilla.
-
-Melt butter, add sugar, cream butter and sugar together, then add yolks
-of eggs one at a time, beating well, then milk, sift in the flour and
-baking powder, and beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth before
-adding. Bake in a deep, well-greased pan. Bake in a slow oven for from
-thirty to forty minutes. Stir in the vanilla with the milk.
-
-
-MARGUERITES
-
-Mix ¼ cup hickorynuts with the beaten whites of 2 eggs and 1
-tablespoonful sugar. Heap this mixture up on Saratoga crackers and set
-in oven to brown slightly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-NUT CAKE
-
- ½ pound hickory nut meats,
- Scant cup of sugar,
- 1 teaspoonful cinnamon,
- 1 teaspoonful vanilla,
- Whites of 3 or 4 eggs, according to size.
-
-Roll the nut meats fine, beat the eggs stiff and add sugar to them. Mix
-all ingredients together. The consistency must be stiff. Drop from a
-teaspoon on buttered pan. Bake in moderate oven. If hickory nuts are
-not procurable, English walnuts and pecans may be substituted.
-
-
-SPONGE CAKE
-
- 3 eggs,
- 1 scant cup sugar,
- 1 tablespoonful hot water,
- 2 teaspoonfuls vinegar,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- ½ teaspoonful extract of lemon,
- 1 cup Gold Medal Flour,
- ½ teaspoonful baking powder.
-
-Beat the yolks until thick and light; add sugar gradually and continue
-beating; then add water and vinegar; add the salt to the whites
-and beat until very stiff; sift the flour with baking powder three
-times; add the flavoring and fold in the flour and the beaten whites
-alternately as gently as possible. Bake about 30 minutes in slow oven
-until well risen; then increase the heat. Invert to cool, then remove
-from pan.
-
-
-WALNUT TORTE
-
- 1 pound English walnuts or almonds,
- 1 cup sugar,
- 9 eggs,
- ¼ cup grated chocolate,
- ½ cup of fine cracker crumbs.
-
-Chop the nuts, reserving twenty-three halves for decorating the top.
-Mix the chopped nuts and chocolate. Beat yolks thoroughly with Dover
-beater, add sugar and beat again. Then mix with the nuts, crumbs and
-chocolate, and stir well. Beat whites of eggs until stiff and add
-lastly, just as in sponge cake. Bake in moderate oven forty-five
-minutes in prepared spring form.
-
-
-UNEEDA BISCUIT TORTE
-
-Yolks of 8 eggs with 1¾ cups sugar—beat well. Ten Uneeda Biscuits
-rolled fine. One cup grated walnuts.
-
-Grated rind and juice of one-half lemon—biscuits added to eggs—then
-nuts and lemon—lastly beaten whites of 8 eggs. Bake in slow oven 40
-minutes. Do not grease pan.
-
-
-CREAM FOR CREAM CAKES
-
- 1 quart milk,
- 4 eggs,
- ½ pound powdered sugar,
- 3 ounces corn starch,
- Whites of six eggs,
- A little salt,
- Vanilla flavor to taste.
-
-Put the milk on the fire in a pan to boil; while the milk is coming
-to a boil put the eggs, sugar, corn starch and salt into a dish and
-mix well together; when the milk boils turn this into it, stirring the
-while, and as soon as it all comes to a boil take it off, and when
-nearly cold add the whites of the six eggs, beat up to a stiff froth.
-
-
-JAM CAKE
-
-Two cups sugar, 2 cups jam, 3 cups Gold Medal Flour, 1 teaspoonful
-cinnamon, 5 eggs, 1 teaspoonful baking powder, 1 cup butter, 1 cup sour
-milk, 1 nutmeg, 1 teaspoonful vanilla, 1 teaspoonful soda.
-
- * * * * *
-
- HARMONY IN THE HOME
- THAT HAS A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- SIERRA BEER Closer to a Temperance Drink
- Than Any Other Beer. Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-LADY FINGERS
-
- 1 pound sugar,
- 1 dozen eggs,
- 1 pound Gold Medal Flour,
- Juice and rind of one lemon.
-
-Mix sugar and eggs with an egg-beater to a light foam, until it is
-filled with little bubbles; add the juice and grated rind of lemon,
-mix flour in carefully, so as not to toughen mixture; lay on paper the
-shape of the little finger and sprinkle with powdered sugar, and bake
-in large sheet pans; when done take from the pans and let cool. Wet the
-under side of the paper and they will come off easily, and then put two
-of the flat sides together.
-
-
-ORANGE CAKE
-
- 5 eggs,
- ½ pound pulverized sugar,
- 1 orange,
- ½ pound Gold Medal Flour,
- 1½ dessert spoonfuls rose water.
-
-Separate the whites from the yolks of eggs, then beat the whites and
-rose water together with a clean whisk for half an hour; then add the
-sugar and grated rind of the orange; when well mixed add juice of the
-orange and the yolks of eggs; beat until smooth, then add flour, after
-putting it through a fine sieve; mix up lightly and put in a deep pan
-and bake about one hour in a cool oven. Lemon cake may be made the same
-way by substituting lemons for the oranges.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-BOSTON LEMON SNAPS
-
- 1 pound Gold Medal Flour,
- ¼ pound butter,
- 12 ounces sugar,
- 3 eggs,
- ½ ounce cream of tartar,
- Lemon flavor.
-
-Rub the butter and flour together then add the sugar, eggs, cream of
-tartar and flavor; mix all together, break up in small pieces and make
-in little balls; put on pans and flatten out with the hand; bake in a
-cool oven.
-
-
-GRAND DUKE CAKE
-
-Cream together ⅔ cup butter and 2 cups sugar. Add 1 cup milk
-alternately with 3½ cups Gold Medal Flour sifted with 2 teaspoonfuls
-baking powder, ¼ teaspoonful almond, ¾ teaspoonful vanilla, and beat
-well. Fold in stiffly beaten whites of 6 eggs. Bake in three square
-layer-cake tins. Put layers together with raisin frosting. Boil 3
-cups sugar with 1 cup water until syrup will spin thread. Pour onto
-whites of 3 eggs beaten very stiff. Beat until cool, and add 1¼ cups
-seeded raisins cut fine, ¾ cup chopped nuts and ½ cup chopped candied
-apricots, plums, pineapple or cherries.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER If purchased by the Wife will keep
- Husband Home. RENO BREWING CO.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-SOUR MILK DOUGHNUTS
-
- 2 eggs, beaten light,
- 3 even tablespoonfuls melted butter,
- 4 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 cup sugar,
- 1 cup sour milk,
- ½ teaspoonful soda,
- 1 saltspoonful each of cinnamon and salt.
-
-Enough more Gold Medal Flour to make just soft enough to roll out.
-Mix the dough rather soft at first. Have the board well floured, and
-the fat heating. Roll only a large spoonful at first. Cut into rings
-with an open cutter. Mix the trimmings with another spoonful. Work it
-lightly till well floured and roll again. Roll and cut all out before
-frying. The fat should be hot enough for the dough to rise to the top
-instantly.
-
-
-DOUGHNUTS AND CRULLERS
-
-The fat should be in a deep pot (to obviate any danger of boiling
-over), and should be of sufficient depth to cover the dough, when
-first dropped in. It should be smoking hot, or the dough will absorb
-grease and be soggy. Not more than half a dozen should be dropped in at
-any one time, or the fat will be unduly cooled and some of the cakes
-submerged during the entire cooking; in which case the cakes when
-cooked will be greasy and not light. One or two pieces of dough should
-be cooked first as testers. When done the cakes should be drained on
-unglazed paper, then rolled in powdered sugar.
-
-
-ALMOND COOKIES
-
- ½ cup butter,
- ⅓ cup almonds blanched and finely chopped,
- ¼ teaspoonful cloves,
- ⅛ teaspoonful salt,
- 2 tablespoonfuls sherry wine,
- 1 cup Gold Medal Rolled Oats,
- 1 cup sugar,
- 1 egg beaten lightly,
- ½ teaspoonful cinnamon,
- ½ teaspoonful nutmeg,
- Grated rind of half a lemon,
- 1 cup Gold Medal Flour,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder.
-
-Cream the butter; add the sugar gradually; add egg well beaten without
-separating; almonds, Gold Medal Flour, oats, spices, baking powder,
-thoroughly mixed; add lemon rind and sherry. Drop in piles about the
-size of an English walnut—1½ inches apart on a buttered sheet. Spread
-with a spatula and press the half of an almond meat on top of each.
-Bake in a moderate oven 12 to 15 minutes.
-
-
-GERMAN DOUGHNUTS
-
-Scald 1 pint milk, pour hot over 1 pint Gold Medal Flour, and beat
-till smooth; add ½ teaspoonful salt, and let cool. Add beaten yolks of
-4 eggs, 1 tablespoonful melted butter, 1 teaspoonful flavoring, ½ cup
-sugar, beaten whites of eggs, 1 cup flour mixed with 2 teaspoonfuls
-baking powder, and more flour to make a soft dough. Roll, cut, and fry.
-
-
-DOUGHNUTS
-
- 2 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 3 teaspoonfuls baking powder,
- 1 egg,
- 4 tablespoonfuls sugar,
- 1 teaspoonful nutmeg,
- 1 cup milk.
-
-Sift the dry ingredients together, beat the egg until light and add
-to the milk, and if flavor is used, add it now. Pour the liquid into
-the flour and mix thoroughly and roll one-half inch thick, cut with a
-doughnut cutter and drop into smoking hot fat.
-
- * * * * *
-
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
- | K | | K |
- | I | WESTERN MUSIC CO. | I |
- | M | | M |
- | B | | B |
- | A | PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS | A |
- | L | | L |
- | L | 12-14 EAST FOURTH ST. RENO, NEV. | L |
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-BATH BUNS
-
-Mix and sift 1 quart Gold Medal Flour, 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder,
-½ teaspoonful salt, ⅔ cup sugar, 1 teaspoonful powdered cinnamon. Add
-grated rind 1 lemon, ½ cup chopped citron. Rub in ½ cup butter. Beat 6
-egg yolks, add ⅔ cup milk, and mix all to soft dough, adding more milk
-if needed. Mold with the hands in round buns. Place 1 inch apart on
-greased pans. Brush with milk, sprinkle with chopped citron, and bake
-in quick oven.
-
-
-ROLLED OATS CRISPS
-
- 2 eggs,
- 2½ cups Gold Medal Rolled Oats,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- ¾ cup brown sugar,
- 1 teaspoonful baking powder,
- 1 tablespoonful shortening,
- ½ teaspoonful vanilla.
-
-Beat up eggs thoroughly; add sugar gradually and continue with the
-beating; put in salt and extract; mix separately the shortening with
-the rolled oats and then mix all together. Drop in small pieces on
-greased baking pan, leaving a good space between. Bake in a hot quick
-oven until crisp and brown. Take off with a knife.
-
-
-HUCKLEBERRY SHORT CAKE
-
-Two cups sugar, ½ cup butter, 1 teaspoonful salt, 1 pint milk, 2
-heaping teaspoonfuls baking powder sifted into 3 cups Gold Medal Flour,
-1 quart washed and well-drained huckleberries, more flour to make a
-very thick batter. Bake in greased dripping-pan, break in squares,
-serve hot with butter.
-
-
-STRAWBERRY OR RASPBERRY SHORT CAKE
-
-Pick, hull, wash, and drain berries. Sweeten, spread between layers
-of short cake. Garnish top layer with large whole berries, dust with
-sugar, and serve with cream or custard.
-
-
-CURRANT LOAF
-
- 3 cups Gold Medal Flour,
- ⅔ cup butter,
- ½ cup sugar,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- 1 cup cleaned currants,
- Grated rind 1 lemon,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder.
-
-Mix dry ingredients, rub in butter, add currants and lemon rind, mix
-to a very thick drop batter with cold milk. Turn into well-greased
-loaf-pan, bake 1 hour in moderate oven.
-
-
-MOLASSES COOKIES
-
- 1 quart molasses,
- 2 ounces soda,
- 1 pint and one gill of water,
- ¼ pound lard,
- Sufficient Gold Medal Flour to mix.
-
-Put the molasses, water, soda and lard in a bowl, mix them together;
-then add flour enough to make a nice dough, suitable to roll out and
-cut; wash with milk or water on top.
-
-Molasses cookies are very common cakes, but they are not easy to
-make, for the reason that there is no rule you can work by that will
-answer in all cases. All molasses does not work alike; some kinds will
-bear more water than others, and the weather has to be taken into
-consideration. In cold weather you can use more water than in warm
-weather. Sometimes you can use the same quantity of water as molasses.
-Be very careful and not get the dough too stiff, and do not work any
-more than is necessary to mix.
-
-
-SPICE CAKES
-
-Two cups sugar, ½ cup butter, cup sour milk, 2 cups Gold Medal Flour, a
-good ½ teaspoonful soda, the yolks of 5 eggs, 3 teaspoonfuls cinnamon,
-2 teaspoonfuls cloves, 2 teaspoonfuls allspice, 1 nutmeg.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER Small Percentage of Alcohol,
- Large Percentage of Extracts
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-OATMEAL COOKIES
-
-Two and one-quarter cups Gold Medal Flour, 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs, 1
-teaspoonful soda, 2½ cups oatmeal, 1 cup butter, 2 tablespoonfuls sour
-milk, flavor to taste. Roll, cut and bake quickly.
-
-
-COCOANUT DROP COOKIES
-
-One cup brown sugar, 1 cup butter, ½ cup sour milk or ¼ cup butter and
-½ cup cream, sour, 1 teaspoonful soda in milk, 1 teaspoonful baking
-powder, 2 cups Gold Medal Flour, 1 box cocoanut. Drop from spoon on
-greased pans.
-
-
-GINGER SNAPS
-
-One cup sugar, 1 cup Orleans molasses, 1 cup butter, heat them boiling
-hot, take from the stove and stir in 1 cup Gold Medal Flour while hot,
-let cool, add 2 teaspoonfuls soda, dissolve in a little vinegar, 2
-eggs, 1 heaping teaspoonful of ginger in the flour, beat all the rest.
-Knead enough Gold Medal Flour in to roll out nicely.
-
-
-EGGLESS CAKE (Fine)
-
-Two cups sugar, 1 cup buttermilk, 4 cups Gold Medal Flour, 1
-teaspoonful each nutmeg, cloves, cinnamon and allspice, 2 cups raisins,
-chopped fine, 1 cup butter, 1 cup cold coffee, 2 level teaspoonfuls
-soda, 1 cup nuts, chopped fine. Mix all together. Add nuts and raisins
-last.
-
-
-PLAIN COOKIES
-
- ¾ cup butter,
- 3 eggs,
- 2½ cups Gold Medal Flour,
- 1½ cups sugar,
- 2 tablespoonfuls milk,
- 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder.
-
-Roll thin.
-
-Stir butter and sugar to cream, add beaten eggs, flour, sifted with the
-baking powder, and milk. Roll out thin and cut in circles.
-
-
-GRAHAM WAFERS
-
- ½ cup butter or nut butter,
- 1 cup sugar,
- 1 egg,
- 1 teaspoonful bicarbonate soda,
- 2 tablespoonfuls milk,
- Graham Flour.
-
-Beat the butter to a cream; add the egg and beat again until light.
-Gradually beat in the sugar. Dissolve the soda in two tablespoonfuls
-of water and add it to the sugar mixture. Add the milk and work in
-sufficient graham flour—about three cupfuls to make a very stiff dough.
-Knead until the mixture will hold together. Roll into a very thin sheet
-and cut into two-inch squares. Lift carefully with a cake-turner, put
-into slightly greased pans and bake in a moderate oven until thoroughly
-crisp and lightly browned—about eight minutes.
-
-
-PEANUT SNAPS
-
- 1½ cups butter,
- 2 cups sugar,
- 6 eggs,
- 1½ pints Gold Medal Flour,
- ½ cup cornstarch,
- 1 teaspoonful baking powder,
- 1 teaspoonful extract lemon,
- ½ cup chopped peanuts mixed with
- ½ cup granulated sugar.
-
-Rub the butter and sugar smooth; add the beaten eggs, the Gold Medal
-Flour, cornstarch, and powder, sifted together, and the extract; flour
-the board, roll out the dough rather thin, cut out with biscuit-cutter,
-roll in the chopped peanuts and sugar, lay on greased baking-tin; bake
-in rather hot oven 8 to 10 minutes.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
- START RIGHT
- BUY A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
-
-
-
-Fillings, Frostings and Icings
-
-
-BOILED CHOCOLATE FROSTING
-
- 2 ounces chocolate,
- ½ cup cream,
- 2 whites of eggs,
- Vanilla,
- Powdered sugar.
-
-Boil chocolate and cream and when cool add vanilla. Beat the whites to
-a stiff froth, add powdered sugar until stiff enough to cut. Combine
-the two mixtures, beat and spread.
-
-
-CARAMEL FROSTING
-
- ¾ pound maple sugar, scraped,
- ¾ pound brown sugar,
- Butter, size of an egg,
- 1½ cups cream.
-
-Mix and boil slowly for forty minutes. Remove from stove and stir over
-ice until the proper consistency to spread. If too stiff, thin with
-cream. Dip knife in cream to spread.
-
-
-NUT OR FRUIT FILLING
-
- ½ cup fruit (chopped fine),
- Boiled frosting,
- ½ cup nuts (chopped fine).
-
-To boiled icing add one cup chopped walnuts, almonds, pecans, hickory,
-hazel nuts, chopped figs, dates, raisins, or selected prunes,
-separately or in combination.
-
-
-MARSHMALLOW FROSTING
-
- ½ pound marshmallows,
- ¼ cup milk or water,
- Whites of 2 eggs,
- 1 teaspoonful vanilla.
-
-Break the marshmallows in pieces, add milk or water, and put in double
-boiler, over boiling water. Stir until melted. Take from fire and while
-hot pour into the well beaten whites of eggs. Add vanilla.
-
-
-BOILED ICING
-
- 1 cup sugar,
- ⅓ cup water,
- ¼ teaspoonful cream of tartar,
- 1 teaspoonful flavoring,
- 1 egg white (large).
-
-Beat white of egg until frothy, add the cream of tartar and beat until
-stiff and dry. Make syrup of sugar and water. When it has reached the
-honey stage, or drops heavily from spoon, add 5 tablespoonfuls slowly
-to egg, beating in well. Then cook the remainder of the syrup until it
-threads and pour over the egg, beating thoroughly. Add flavoring and
-beat until cool enough to spread.
-
-
-WHIPPED CREAM FILLING WITH PINEAPPLE AND NUTS
-
- 1 yolk of egg,
- 2 tablespoonfuls powdered sugar,
- ½ cup whipped cream,
- 1 cup nut kernels, or ½ cup nuts and ½ cup pineapple.
-
-Whip cream, same as above, using one-half cupful nuts and one-half
-cupful pineapple, all chopped up.
-
-
-WHIPPED CREAM FILLING
-
- ¾ cup thick cream,
- ¼ cup powdered sugar,
- White of 1 egg,
- ½ teaspoonful vanilla.
-
-Set medium sized bowl in pan of crushed ice to which water has been
-added. Place cream in bowl and beat until stiff, with wire whip or, if
-possible, use patent cream whipper. Whip up well that air bubbles may
-not be too large. Add sugar, white of egg beaten stiff, and vanilla.
-Keep cool.
-
-
-CHOCOLATE FILLING
-
- ½ cup sugar,
- ½ cup milk,
- ½ cup grated chocolate,
- Yolk of 1 egg,
- ½ teaspoonful vanilla.
-
-Melt chocolate, add sugar and milk, and boil when it forms a soft ball
-in cold water, remove from fire. Add beaten yolk and vanilla. Cool and
-spread between layers.
-
-
-ICING FOR WHITE CAKE
-
- 1½ cups sugar,
- 1 cup water,
- 2 eggs (whites).
-
-Boil sugar and water until it threads well, pour over the egg whites
-well beaten, beating all the time, when partly cool add ½ cup chopped
-pineapple.
-
-
-
-
-PUDDINGS
-
-
-PEACH COBBLER, SOUTHERN STYLE
-
-A large pie baked in shallow baking tins from one to one and a half
-inches in depth with bottom and top crust, glazed and sugared on top,
-and cut out in squares or triangular pieces.
-
-Fine puff paste is too rich for this purpose; ordinary flaky pie crust
-made with ten or twelve ounces of butter, to a pound of Gold Medal
-Flour, is best; cover the bottom of the pan with a sheet of paste
-rolled quite thin, fill with ripe peeled peaches, strew over them half
-their weight of sugar, and a little nutmeg; cover with another thin
-sheet of paste, and bake about three-quarters of an hour; when half
-done brush over the top with egg and water and strew granulated sugar
-over; put back and bake to a rich color; when the fruit is too dry to
-make its own syrup, make a sauce to go with the cobbler; all sorts of
-fruit or rhubarb can be used this way; canned fruit should be stewed
-down till the juice becomes thick before being put in the paste lined
-tins.
-
-
-BAKED CUSTARD
-
- 3 yolks,
- 1 egg,
- 1 pint milk,
- 1⅓ cups sugar,
- Pinch of salt.
-
-Bake until firm in center.
-
-When you want caramel custard, then take ⅔ cup of granulated sugar,
-melt the sugar until it turns a light brown then add it to the boiling
-milk.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-PLUM PUDDING
-
-One and one-half cupfuls each grated bread, very fine chopped suet,
-raisins, seeded, currants, mashed and picked, and coffee, sugar,
-one-half cupful of citron, milk and orange marmalade, four eggs,
-two cups Gold Medal Flour, one teaspoonful each of baking powder,
-cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg. Mix all these together in large bowl, put
-in well-buttered mold, set in sauce pan with boiling water to reach
-one-half up its sides. Now steam three and a half hours, turn out
-carefully on dish and serve with wine sauce.
-
-
-RAISIN LAYER PUDDING
-
-Pour 1 cup boiling water over ¾ cup sugar and boil three or four
-minutes. Remove from fire and add 1 tablespoonful gelatine which has
-been soaked for 15 minutes in ¼ cup cold water. Let cool partially.
-When mixture begins to thicken, heat until frothy, add stiffly beaten
-whites 3 eggs and beat twenty minutes. Divide into two portions. Use
-new oblong bread pan for mold. Tint half pale green, flavor with almond
-or lemon, add ½ cup rich canned apricots cut in small pieces and
-drained from juice. Put into pan as first layer. Let set before adding
-second layer, which should be tinted light pink, flavored with vanilla.
-Into the pink layer beat ½ cup seedless raisins cooked until tender and
-drained dry. Serve with whipped cream, garnish with chopped nuts.
-
- * * * * *
-
- HARMONY IN THE HOME
- THAT HAS A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- RENO’S BIG, MODERN, STORE
-
- Make this Store your headquarters, it was
- built for YOU. There is a comfortable
- Rest Room here for your benefit.
-
-
-=_Do You Need Draperies?_=
-
- We carry the complete line of “Colonial Draperies”,
- Cretonnes, Tapestries, Scrims, Curtains, Couch Covers,
- etc.
-
-=_Headquarters_=
-
- for Table Linens, Bedding of every description, Staple
- Dry Goods, Silks, Dress Goods and Wash Goods.
-
-=_Our Ready to Wear_=
-
- We at all times show the very latest novelties as
- regards Ladies’ Suits, Dresses and Waists.
-
-=_Sole Agents For_=
-
- Merode Underwear, Trefousse Kid Gloves, Pictorial
- Review Patterns.
-
-
- PALACE DRY GOODS STORE
-
- Cor. West Second and Center Streets
-
- Mail Orders Carefully Filled the Same Day Received
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROCK SPRINGS COAL YARDS
-
- J. E. MARTIN, Proprietor
-
- ALL KINDS OF
-
- WOOD
-
- AND
-
- COAL
-
- FOR FUEL
-
- Best Attention and
- Equality to All
- A Trial Is All We Ask
-
- Phone Us Your Orders
- PHONE 1248
-
- 235 Ralston Street RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- SIERRA BEER Closer to a Temperance Drink
- Than Any Other Beer. Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-BREAD CRUMB PUDDING WITH CORNMEAL
-
-Carmelize ⅔ cup sugar, add to 1 quart milk scalded in double boiler,
-let stand until dissolved; then add 2 cups stale bread crumbs and
-let soak until softened. Beat 2 eggs slightly, add ⅓ cup sugar, ¼
-teaspoonful salt, ½ teaspoonful each Mapleine and vanilla, ⅔ cup seeded
-raisins cut in halves and dredged with 2 tablespoonfuls Gold Medal
-Flour. Combine mixtures, turn into buttered earthenware pudding dish
-and bake in moderate oven one hour. Serve hot or cold with whipped
-cream sauce.
-
-
-RAISIN-APPLE TAPIOCA PUDDING
-
-Cook 1 cup seeded raisins in 3 cups water until tender. Drain water
-from raisins into double boiler. There should be 2½ cups. Add ¾
-cup Minute Tapioca, 2 tablespoonfuls sugar, few grains salt and
-1 tablespoonful butter and cook over hot water until mixture is
-transparent. Pare and core 7 or 8 sour apples, arrange in buttered
-baking dish, fill centers with 1 cup seeded raisins mixed with ½ cup
-sugar, 2 tablespoonfuls lemon juice, 2 tablespoonfuls sifted cracker
-dust and grated rind 1 lemon. Pour the tapioca over the apples. Bake in
-moderate oven until apples are well done. Serve with custard sauce or
-cream, plain or whipped. Sprinkle shredded cocoanut over the top.
-
-
-PRUNE WHIP
-
-Wash a half pound of prunes and soak them over night. Cook them in the
-water in which they were soaked until quite soft, remove the stones
-and press the prunes through a potato masher. Add a quarter of a cup
-of sugar and cook five minutes. Beat the whites of two eggs to a very
-stiff froth, add this, with a half tablespoonful of lemon juice, to the
-prunes pulp, stirring in lightly with a fork. Put all in a buttered
-shallow dish and bake twenty minutes in a slow oven. Serve with cream
-or a custard made from the yolks of the eggs.
-
-
-RUSSIAN CREAM
-
- 8 ounces sugar,
- 4 eggs,
- 10 leaves of gelatine,
- ½ pint whipped cream,
- 2 tablespoonfuls lemon juice,
- ½ gill orange juice,
- ½ pint white wine,
- ½ gill rum.
-
-Beat the sugar, orange juice, eggs, wine and rum well together. Stir in
-a saucepan till it thickens, then add the dissolved gelatine. Remove
-from the fire, whisk briskly and stir in the whites of eggs beaten to a
-snow. Pour into a mould rinsed with cold water, and, when set, turn out.
-
-
-FROZEN PUDDING
-
-To two well-beaten eggs add two and one-half cups of milk and one-half
-cup of sugar; put on the stove and add one tablespoonful of cornstarch
-dissolved in a little milk; heat until it has the consistency of a thin
-custard; when cold add chopped crystallized cherries, pineapple and
-walnuts, and flavor to taste; then set it in a pail of ice and salt for
-four or five hours.
-
-
-BLACKBERRY PUDDING
-
-Three eggs, 1 teacupful sugar, ½ cup Gold Medal Flour, 1 cup jam, ½ cup
-butter, 1 teaspoonful soda dissolved in 3 teaspoonfuls of sour milk;
-add cinnamon and nutmeg; mix and bake slowly ¾ of an hour.
-
-Sauce for Pudding—One pint boiling milk, 1 tablespoonful Gold Medal
-Flour with milk; have ready 1 teacup sugar and ½ cup butter; mix
-thoroughly; boil 2 or 3 minutes, add butter and sugar but do not boil.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-BOILED CUSTARD
-
- 1 quart milk,
- 1 cup sugar,
- Pinch of salt,
- Yolks of 4 eggs,
- Teaspoonful vanilla,
- 1 ounce butter.
-
-Put milk in double boiler with sugar, salt and butter. When boiling add
-cornstarch which has been blended in a scant cup of water, or milk.
-Stir constantly. When thick turn heat off and add the beaten yolks of
-eggs. Must be done deftly so as to prevent curdling. Add vanilla when
-the custard is taken from stove.
-
-
-APPLE TAPIOCA PUDDING
-
-Pick over and wash ¾ of a cup of pearl tapioca. Pour 1 quart of boiling
-water over it, and cook in the double boiler until transparent; stir
-often, and add ½ teaspoonful of salt. Core and pare 7 apples. Put them
-in a round baking dish, and fill the cores with sugar and lemon juice.
-Pour the tapioca over them and bake till apples are very soft. Serve
-hot or cold with sugar and cream. A delicious variation may be made by
-using half pears, or canned quinces, and half apples.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-RAISIN DUFF
-
-Dispose 1 quart sliced, pared apples, and ⅔ cup seeded raisins cut in
-halves, in buttered granite baking dish. Sprinkle through them, as
-placed in dish, ½ cup brown sugar, few grains salt, 2 tablespoonfuls
-Gold Medal Flour, ¼ teaspoonful each mace and ginger that have been
-sifted together. Add ⅔ cup water, cover and let bake while preparing
-the crust. Sift together 1 cup pastry flour, 2 teaspoonfuls baking
-powder, ¼ teaspoonful salt and 2 tablespoonfuls sugar. Work in 4 level
-tablespoonfuls butter, then add milk to make dough soft as possible
-to handle. Roll thin and little larger than pan in which apples have
-cooked. Remove pan from oven, dispose crust over apples loosely, press
-edges to pan and cut openings in dough with scissors. Bake until crust
-is well done. Serve hot with custard or hard sauce or whipped cream.
-
-
-BLANC MANGE
-
-Parboil eighteen ounces of Jordan, and three ounces of bitter almonds,
-in a quart and a pint of water, for about three minutes; drain them on
-a sieve, and remove the skins, and wash them in cold water; after they
-have been soaked in cold water for half an hour, pound them in a mortar
-with six ounces of sugar, until the whole presents an appearance of a
-soft paste. This must then be placed in a basin with eighteen ounces
-of loaf sugar, and mixed with a pint and a half of water; cover the
-basin with a sheet of paper twisted around the edges, and allow the
-preparation to stand in a cool place for about an hour in order to
-extract the flavor of the almonds more effectually. The milk should
-then be strained off from the almonds through a napkin, with pressure
-by wringing at both ends. Add three ounces of clarified gelatine to the
-milk of almonds. Pour the blanc mange into a mould embedded in rough
-ice, and when set firm turn it out on its dish with caution, having
-first dipped the mould in warm water.
-
- * * * * *
-
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
- | K | | K |
- | I | WESTERN MUSIC CO. | I |
- | M | | M |
- | B | | B |
- | A | PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS | A |
- | L | | L |
- | L | 12-14 EAST FOURTH ST. RENO, NEV. | L |
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
-
- * * * * *
-
- Sierra Beer for Health Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-SAUCES
-
-
-HARD SAUCE
-
- ¼ cup butter,
- ½ cup powdered sugar,
- ½ teaspoonful lemon or vanilla, or a little nutmeg.
-
-Rub the butter to a cream in a warm bowl; add the sugar gradually, then
-the flavoring. Back it smoothly in a small dish, and stamp it with a
-butter mould or the bottom of a figured glass. Keep it on ice till very
-hard; or pile it lightly on a small fancy dish and you may call it
-snowdrift sauce.
-
-
-HARD SAUCE
-
-Beat one cup sugar and one-half cup butter to white cream; add whites
-of two eggs; beat few minutes longer; add tablespoonful brandy and
-teaspoonful extract nutmeg; put on ice until needed.
-
-
-CREAMY SAUCE
-
-Cream two tablespoonfuls butter; beat in by degrees one-half cup
-powdered sugar, two tablespoonfuls each of thick cream and sherry. Beat
-long and hard. Just before serving stand bowl over hot water and beat
-until sauce looks creamy, but is not hot enough to melt the butter.
-
-
-BRANDY SAUCE
-
-Melt one rounding tablespoonful butter. Add three level tablespoonfuls
-corn starch, ½ tablespoonful Gold Medal Flour, few grains salt. When
-well blended, add one pint hot water gradually, stirring constantly,
-and cook five or six minutes. Then add three-fourths of a cup of brown
-sugar, cook a minute, add one teaspoonful vanilla extract and one
-tablespoonful brandy. Remove from fire, add one rounding tablespoonful
-butter, and beat until very smooth. Strain if necessary. Serve with
-steamed puddings.
-
-
-ORANGE SAUCE
-
-Mix one teaspoonful corn starch with two tablespoonfuls of sugar.
-Squeeze the juice from three oranges and heat it. When sufficiently hot
-add corn starch and sugar and cook till clear.
-
-
-WINE SAUCE
-
-Three-quarters pint water, one cup sugar, one small teaspoonful corn
-starch, one teaspoonful of extract lemon and cinnamon, one-half gill
-of wine. Boil water, add corn starch, dissolved, and the sugar; boil
-fifteen minutes, strain; when about to serve, add extracts and wine.
-
-
-CARAMEL SAUCE
-
-Put ⅓ cup sugar in a spider, stir over the fire until melted and light
-brown; add very gradually ½ cup of boiling water and simmer 10 minutes;
-or, melt sugar in sauce pan, add 1 pint cream and set over hot water
-until the caramel liquifies.
-
-
-LEMON SAUCE
-
- 2 cups hot water,
- 1 cup sugar,
- 1 lemon rind and juice,
- 2 tablespoonfuls corn starch,
- 2 tablespoonfuls butter.
-
-Mix the sugar and corn starch, add the boiling water gradually,
-stirring all the time. Cook 8 or 10 minutes, add lemon juice and
-butter. Serve hot.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-PIES
-
-
-BANANA RAISIN PIE
-
-Cook ½ cup chopped seeded raisins in 1 cup water until plump. Take
-from fire, add 2 tablespoonfuls sifted cracker crumbs mixed with 1
-tablespoonful flour and 1 teaspoonful butter. Let stand covered until
-cold. Cut 1 large banana in thin slices, add ¼ teaspoonful cinnamon, 2
-tablespoonfuls lemon juice, 3 tablespoonfuls sugar, ¾ teaspoonful lemon
-extract and grated rind ½ lemon. Combine mixture, add 1 well-beaten egg
-and 2 tablespoonfuls seeded raisins cut in pieces. Bake between two
-crusts.
-
-
-LEMON PIE
-
-One small teacup of boiling water, put in juice and rind of one lemon,
-one teaspoonful of corn starch to thicken; then add four egg yolks, one
-cup of sugar, mixed together; beat the whites of two eggs stiff and
-put in with egg yolks and sugar. After custard is done put on top the
-whites of the other two eggs, put in oven and brown. Bake pie crust
-first.
-
-
-APPLE PIE
-
-Stew green or ripe apples, when you have pared and cored them. Mash to
-a smooth compote, sweeten to taste, and while hot, stir in a teaspoon
-butter for each pie. Season with nutmeg. When cool, fill your crust,
-and either cross-bar the top with strips of paste, or make without
-cover. Eat cold, with powdered sugar strewed over it.
-
-
-PUMPKIN PIE
-
-The following measure will make three good sized pies: Put into your
-mixing dish one quart and a pint of stewed and strained pumpkin, about
-one-quarter pound sugar, half cup molasses, half a tablespoonful
-each ginger, nutmeg, a scant teaspoonful each of cinnamon and salt,
-one-quarter cup melted butter and one quart of milk. Beat six eggs and
-add to the mixture, and stir until the ingredients are well blended.
-Bake in a good, deep crust.
-
-
-RHUBARB PIE
-
-Select the red stalks, cut off where the leaves commence, strip off the
-outside skin, then cut in pieces one-half inch long; line a pie dish
-with paste, put a layer of the rhubarb nearly an inch deep, a large
-teacup of sugar, sprinkle with salt, shake over a little Gold Medal
-Flour, cover with a crust, slit in the center, trim off the edge and
-bake in a quick oven until done. Rhubarb pies made in this way are
-superior to those made of the fruit stewed.
-
-
-LEMON CUSTARD PIE
-
-Make a good pie crust and prick bottom. Put one cup sugar and one cup
-water in a saucepan and let come to a boil. Mix one tablespoonful
-cornstarch in a little water and add to water and sugar on stove. When
-thick take off stove and add a small chunk of butter; stir it up. Stir
-in the yolks of two eggs and grated rind and juice of one lemon. Beat
-whites of two eggs until thick and spread over pie when cooked; then
-put in oven to brown.
-
-
-CRANBERRY PIE
-
-Three cups cranberries, stewed with one and one-half cups sugar, and
-strained. Line pie plate with paste; put in cranberry jam; wash the
-edges, lay three narrow bars across; fasten at edge, then three more
-across, forming diamond-shaped spaces. Lay rim of paste; wash with egg
-wash; bake in quick oven until paste is cooked.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
- START RIGHT
- BUY A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER If purchased by the Wife will keep
- Husband Home. RENO BREWING CO.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-PRUNE PIE
-
-Stew, stone and mash enough prunes to make a cupful of pulp. Add a cup
-cream, yolks of three eggs, beaten, flavor with vanilla, add pinch
-of salt; bake in a rich under-crust as quickly as possible; beat the
-whites of the eggs with two tablespoonfuls of sugar, spread over top,
-return to oven and brown very highly.
-
-
-MINCE MEAT
-
-The following is an excellent recipe for mince meat and it will fill
-twelve to fourteen quart jars. Chop fine six pounds of cooked beef
-and mix with two pounds of chopped suet; add twelve pounds of chopped
-apples, five pounds of raisins, three and a half pounds currants, one
-pound of citron and two pounds of brown sugar; mix thoroughly and then
-add seven cups of molasses, two tablespoonfuls of cinnamon, three of
-nutmeg, two quarts of sweet cider, one quart of boiled cider, three
-cups of sherry wine and one pint of brandy. Cook twenty minutes,
-stirring frequently.
-
-
-MOLASSES PIE
-
-Four eggs, one cup sugar, two cups molasses. Boil sugar and molasses
-two minutes, then pour off into another cup sugar. Flavor with spice,
-cloves, cinnamon and butter. Bake thin crust.
-
-
-RASPBERRY PIE
-
-Take two boxes of red raspberries, mash and add about 1 cupful of
-powdered sugar. Let stand at least 2 hours in ice box, then put through
-cheese cloth, add about ½ cup powdered sugar, 1 cup water, juice of ½
-lemon and small bottle of cream. Freeze. This mixture makes about a
-good quart.
-
-Grate the rind of the lemons into a bowl, and squeeze in the juice.
-Make a boiling syrup of the sugar and half the water and pour it hot
-on the lemon zest, and juice, and let it remain until cold; then add
-the rest of the water. Strain the lemonade into a freezer and freeze
-as usual and at last add the whites whipped to a firm froth, beat, and
-freeze again. The scalding draws the flavor from the lemons. It should
-never be boiled and fewer lemons used when they are very large. This
-ice is perfectly white.
-
-
-APPLE MERINGUE PIE
-
-Pare, slice, stew and sweeten ripe, tart and juicy apples, mash and
-season with nutmeg (or lemon peel), fill crust and bake till done;
-spread over the apple a thick meringue made by whipping to froth whites
-of three eggs for each pie, sweetening with three tablespoonfuls
-powdered sugar; flavor with vanilla, beat well, and cover pie
-three-quarters of an inch thick. Set back in a quick oven till well
-“set,” and eat cold. In their season substitute peaches for apples.
-
-
-CUSTARD PIE
-
-Six eggs, one and one-half cupfuls of sugar, one cupful of butter, six
-tablespoonfuls of corn starch or Gold Medal Flour and three cups of
-milk; flavor to taste. This is sufficient for three pies; bake with one
-crust only.
-
-
-PINEAPPLE PIE
-
-Slice of butter and a cup of sugar beat to a cream; add yolks of four
-eggs well beaten; then add a small can of grated pineapple. Last of all
-add the whites of two eggs well beaten and enough milk to suit taste.
-Line a deep pie plate with a rich crust. Put in custard and bake. When
-done beat the whites of two eggs, spread over top and brown.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER Small Percentage of Alcohol,
- Large Percentage of Extracts
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-STANLEY CURRANT PIE
-
-For each pie, take one cup fresh currants, mash with potato masher, add
-three-quarters cup sugar. Take yolks of two eggs, beat to a froth; add
-one tablespoonful Gold Medal Flour very slowly, a little sugar and one
-tablespoonful water. Beat this into the mashed currants; put in crust
-and bake. When baked, beat whites of eggs to stiff froth, add one and
-one-half tablespoonfuls sugar, put over pie and set back in oven to
-brown. (Bake with only under crust.)
-
-
-FAMOUS CREAM PIE
-
-One and one-half tablespoonfuls sugar, one tablespoonful Gold Medal
-Flour, one egg and the yolks of two eggs. When smooth add gradually one
-pint milk. Add one teaspoonful vanilla. Line your pie tin with crust
-and put holes in it with a fork to keep from blistering. Bake until a
-light brown. Put the filling in, the meringue on top and brown in oven.
-
-
-SQUASH PIE
-
- 2 cups squash,
- 2 eggs,
- 1 tablespoonful melted butter,
- 1 teaspoonful cinnamon,
- 1 cup brown sugar,
- 2 tablespoonfuls molasses,
- ½ tablespoonful ginger,
- Salt to taste,
- 2 cups milk.
-
-Mix in order given and strain into a deep plate lined with paste.
-
-
-MINCE MEAT (English)
-
- 4 pounds boiled beef,
- 4 pounds of beef suet,
- 4 pounds of currants,
- 4 pounds of raisins,
- 2 pounds of citron,
- 1 pound of candied lemon,
- 1 pound of orange peel,
- 6 pounds of peeled apples,
- 4 pounds of sugar,
- 4 ounces of ground spices (equal proportions of nutmeg, cloves and
- cinnamon),
- The grated rind of 12 oranges and also lemons,
- 3 pints of brandy or madeira, sherry or port.
-
-Thoroughly clean the currants and raisins, cut up the citron in small
-pieces, remove the skin from and cut the suet up fine; place these with
-the lemon and orange peel, currants, raisins and candied lemons in an
-earthen jar; chop the apples and add them, trim the meat so that it
-will be lean and clear (see that it weighs four pounds when trimmed),
-chop this and add to the rest; then add sugar and spice, mix all
-together; then add brandy and cover the jar. Over it place a cloth and
-tie firmly, so as to exclude the air and prevent the evaporation of the
-brandy. The mince meat should be kept in a cold place. It is better to
-stand a week after being made.
-
-
-COCOANUT PIE
-
-Cream a half cupful of butter with two teacupfuls of powdered sugar,
-and beat in a half grated cocoanut. Fold in lightly the stiffened
-whites of six eggs, turn into a deep pie dish, lined with puff paste,
-and bake in a quick oven. Eat cold with powdered sugar and cream.
-
-
-LEMON-RAISIN PIE
-
-Cook ⅔ cup ground seeded raisins in 1¼ cups water about 20 minutes.
-Mix 2 tablespoonfuls each Gold Medal Flour and cornstarch with ⅔ cup
-sugar, dilute with 4 tablespoonfuls water, add to raisins and cook
-until smooth and clear. Take from fire, add 3 tablespoonfuls lemon
-juice, grated rind of 1 lemon, 1 tablespoonful butter and yolks 2 eggs
-slightly beaten. Bake in crust as custard pie. When crust is well baked
-and filling firm cover with meringue from stiffly beaten whites 2 eggs,
-2 tablespoonfuls powdered sugar and ¾ teaspoonful lemon extract.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For that Party, Dinner, Reception
-
-“_All’s well that end’s well_”
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_Order Blanchard Ice Cream_
-
-_100 Per Cent Cream_
-
-_Made in Our Sanitary Factory_
-
-_522-524 Surprise Avenue_
-
-_From the Very Best Material_
-
-_Family and Club Trade Solicited_
-
-
- MUTUAL CREAMERY CO.
- PHONE 1109 Reno, Nevada
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-ICE CREAM,
-
-ICES AND FROZEN DAINTIES
-
-
-PEACHES MELBA ICE CREAM
-
- 1½ pint cream,
- 1 vanilla bean,
- 6 eggs (yolk),
- ½ pound powdered sugar.
-
-Put the cream in a double boiler, with the vanilla bean split in half.
-Beat the yolks of the eggs and the sugar together until light, add to
-the hot cream, stir until the eggs begin to thicken. Strain through a
-sieve; when cool, freeze.
-
-Take half a cup strawberry syrup, half a cup raspberry syrup. Put on
-stove; when it begins to boil add a scant teaspoonful corn starch
-dissolved in a little water. Take from fire and put in cool place.
-
-Peel fresh peaches and place on ice, then pour the above syrup over the
-ice cream.
-
-Whole preserved, sweet peaches are used, out of season.
-
-
-STRAWBERRY ICE CREAM
-
- 2 quarts berries (red, ripe and sweet),
- 2 pounds sugar,
- 2 quarts cream.
-
-Cover the fruit with the sugar and mash them together, and rub the
-fruit and syrup through a sieve into a bowl; adding a cupful of water
-to the pulp at last. Half freeze the cream by itself, and then add the
-strawberry syrup and finish freezing as usual.
-
-
-RAISIN AND CRANBERRY FRAPPE
-
-Simmer ¾ cup ground raisins (that have been soaked in 1 cup cold
-water for two hours) until reduced to pulp. Cook 3 cups cranberries
-in 1¼ cups water and press pulp through sieve. Soften 1 tablespoonful
-gelatine in ½ cup cold water and dissolve by standing in hot water;
-combine ingredients, add 1½ cups sugar, juice 1 lemon and beat well
-together. Turn into freezer, pack in ice and salt, and let stand for
-two hours. Delicious to serve in sherbet glasses with roast turkey.
-
-
-PINEAPPLE ICE
-
- 2 cans pineapple,
- 2 pounds sugar,
- 2 quarts water,
- 6 or 8 whites of eggs.
-
-Strain the juice from one lemon into the freezer. Make a boiling syrup
-of the sugar, and one quart of water, and throw in pieces of pineapple,
-previously cut in large dice. Let boil a few minutes and then strain
-the flavored syrup also into the freezer. Add the other quart of water
-and freeze. Strew some sugar over the pieces of pineapple and set them
-on ice; when the syrup is nearly frozen, add some red fruit juice or
-coloring to make it pink, the beaten whites, and freeze again. Throw
-the pieces of pineapple on top, cover down, and let remain until ready
-to serve, and then mix them in.
-
-
-MARASCHINO PUNCH
-
- 2 pounds sugar,
- 3 pints water,
- 2 lemons (juice only),
- 2 oranges (juice only),
- 1 pint maraschino,
- 6 whites of eggs.
-
-Mix the sugar and water and juice of fruits together; strain and
-freeze, add the whipped whites and beat up.
-
- * * * * *
-
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
- | K | | K |
- | I | WESTERN MUSIC CO. | I |
- | M | | M |
- | B | | B |
- | A | PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS | A |
- | L | | L |
- | L | 12-14 EAST FOURTH ST. RENO, NEV. | L |
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
-
- * * * * *
-
-CHALMERS 1917
-
-[Illustration: CHALMERS MOTOR CO
-
-Detroit, Mich., U.S.A.]
-
-_Quality First_
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The car with unlimited power, beauty of design, and such flexibility
-that gear shifting is practically unnecessary.
-
-Have you ever owned a car? If not, let your first car be a Chalmers
-3400, R. P. M., thereby avoiding all costly automobile experience.
-Or are you now the owner, if so, are you fully satisfied with same?
-If not, get the one car that has no dissatisfied owners. Because the
-Chalmers 3400, R. P. M., motor spells satisfaction in its P-U-R-R. And
-above all you get all of this at a nominal initial cost and very low
-up-keep and running expense.
-
-If you want to know more about this car we will be pleased to furnish
-you literature descriptive of same, or, better yet, if you will call
-at the “Lincoln Garage,” 41-45 W. Fourth Street, the home and service
-station of the Chalmers, we will be glad to explain in detail the
-embodied quantities of this 3400, R. P. M., Chalmers.
-
-
- LINCOLN GARAGE
-
- CORRECCO BROS., Props.
-
- Phone Main 996
-
- 41-45 W. Fourth Street RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-_BECKER’S_
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_For Dutch Lunches_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_A Popular Family Cafe_
-
-
- _BECKER’S_
-
- _32 Commercial Row
- RENO, NEVADA_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-SOUPS
-
-
-CONSOMME OR PLAIN MEAT STOCK FOR SOUP
-
-Consomme or stock forms the basis of all meat soups, gravies and
-purees. The simpler it is made, the longer it keeps. It is best made
-of fresh uncooked beef and some broken bones, to which may be added
-the remnants of broken meats. In a home where meat forms part of the
-every-day diet, a good cook will seldom be without a stock-pot.
-
-Four pounds of beef and broken bones, one gallon of cold water and two
-teaspoonfuls of salt. Put the meat and water on the back of the stove
-and let it slowly come to a boil, then simmer three or four hours,
-until the water is boiled away one-half; add the salt, strain and set
-to cool, in an earthenware dish well covered. When cold, take off the
-fat from the top and it is ready for use. To make soup for a family of
-six, take one-quarter of the stock, to which add one-quarter of boiling
-water, and any vegetables desired—boil three hours. Season with salt
-and pepper.
-
-
-BARLEY BROTH
-
-Put two pounds of shin beef in one gallon of water. Add a teacup of
-pearl barley, 3 large onions and a small bunch of parsley minced, 3
-potatoes sliced, a little thyme and pepper, salt to taste. Simmer
-steadily three hours, and stir often, so that the meat will not burn.
-Do not let it boil. Always stir soup or broth with a wooden spoon.
-
-
-TURKEY SOUP
-
-Place the remains of a cold turkey and what is left of the dressing and
-gravy in a pot, and cover it with cold water. Simmer slowly four hours,
-and let stand until the next day. Take off what fat may have arisen,
-and take out with a skimmer all the bits of bones. Put the soup on to
-heat until at boiling point, then thicken slightly with flour stirred
-into a cup of cream, and season to taste. Pick off all the meat from
-bones, put it back in the soup, boil up and serve.
-
-
-MOCK TURTLE SOUP
-
-Take a calf’s head, a knuckle of veal, a hock of ham, six potatoes
-sliced thin, three turnips, parsley and sweet marjoram chopped fine,
-and pepper. Forced meat balls of veal and beef, half a pint of wine,
-one dozen egg balls, juice of a lemon. The calf’s head must have had
-the brains removed, and must have been boiled previously till the meat
-slips off the bone. The broth must be saved, so as to use in the soup.
-Cut the head in small pieces after boiling. The veal and ham also must
-have been boiled and cut up, and all simmered for a couple of hours in
-the broth made by the calf’s head. Now put all together. The forced
-meat balls and egg balls should be added, and all boiled about ten
-minutes.
-
-
-VEGETABLE SOUP WITH STOCK
-
-Cut three onions, three turnips, one carrot and four potatoes. Put them
-into a stew-pan with two tablespoonfuls of butter and a teaspoonful
-of powdered sugar. After it has cooked ten minutes, add two quarts
-of stock, and when it comes to a boil put aside to simmer until the
-vegetables are tender—about one-half hour.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
- START RIGHT
- BUY A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- Reno Brewing Company
-
- INCORPORATED
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_The Home of_
-
-_Sierra and Royal Beer_
-
-_NEVADA PRODUCTS_
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- RENO :: :: NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Where?= In the City of Reno, the greatest little city in forty-eight
-states—a city situated by the most beautiful of rivers, the greatest
-of railroads and the grandest of mountains—a city possessing the most
-balmy climate in all the land.
-
-=Why?= Because these are the beverages of health and happiness; of
-contentment and good cheer; because they are superbly brewed from the
-finest material, aged to mellow ripeness and when bottled are put in
-your home with the supreme sparkle, zest and flavor that prevailed in
-the original casks.
-
-=Who?= By those who appreciate the worth of a modern sunshiny brewery—a
-bottling plant equipped with every device to insure these beers
-against even the slightest contamination; by those who know the art of
-combining sunshine, fresh air, pure water and nutritious grains into
-the concentrated goodness of the very best of beers—
-
-_SIERRA and ROYAL_
-
- TELEPHONE 581 FOR A CASE
-
- Reno Brewing Company
-
- * * * * *
-
- SIERRA BEER Closer to a Temperance Drink
- Than Any Other Beer. Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHICKEN SOUP
-
-Time, four hours. Boil two chickens with great care, skimming
-constantly, and keeping them covered with water. When tender, take out
-the chickens and remove every bone from the meat; put a large piece of
-butter into a frying-pan and sprinkle the chicken meat well with flour,
-lay in the hot pan; fry a nice brown and keep it hot and dry. Take a
-pint of the chicken water and stir in two large spoonfuls of curry
-powder, two of butter and one of flour, one teaspoonful of salt and
-a little cayenne; mix it with the broth in the pot; when well mixed,
-simmer five minutes, then add the browned chicken. Serve with rice.
-
-
-CHICKEN GUMBO SOUP
-
-Fry one chicken; remove the bones; chop fine; place in kettle, with two
-quarts of boiling water, three ears of corn, six tomatoes, sliced fine,
-twenty-four pods of okra; corn, tomatoes and okra to be fried a light
-brown in the gravy left from frying the chicken; then add to the kettle
-with water and chicken two tablespoonfuls of rice, pepper and salt;
-boil slowly one hour.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-MACARONI SOUP—ITALIAN STYLE
-
-Put four and one-half sticks of macaroni into a saucepan with one
-tablespoonful of butter and one onion. Boil until the macaroni is
-tender; when done drain and pour over it two quarts of good broth,
-beef, chicken or other kind. Place the pan on the fire to simmer for
-about ten minutes, watching lest it break or become pulpy. Add a little
-grated Parmesan cheese, and serve.
-
-
-OX-TAIL SOUP
-
-One ox-tail, two pounds lean beef, four carrots, three onions, parsley,
-thyme, pepper, and salt to taste, four quarts cold water. Cut tail into
-joints, fry brown in good drippings. Slice onions and 2 carrots and fry
-in the same, when you have taken out all of the pieces of tail. When
-done tie the thyme and parsley in lace bag, and drop into the soup-pot.
-Put in the tail, then the beef cut into strips. Grate over them two
-whole carrots, pour over all the water, and boil slowly four hours;
-strain and season; thicken with brown flour wet with cold water; boil
-fifteen minutes longer and serve.
-
-
-CREAM OF CELERY SOUP
-
-In three pints of boiling water cook three cupfuls of celery, cut fine,
-until tender enough to be rubbed through a sieve. One pint of milk
-thickened with one tablespoonful of butter and one tablespoonful of
-Gold Medal Flour. Add celery salt, or extract, salt and pepper. Simmer
-ten minutes. A cupful of scalded cream added just before serving is an
-addition.
-
- * * * * *
-
- HARMONY IN THE HOME
- THAT HAS A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- Nevada Transfer Co.
-
- _We Haul Anything_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-MOVING
-
-PACKING
-
-and
-
-STORAGE
-
-Concrete Warehouse
-
-We check your baggage at your home.
-
-No extra charge.
-
-
- 142 E. Second St. Reno, Nevada
-
- PHONE 30
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER If purchased by the Wife will keep
- Husband Home. RENO BREWING CO.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-SPLIT PEA SOUP WITH SALT PORK
-
-Wash a pint of split peas and cover with tepid water, adding a pinch
-of soda; let remain over night to swell. In the morning put them in a
-kettle with three quarts of cold water, adding half a pound of lean
-salt pork; a teaspoonful of salt, a little pepper. Cook gently for
-three hours, stirring occasionally till the peas are all dissolved,
-adding a little more boiling water to keep up the quantity as it boils
-away. Strain through a colander. Serve with small squares of toasted
-bread. If not rich enough, add a small piece of butter.
-
-
-BEAN SOUP
-
-Soak quart of white beans over night; in morning pour off water; add
-fresh, and set over fire until skins will come off; throw them into
-cold water, rub well, and skins will rise to top, where they may be
-removed. Boil beans till perfectly soft, allowing two quarts of water
-to one quart of beans; mash beans, add flour and butter, which have
-been rubbed together, also salt and pepper. Cut bread into small
-pieces, toast and drop on soup when you serve.
-
-
-OYSTER SOUP
-
-Two quarts of oysters, one quart of milk, two tablespoonfuls of butter,
-one teacupful hot water; pepper and salt. Strain all the liquor from
-the oysters; add the water and heat. When near the boil, add the
-seasoning, then the oysters. Cook about five minutes from the time they
-begin to simmer, until they “ruffle.” Stir in the butter, cook one
-minute and pour into the tureen. Stir in the boiling milk, and send to
-table.
-
-
-CLAM SOUP
-
-Boil juice of clams, make a little drawn butter and mix with the juice;
-stir until it boils, chop up clams and put them in; season to taste
-with pepper, salt and little lemon juice; cream or milk is to be added.
-Boil over slow fire about one hour.
-
-
-CHICKEN BROTH
-
-Cut up a chicken into small pieces and put it in a deep earthen dish,
-adding a quart of cold water, and setting it over a boiling kettle.
-Cover closely and let it steam several hours until the meat of the
-chicken has become tender, after which strain off the broth and let it
-stand over night. Skim off the fat in the morning and pour the broth
-into a bowl. Into the dish in which the broth was made put one-third
-of a teacupful rice in a teacupful of cold water, and steam as before
-until the rice is soft; then pour in the broth and steam an hour or two
-longer.
-
-
-CREAM TOMATO SOUP
-
-One can of tomatoes, quart of fresh, ripe tomatoes, one-half cup rice,
-two tablespoonfuls of butter and one of Gold Medal Flour. Peel and
-slice the tomatoes and put over the fire in a granite kettle, with one
-quart of cold water. Let them heat gradually and then add an additional
-quart of cold water. When this boils, put in the rice, pepper and salt
-to taste, and continue the boiling until the rice is tender; then stir
-in Gold Medal Flour and butter, half teaspoonful baking soda and one
-pint of milk. Boil for a few minutes and serve.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
- START RIGHT
- BUY A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Meacham’s_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-AMERICAN GROCERY CO.
-
-
-Phone Your Orders to 41
-
-
-_Our Specials_:
-
- Meacham’s Spoon Brand
- Coffee
- A Silver Spoon in each package
-
-M. J. B. COFFEE
-
-TREE TEA—Full Weight
-
-Folger’s Coffees, Spices, Extracts
-
-
-Prompt Delivery
-
-
- 226 North Virginia St. [Illustration] RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-For Quick Service Call Up
-
-The Eagle Express
-
-Phone 492
-
-We do All Kinds of Hauling
-
- Office 36 West Second Street RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-SOMETHING NEW!
-
-=Mrs. Newlywed=:
-
-Why bake your own bread when you can save time, trouble and money in
-buying the Prize Bread of the World and delivered at your door daily?
-The most delicious bread you ever tasted, baked in a revolving oven.
-Equal distribution of heat to every loaf. Its golden brown color,
-texture and taste, always the same. Keeps practically fresh for three
-days. Only pure sweet milk 4½ per cent butter fat used. Baker’s
-Home-Made Bakery goods.
-
-BARKER’S BAKERY No. 48
-
-Phone 488
-
- 329 N. Sierra St. Reno, Nev.
-
- * * * * *
-
-SPORTING GOODS
-
-CHAS. STEVER
-
-Bicycles and Sundries, Fishing Tackle, Guns and Ammunition Baseball and
-Tennis Goods, Pocket Cutlery, Skates Sleds, Snow Shoes, Skies, Etc.
-
- 233 Sierra Street Phone 644
-
-RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-PAIGE-DETROIT
-
-MOTOR CAR COMPANY
-
-Manufacturers
-
-DETROIT, MICHIGAN
-
-
-SERVICE STATION
-
-112 North Center Street
-
-RENO, NEVADA
-
-
-[Illustration: PAIGE
-
-The Standard of Value and Quality]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Buy a Real Automobile
-
- 5 Passenger $1240 7 Passenger $1525
-
-
-J. S. Malcolm & Son
-
-State Distributors
-
- 112 North Center Street RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- West 3d Street Telephone 869
-
-_Crescent Creamery Co._
-
-Manufacturers of
-
-_Extra Creamery Butter_
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Crescent Creamery
-
- BLUE EXTRA
- RIBBON CREAMERY
- BRAND BUTTER
- NET WEIGHT 2 LBS.
-
- RENO, NEV.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_Made from the
-
-Pure Pasteurized Cream_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- JOHN CHISM, Manager RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-SALADS
-
-
-IDEAS IN SALADS
-
-Prepare celery stalks very carefully by removing the stringy fiber
-until entirely free from shreds. Chop quite fine, and to two cupfuls
-of celery add two cupfuls of chopped lettuce, the latter crisp and
-fresh as possible. Season with salt, pepper and thyme, vinegar, olive
-oil, bay leaf. If possible, add half a teaspoonful shoyu, or Japanese
-sauce, which greatly improves the flavor. Mix all thoroughly and then
-add crab, shrimp, sardine, spiced mackerel or halibut filling. Boiled
-halibut, chilled in salt water, makes a good combination with crab, and
-when broken into small portions and allowed to stand for an hour or so,
-in the same salt water with crab, can with difficulty be distinguished
-from the crab itself. For sardine, potato, and meat salads, a
-tablespoonful of onion juice is desirable.
-
-Make mayonnaise dressing by using the yolks of three or four eggs,
-according to the quantity desired, and after beating add, drop by
-drop, pure olive oil, stirring constantly until the mixture begins to
-thicken. Then a larger quantity of oil may be stirred in until the
-mixture becomes of proper consistency, about like heavy cream; do not
-season until thickened for fear of curdling. Salt very sparingly, and
-if desired sift in a little cayenne pepper, a few drops of lemon, two
-teaspoonfuls of spiced mustard vinegar from mustard pickles.
-
-
-CHICKEN SALAD
-
-Cut cold roast or boiled chicken in small dice, add celery cut fine,
-season with salt and pepper. Mix with French dressing and put aside for
-an hour or more. Just before serving stir in some mayonnaise slightly
-thinned with lemon juice or French dressing, arrange on lettuce leaves
-and cover with thick mayonnaise.
-
-
-CRAB SALAD
-
-One pint of crab meat, two stalks of celery, cut fine; one hard-boiled
-egg, chopped fine, and one tomato cut into small pieces; season with
-salt, pepper and vinegar, mix in salad bowl, garnishing it with crisp
-leaves of lettuce; dress with mayonnaise dressing.
-
-
-LOBSTER SALAD
-
-Cut the lobster into small squares and season with two tablespoonfuls
-of vinegar, two of oil, one teaspoonful of salt and pepper and let it
-stand in a cool place for an hour. When ready to serve line the salad
-bowl with crisp lettuce leaves, and after mixing the lobster thoroughly
-with mayonnaise place it on the lettuce. Serve with toasted crackers
-and cheese.
-
-
-SALMON SALAD
-
-Remove bones and skin from salmon. Drain off liquid. Mix with French
-dressing or thin mayonnaise; set away for awhile. Finish same as
-lobster salad. Other fish salads may be prepared in same manner.
-
-
-TOMATO SALAD
-
-Pare with sharp knife. Slice and lay in salad bowl. Make dressing in
-the following manner: Work up saltspoon of each of salt, pepper and
-mustard, two tablespoonfuls of salad oil, adding a few drops at a
-time, and, when thoroughly mixed, whip in with an egg, beaten, four
-tablespoonfuls vinegar; toss up with fork.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Mr. and Mrs._ _______________________
-
-
-The NEVADA TEA STORE sincerely congratulates you on this auspicious
-occasion and wishes you all joy and happiness and trust that you will
-find this useful cook book helpful to you in your housekeeping duties.
-
-The NEVADA TEA STORE also can be very helpful to you, if you will do
-your trading with us and on your first order of goods we will allow you
-a special discount of 10 per cent, in order to induce you to try our
-goods.
-
-We roast all our Coffee fresh every day and we manufacture all our
-Baking Powder and Extracts.
-
-Make up your order for the following articles and phone to us and we
-will allow you a 10 per cent discount and also give you premium coupons:
-
- Teas, Coffees, Baking Powder, Extracts, Spices,
- Chocolate and Cocoa, Salad Oil, Rice, Laundry and
- Toilet Soaps.
-
-We also have a full line of Bakery Goods.
-
-We pay all parcel post charges on out of town orders.
-
-
- Nevada Tea Store
-
- PHONE 986-J
-
- 340 N. Virginia Street Reno, Nevada
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sierra Beer for Health Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-COLD SLAW
-
-Chop or shred a small white cabbage. Prepare a dressing in the
-proportion of one tablespoonful of oil to four of vinegar, a
-teaspoonful mustard, salt and sugar, and pepper. Pour over the salad,
-adding, if you choose, three tablespoonfuls of minced celery; toss up
-well and put in a glass bowl.
-
-
-POTATO SALAD
-
-Four large potatoes, one-half a small onion, a little celery, chopped
-fine. If the potatoes have been boiled in their skin they are better.
-The dressing consists of one cupful of cream, one tablespoonful of corn
-starch, one egg, two tablespoonfuls of butter, three tablespoonfuls of
-vinegar, one-half teaspoonful of mustard, one of sugar, salt and pepper
-to taste.
-
-
-CELERY SALAD
-
-Two bunches celery, one tablespoonful salad oil, four tablespoonfuls
-of vinegar, one teaspoonful of sugar, pepper and salt. Wash and scrape
-celery; lay in ice-cold water until dinner time. Then cut into inch
-lengths, add above seasoning. Stir well together with fork and serve in
-salad bowl.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-APPLE SALAD WITH HERRINGS OR CARDELLEN
-
- 1 pound apples,
- 2 hard-boiled eggs,
- ½ gill vinegar,
- ½ teaspoonful chopped onion,
- 4 ounces chopped Sardellen or pickled herrings,
- 4 tablespoonfuls salad oil,
- 1 teaspoonful capers,
- Sugar to taste.
-
-Soak the herrings or Sardellen, then chop them finely and mix with the
-oil, vinegar, hard-boiled eggs (chopped finely) and the capers. Add the
-apples, cut into tiny dice, flavor with pepper and sugar, and mix all
-thoroughly.
-
-
-EGG SALAD
-
-Cut hard-boiled eggs in half lengths, rub their yolks through a sieve,
-mix with equal weight of Parmesan cheese, season with chopped chives,
-pepper and salt, and enough butter to moisten. Fill the whites with
-this mixture, serve on lettuce, and garnish with sliced tomatoes.
-
-
-ENDIVE SALAD
-
- 1 head endive,
- French salad dressing,
- 4 hard cooked eggs,
- 1 pint boiled potatoes, sliced.
-
-Wash and dry endive picked off the green outer leaves and use only the
-light-colored feathery leaves. Arrange on salad dish with white leaves
-in center. Place eggs, cut into quarters lengthwise, around carefully,
-and mix with potatoes and pour over all French dressing.
-
- * * * * *
-
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
- | K | | K |
- | I | WESTERN MUSIC CO. | I |
- | M | | M |
- | B | | B |
- | A | PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS | A |
- | L | | L |
- | L | 12-14 EAST FOURTH ST. RENO, NEV. | L |
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-EGG SALAD
-
-Boil six eggs until the yolks are very mealy. Boil also one dozen
-medium-sized potatoes, with jackets on. Peel eggs and potatoes and cut
-in dice. Add two slices onions. Put first a layer of one, then of the
-other, until all is used. Pour over it some cream salad dressing.
-
-
-A DELICIOUS SALAD FOR STUFFED PEPPERS
-
-One can of sardines picked into fine pieces with a fork, two
-tablespoonfuls of chopped olives, two tablespoonfuls of chopped
-pickles, mayonnaise dressing and salt and pepper to taste. Remove
-the seeds, membrane and stem end from the peppers and soak in salt
-water. Mix the olives, pickles, etc., with the sardines and add enough
-mayonnaise dressing to hold it together. Then drain the peppers dry and
-fill with the salad. Garnish the plate with lettuce leaves and olives.
-
-
-SARDINE SANDWICH
-
-Take one can of sardines, remove the back-bone from the fish, add juice
-of one lemon, one tablespoonful of Worcestershire sauce. Mix the above
-thoroughly and spread on buttered bread. Before placing layers of bread
-together, add a few slices of pickled onions.
-
-
-SARDINE PASTE
-
-Work required amount of sardines into a paste with a broad knife or
-spatula. Add to this very tiny pickled onions, the quantity depending
-upon the taste, about one-quarter as much onion as paste, is good.
-Season with Worcestershire sauce, salt, pepper, paprika, celery salt
-and a liberal amount of lemon juice.
-
-This is delicious for sandwiches, to serve on small pieces of toast
-with cocktails, or on crackers with salad.
-
-
-SANDWICHES
-
-Take each fish, lightly scrape off skin and remove the tail, and pick
-the meat into convenient sized pieces with a fork. Put the pieces into
-a bowl of lemon juice and let stand a few minutes. Then drain and
-spread on thin slices of bread between fresh lettuce leaves. If the
-“Soused” Sardines are used, substitute mayonnaise dressing for the
-lemon juice.
-
-
-SARDINE SANDWICHES
-
-Very tasty sandwiches can be prepared by mincing fish with half the
-quantity of hard-boiled eggs and moistening with mayonnaise dressing.
-Place this mixture between thin slices of bread and cut into small
-squares with a sharp knife.
-
-
-CHICKEN AND LOBSTER SALAD
-
- ½ chicken,
- ½ pound tinned peas,
- 1 tablespoonful chopped parsley and olives,
- 1 pound tinned lobster,
- Mayonnaise dressing,
- ¼ pint oil.
-
-Remove the meat from bones and cut up into small pieces. Sprinkle over
-with lemon juice and stand on one side for thirty minutes. Then mix
-with peas, stir the chopped parsley and olives into a mayonnaise and
-mix all well together. Garnish with gherkins and tiny onions. Asparagus
-may be substituted for peas.
-
- * * * * *
-
- HARMONY IN THE HOME
- THAT HAS A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER Small Percentage of Alcohol,
- Large Percentage of Extracts
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CABBAGE SALAD a la CALAIS
-
-First make a dressing in the following manner: Take two raw eggs, two
-level teaspoonfuls of salt and two level teaspoonfuls of dry mustard
-and a quarter teaspoonful of cayenne pepper or paprika and about five
-teaspoonfuls of sugar and one tablespoonful of butter and add two
-tablespoonfuls of milk, mix well and beat with a fork. Then take one
-cup of vinegar and boil separately, pour slowly over the other mixture
-and when this is done boil slowly until thick. Grind up a fair-sized
-head of cabbage, one medium sized onion and two green peppers from
-which the seeds and fibre have been removed. Then mix with the dressing
-and serve.
-
-
-HOT SLAW
-
-Pick off the bad leaves from head of small cabbage, slice or cut the
-cabbage very thin, scald it 5 minutes in 2 quarts of boiling water and
-drain through a colander. Mix it well with a sauce made of ¼ cup of hot
-vinegar, 1 cup of sour cream, yolks of 2 eggs, 3 tablespoonfuls of oil,
-salt and pepper to taste.
-
-
-JELLIED CHICKEN AND CELERY SALAD
-
-Make the chicken jelly and set it in a border mould. Chop three bunches
-of celery, and mix with one can of asparagus tips. When the jelly is
-cold set on a platter, and heap the celery and asparagus in the center.
-Slice four hard-boiled eggs and lay around the jelly in little piles,
-alternating with mayonnaise dressing.
-
-This is also nice made with fruit jelly with fruit in center, omitting
-the egg and using French dressing made with lemon instead of the
-mayonnaise.
-
-
-ROMAINE SALAD
-
-Take the heart of a Romaine, don’t wash, but wipe with a clean towel,
-one-half pint of cream, mix in pepper and salt to taste. This is the
-proper way to eat Romaine, and the only way it is served in Paris,
-especially in private families. No dressing.
-
-
-MAYONNAISE DRESSING
-
-Put the yolk of an egg into a cup with salt-spoonful of salt, and beat
-until light, one-half teaspoonful of mustard and beat again. Then add
-olive oil, drop by drop, then a few drops of vinegar and the same of
-lemon juice. Continue this process until the egg has absorbed a little
-more than a half a teacup of oil; finish by adding a very little
-cayenne pepper and sugar.
-
-
-FRENCH DRESSING
-
-Mix one-fourth of a teaspoonful of salt, dash of white pepper, 3
-tablespoonfuls olive oil. Stir for few minutes, then gradually add
-1 tablespoonful vinegar, stirring rapidly until mixture is slightly
-thickened and vinegar cannot be noticed. Mixture will separate in about
-twenty minutes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- Peoples Fish Market
-
- F. G. LISTON
-
- _The Fish King_
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- FRESH
- Fish,
- Oysters,
- Crabs,
- Shrimps,
- Mussells
- _and_ Clams
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- PHONE 725
-
-[Illustration]
-
- 28 W. Second Street Reno, Nevada
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-FISH
-
-
-TO FRY FISH
-
-After the fish is well cleansed, lay it on a folded towel and dry
-out all the water; when well wiped and dry, roll it in wheat flour,
-rolled crackers, grated stale bread or Indian meal, whichever
-may be preferred; Gold Medal Flour will generally be liked. Have
-a thick-bottomed frying-pan with plenty of sweet lard salted (a
-tablespoonful of salt to each pound of lard) for fresh fish which have
-not been previously salted; let it become boiling hot, then lay the
-fish in and let it fry gently until one side is a fine, delicate brown,
-then turn the other; when both are done take it up carefully and serve
-quickly, or keep it covered with a tin cover, and set the dish where it
-will keep hot.
-
-
-TO BROIL FISH
-
-Rub the bars of your gridiron with dripping or a piece of beef suet, to
-prevent the fish from sticking. Put a good piece of butter into a dish,
-enough salt and pepper to season the fish. Lay the fish on it when it
-is broiled, and with a knife put the butter over every part. Serve very
-hot.
-
-
-TO BAKE FISH WHOLE
-
-Cut off the head and split the fish down nearly to the tail; prepare
-a dressing of bread, butter, pepper and salt, moisten with a little
-water. Fill the dish with this dressing, and bind it together with a
-piece of string; lay the fish on a bake-pan and pour round it a little
-water and melted butter. Baste frequently. A good-sized fish will bake
-in an hour. Serve with the gravy of the fish, drawn butter.
-
-
-BROILED SALT MACKEREL
-
-Freshen by soaking it over night in water, being careful that the
-skin lies uppermost. In the morning dry it without breaking, cut off
-the head and tip of the tail, place it between the bars of a buttered
-fish-gridiron, and broil to a light brown; lay it on a hot dish, and
-dress with a little butter, pepper, and lemon juice, vinegar.
-
-
-CODFISH BALLS
-
-Put fish in cold water, set on back of stove; when water gets hot, pour
-off and put cold again until fish is sufficiently fresh; then pick it
-up. Boil potatoes and mash them, mix fish and potatoes together, while
-potatoes are hot, taking two-thirds potatoes and one-third fish. Put in
-plenty of butter; make into balls and fry in plenty of lard. Have lard
-hot before putting in balls. Variation may be had by rolling each ball
-in beaten egg, then in dry bread crumbs before frying.
-
-
-FISH STEAKS FRIED
-
-Cut the slices of fresh fish three-quarters of an inch thick, sprinkle
-with Gold Medal Flour, or cornmeal slightly salted or dip them in eggs
-lightly salted and roll in crumbs; fry a light brown. Salmon or any
-other large fish can be fried this way.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- SIERRA BEER Closer to a Temperance Drink
- Than Any Other Beer. Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CREAMED FISH
-
-Pick (not shred) one cupful of codfish; place in a spider and fill and
-cover with cold water. Stir a moment over the fire and pour off the
-water. Stand on the stove, cover the fish with one and one-half pints
-of milk and a large tablespoonful of butter. Stir into a cup of cold
-cream two tablespoonfuls of Gold Medal Flour and when the milk on the
-stove is about to boil mix this with it. When the mixture has thickened
-stand where it will boil no longer and stir into it one egg. Serve at
-once.
-
-
-FISH CHOWDER
-
-Two pounds of fresh white fish, a quarter of a pound of bacon, five
-small potatoes, one small onion, six tomatoes, one quart of milk,
-butter the size of a small hen’s egg and a teaspoon Gold Medal Flour.
-Pick the fish to pieces. Remove the bone and skin; cut potatoes into
-small squares; the bacon in small pieces; rub the butter and flour to
-a cream. Spread in a granite kettle half of the potatoes, then half of
-the fish, then sprinkle in the minced onions, then the bacon, then half
-of the tomatoes. Then a shake of salt and pepper; add the rest of the
-fish, tomatoes, potatoes, and more salt and pepper, using in all one
-teaspoon of salt and one-fourth teaspoon of pepper. Cover with water,
-let simmer for half an hour. Scald the milk, put a pinch of soda into
-the chowder and stir; add the hot milk to the butter and flour; stir
-smooth; then add to the chowder. Serve very hot.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-FISH BALLS
-
-The remnants of any cold fish can be used by breaking the fish to
-pieces with a fork, removing all the bones and skin, and shredding
-very fine. Add an equal quantity of mashed potatoes, make into a stiff
-batter with a piece of butter and some milk, and a beaten egg. Flour
-your hands and shape the mixture into balls. Fry in boiling lard or
-drippings, to a light brown.
-
-
-FISH CROQUETTES
-
-Take remnants of boiled cod, salmon or halibut and pick the flesh out
-carefully. Mince it moderately fine. Stir a piece of butter, a small
-spoon Gold Medal Flour and some milk over fire until they thicken.
-Then add pepper, salt and a little grated nutmeg, together with
-finely-chopped parsley, and then the minced fish. When very hot remove
-from the fire, turn on a dish to get cold, then shape and finish the
-croquettes.
-
-
-CLAMS AND RICE
-
-Chop fine one onion and a small piece of ham or pork; add a bruised
-clove of garlic, one cupful of tomatoes and a little saffron water;
-stew all together for a few minutes, then add a pint of well scrubbed
-small clams, still in the shell; steam a half hour in a tightly covered
-dish; then add one cupful of well washed rice and about one pint of
-water; season with salt and cook until the rice is done.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
- START RIGHT
- BUY A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAFING DISH RECIPE
-
-Skin the fish and lay on brown paper for a few minutes. Then dip in
-beaten egg and roll in finely powdered cracker crumbs.
-
-Place butter in a chafing dish so that when melted it will cover bottom
-of the dish to the depth of three-eighths of an inch. When hot place
-the sardines in and cook until nicely browned, being careful not to let
-them burn.
-
-Serve on a lettuce leaf with mayonnaise dressing.
-
-
-SARDINE BALLS
-
-Pick required number of sardines into fine pieces, season to taste with
-salt, pepper and onion juice. Make into small balls, handling as little
-as possible. When the chafing dish (or saucepan) is hot, butter the
-balls enough to prevent sticking, place in pan, and shake gently for a
-few minutes until brown. Serve hot.
-
-
-SHRIMP
-
-Have a pint of shelled shrimps. Then make a thick sauce; a heaped
-teaspoonful Gold Medal Flour, half an ounce butter and a quarter pint
-of milk. Flavor it with a little mace, pepper and salt. Stir in the
-shrimps. When well heated pour the whole out onto a hot dish, trim the
-dish round with cold boiled rice, and serve.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-SARDINES a la CAMBRIDGE
-
-Take a can of good sardines (“Mustard”), remove the backbone and
-outside skin and rub the meat through a sieve; mix with it minced raw
-oysters, the yolks of two hard-boiled eggs, a tiny dust of paprika,
-three ounces of fresh bread crumbs, one and a half ounces of warm
-butter, and the liquor from the oysters, and the yolks of two raw eggs.
-Divide the mixture into portions about the size of walnuts, roll each
-up in Gold Medal Flour and dip into beaten egg and then into freshly
-made bread crumbs, and put into a frying basket and fry for three or
-four minutes in clean boiling fat. Dish up in a pile on a hot dish on a
-dish paper, and serve hot. Garnish with a little fresh parsley around
-the dish.
-
-Remove the skin from a can of sardines and place them in a pan, add a
-piece of butter, a glass of white wine, a few shrimp, a dozen oysters,
-a few mushrooms and a few crusts of bread fried in butter, and when all
-is well cooked make the following sauce:
-
-Place in a pan a piece of butter the size of an egg and melt, then add
-a spoonful Gold Medal Flour and when brown, half a glass of the above
-mixture except the fish; use a wooden spoon. When the sauce is made,
-add the yolk of an egg and take from the fire. Place the fish in a
-dish, spread on the sauce, and put in a warm oven for fifteen minutes
-and serve.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-SIERRA BEER FOR HEALTH—Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-SCALLOPED SARDINES
-
-One can of sardines, one cupful of sauce (as below), five or six soda
-crackers. Pick the fish over, removing back-bone and tail, and flake
-with a fork. Place a layer of the sardines in an agate baking dish,
-cover with the sauce, then a layer of the cracker crumbs, another layer
-of sardines, and so on until the fish is all used. Cover the top layer
-with cracker crumbs and bake in a hot oven until brown. Prepare the
-fish sauce as follows:
-
-SAUCE—Two tablespoonfuls each of Gold Medal Flour, butter, cup hot
-milk, salt and pepper to taste. Melt the butter in sauce-pan until it
-bubbles, then add the flour, salt and pepper until smooth, and pour the
-hot milk in gradually, stirring each time. Cook until it thickens. This
-is a good sauce to serve with any fish.
-
-
-LOBSTER NEWBURG
-
-Season one pint diced lobster with half teaspoon salt, dash cayenne,
-pinch nutmeg. Put in sauce-pan with two tablespoons butter; heat
-slowly. Add two tablespoons sherry; cook six minutes; add one-half cup
-cream beaten with yolks two eggs, stir till thickened. Take quickly
-from fire.
-
-
-STEWED MUSSELS
-
-Take about five dozen good-sized mussels, clean and then boil them
-until shells open. Put very little water on when boiling them, for when
-they are heated they let out plenty of juice themselves. When they are
-cooked take from shell and pick over. Put in a saucepan a piece of
-butter and some onions; fry until brown and add the mussels, a can of
-tomatoes and two cupfuls of the juice and stew all together for about
-fifteen minutes. Salt and pepper to taste, and lastly thicken the gravy
-with some Gold Medal Flour dissolved in cold water.
-
-
-DEVILED CRAB
-
-One cup crab meat, picked from shells of well-boiled crabs, two
-tablespoons fine bread crumbs or rolled crackers, yolk two hard-boiled
-eggs, chopped juice of a lemon, one-half teaspoon mustard, a little
-cayenne pepper and salt, one cup good drawn butter. Mix one spoon
-crumbs with chopped crab meat, yolks, seasoning, drawn butter. Fill
-scallop shells—large clam shell will do—with mixture; sift crumbs over
-top, heat to slight brown in quick oven.
-
-
-CREAMED CRAB
-
-Melt a half inch slice butter, add half a cup Gold Medal Flour, stir
-all the time; to this add three cups of milk and one cup of cream;
-season with salt, red pepper and one tablespoonful Worcestershire
-sauce. Cook ten minutes. Add the picked meat of three crabs and a small
-bottle of mushrooms. Let it come to a boil once. Serve in ramikins.
-
-
-CLAM CHOWDER
-
-Twenty-five clams, chopped—not fine—one-half pound salt pork chopped
-fine, six potatoes sliced thin, four onions sliced thin. Put pork in
-kettle; after cooking a short time add potatoes, onions and juice of
-clams. Cook two and one-half hours, then add clams; fifteen minutes
-before serving add two quarts of milk.
-
- * * * * *
-
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
- | K | | K |
- | I | WESTERN MUSIC CO. | I |
- | M | | M |
- | B | | B |
- | A | PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS | A |
- | L | | L |
- | L | 12-14 EAST FOURTH ST. RENO, NEV. | L |
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Poultry and Game
-
-
-ROAST TURKEY
-
-Carefully pluck the bird and singe off the down with lighted paper;
-break the leg bone close to the foot, hang up the bird and draw out the
-strings of the thigh. Never cut the breast; make a small slit down the
-back of the neck and take out the crop that way, then cut the neck bone
-close, and after the bird is stuffed the skin can be turned over the
-back and the crop will look full and round. Cut around the vent, making
-the hole as small as possible, and draw carefully, taking care that
-the gall bag and the intestines joining the gizzard are not broken.
-Open the gizzard, take out the contents and detach the liver from the
-gall bladder. The liver, gizzard and heart, if used in the gravy, will
-need to be boiled an hour and a half and chopped as fine as possible.
-Wash the turkey and wipe thoroughly dry, inside and out; then fill the
-inside with stuffing, and sew the skin of the neck over the back. Sew
-up the opening at the vent, then run a long skewer into the pinion and
-thigh through the body, passing it through the opposite pinion and
-thigh. Put a skewer in the small part of the leg, close on the outside
-and push it through. Pass a string over the points of the skewers and
-tie it securely at the back.
-
-Sprinkle well with Gold Medal Flour, cover the breast with
-nicely-buttered white paper, place on a grating in the dripping-pan and
-put in the oven to roast. Baste every fifteen minutes—a few times with
-butter and water, and then with the gravy in the dripping-pan. Do not
-have too hot an oven. A turkey weighing ten pounds will require three
-hours to bake.
-
-
-ROAST GOOSE
-
-Get a goose that is not more than eight months old, and the fatter it
-is the more juicy the meat. The dressing should be made of three pints
-of bread crumbs, six ounces of butter, a teaspoonful each of sage,
-black pepper and salt and chopped onions. Don’t stuff very full, but
-sew very closely so that the fat will not get in. Place in a baking
-pan with a little water, and baste often with a little salt, water and
-vinegar. Turn the goose frequently so that it may be evenly browned.
-Bake about 2½ hours. When done, take it from the pan, drain off the fat
-and add the chopped giblets, which have previously been boiled tender,
-together with the water in which they were done. Thicken with Gold
-Medal Flour and butter rubbed together; let boil, and serve.
-
-
-BAKED CHICKEN
-
-Take a plump chicken, dress and lay in cold salt water for half hour,
-put in pan, stuff and sprinkle with salt and pepper; lay a few slices
-of fat pork. Cover and bake until tender, with a steady fire. Baste
-often. Turn so as to have uniform heat.
-
-
-CHICKEN—SOUTHERN STYLE
-
-Wash your chicken thoroughly in soda and water. Dry and disjoint. Put
-one and one-half cups of cold water in a porcelain pot (Dutch oven
-preferred); pack chicken in closely. Mince two small onions, one kernel
-garlic, little parsley and sprinkle over chicken. Cover closely and let
-simmer for three hours. One-half hour before done season with salt and
-pepper. Don’t lift cover during the cooking. When done remove chicken
-and thicken gravy with a little Gold Medal Flour.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER If purchased by the Wife will keep
- Husband Home. RENO BREWING CO.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-WILD DUCKS
-
-Nearly all wild ducks are liable to have a fishy flavor, and when
-handled by inexperienced cooks, are sometimes uneatable from this
-cause. Before roasting them guard against this by parboiling them
-with a small carrot, peeled, put within each. This will absorb the
-unpleasant taste. An onion will have the same effect; but unless you
-mean to use onion in the stuffing, the carrot is preferable.
-
-
-ROAST WILD DUCK
-
-Parboil as above directed; throw away the carrot or onion, lay in fresh
-water one-half of an hour; stuff with bread crumbs, season with pepper,
-sage, salt and onion, roast until brown, basting for half the time
-with butter and water, then with drippings. Add to the gravy, when you
-have taken up the ducks, a teaspoonful of currant jelly and a pinch of
-cayenne pepper. Thicken with browned flour and serve in a tureen.
-
-
-PIGEON PIE
-
-Clean and truss three or four pigeons, rub outside with a mixture
-of pepper and salt; rub inside with a bit of butter, fill with a
-bread-and-butter stuffing, or mashed potatoes; sew up the slit, butter
-the sides of a tin basin or pudding dish, and line (the sides only)
-with pie paste, rolled to quarter of an inch thickness; lay the birds
-in; for three large tame pigeons, cut quarter of a pound of sweet
-butter and put it over them, strew over a large teaspoonful of salt and
-a small teaspoonful of pepper, with finely cut parsley; dredge a large
-teaspoonful of Gold Medal Flour over; put in water to nearly fill the
-pie; lay skewers across the top, cover with a puff paste crust; cut a
-slit in the middle, ornament the edge with leaves, braids, or shells
-of paste, and put in a moderately hot or quick oven for one hour; when
-nearly done brush the top over with the yolk of an egg beaten with a
-little milk, and finish. The pigeons for this pie may be cut in two or
-more pieces, if preferred. Any small birds may be done in this manner.
-
-
-ROAST PIGEON
-
-Clean and truss two young pigeons, mince the liver, and mix with them
-two ounces of finely grated bread crumbs, two ounces of fresh butter,
-finely chopped onion, a teaspoonful shredded parsley, a little salt,
-pepper, nutmeg. Fill birds with this forcemeat, fasten a slice of fat
-bacon over the breast of each, and roast. Make a sauce by mixing a
-little water with the gravy which drops from the birds, and boiling
-it with a little thickening; season it with pepper, salt and chopped
-parsley.
-
-
-QUAIL ON TOAST
-
-Take five quail, but don’t remove the legs, for you would lose all the
-taste of the game. Wipe them well; string them tight, so as to raise
-the breasts. Put a little butter on each, a little lemon juice, and
-inside each the quarter of a lemon without the peel. Then put a very
-thin slice of pork, about two inches square, around each quail, with
-two or three cuts in each side, and string it tight. Let cook on a good
-fire, and when they are nearly well done, for white meat game must be
-well done, cut the strings; dress nicely on toast and serve hot. Pour
-the juice on the quail after having taken the fat off, and put some
-slices of lemon around the dish, one for each quail.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
-
- START RIGHT
-
- BUY A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sierra Beer for Health Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-ROAST TAME DUCK
-
-Take a young farmyard duck fattened at liberty, but cleansed by being
-shut up two or three days and fed on barley meal and water. Pluck,
-singe and empty; scald the feet, skin and twist round on the back of
-the bird; head, neck and pinions must be cut off, the latter at the
-first joint, and all skewered firmly to give the breast a nice plump
-appearance. For stuffing, one-half pound of onions, one teaspoonful
-of powdered sage, three tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs, the liver of
-a duck parboiled and minced with cayenne pepper and salt. Cut fine
-onions, throwing boiling water over them for ten minutes; drain through
-a gravy strainer, and add the bread crumbs, minced liver, sage, pepper
-and salt to taste; mix, and put inside the duck. This amount is for
-one duck, more onion and more sage may be added, but the above is a
-delicate compound not likely to disagree with the stomach. Let the
-duck be hung a day or two, according to the weather, to make the flesh
-tender. Roast before a brisk, clear fire, baste often, and dredge with
-flour to make the bird look frothy. Serve with a good brown gravy in
-the dish, and apple sauce in a tureen. It takes about an hour.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-RABBIT PIE
-
-Cut a rabbit into seven pieces, soak in salted water one-half hour and
-stew until half done in enough water to cover it. Lay slices of pork in
-the bottom of a pie dish and upon these a layer of rabbit. Then follow
-slices of hard-boiled egg, peppered and buttered. Continue until the
-dish is full, the top layer being bacon. Pour in the water in which the
-rabbit was stewed, and adding a little Gold Medal Flour, cover with
-puff paste, cut a slit in the middle and bake one hour, laying paper
-over the top should it brown too fast.
-
-
-VENISON STEAK BROILED
-
-Take the leg and cut slices from it, having a quick, clear fire. Turn
-them constantly. They should be served underdone. Butter both sides
-of the steak; sprinkle salt and pepper over the venison, garnish with
-parsley and accompanying it by a jelly sauce.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-STUFFINGS
-
-
-CHESTNUT STUFFING FOR POULTRY
-
-One pint fine bread crumbs, one pint shelled and boiled French
-chestnuts chopped fine, salt, pepper, and chopped parsley to season,
-one-half cup melted butter.
-
-
-OYSTER STUFFING FOR POULTRY
-
-Substitute small raw oysters, picked and washed, for chestnuts in above
-recipe.
-
-
-CELERY STUFFING
-
-Substitute finely cut celery for chestnuts.
-
-
-STUFFING FOR TOMATOES, GREEN PEPPERS, ETC.
-
-One cup dry bread crumbs, one-third teaspoonful salt, one-quarter
-teaspoonful pepper, one teaspoonful onion juice, one tablespoonful
-chopped parsley, two tablespoonfuls melted butter. Hominy, rice, or
-other cooked cereal may take the place of crumbs.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-LAMB AND VEAL STUFFING
-
-Three cups stale bread crumbs, three onions chopped fine, one
-teaspoonful salt, one-half teaspoonful white pepper, two tablespoonfuls
-chopped parsley, one-half cup melted butter or suet.
-
-
-STUFFING FOR PORK
-
-Three large onions parboiled and chopped, two cups fine bread crumbs,
-two tablespoonfuls powdered sage, two tablespoonfuls melted butter, or
-pork fat, salt and pepper to taste.
-
-
-SAGE STUFFING FOR GEESE AND DUCKS
-
-Two chopped onions, two cups mashed potatoes, one cup bread crumbs,
-salt, pepper, and powdered sage to taste.
-
-
-POULTRY STUFFING
-
-One quart stale bread crumbs, salt, pepper, and powdered thyme to
-season highly, one-half cup melted butter.
-
- * * * * *
-
- HARMONY IN THE HOME
- THAT HAS A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-MEATS
-
-
-ROAST PIG
-
-Select a pig about six weeks old, wash it thoroughly inside and
-outside; wipe dry with a towel, salt inside and stuff it with a rich
-fowl dressing, making it plump. Sew it up, place it in the dripping
-pan, salt and pepper the outside. Pour a little water into the dripping
-pan, baste with butter and water a few times as the pig warms,
-afterward with gravy from the dripping pan. Roast from two to three
-hours. Make the gravy by skimming off most of the grease; stir in the
-pan a good tablespoonful of Gold Medal Flour, turn in the water to make
-it the right thickness, season and let all boil up once. Strain and
-turn into the gravy dish. Place the pig upon a large platter surrounded
-with parsley. Send to the table hot. In carving, cut off the head
-first; split the back, take off the hams and shoulders and separate the
-ribs.
-
-
-BAKED HAM
-
-Put a medium-sized ham in a pot and cover with sweet cider. Let it
-simmer gently for three and one-half hours. Skim frequently to remove
-the grease as it rises. When tender take out and remove the rind; cut
-the fat on top into diamonds and in each diamond stick a clove; then
-rub over the top of the ham one-half of a cupful of maple syrup, place
-in the oven and bake slowly for forty-five minutes.
-
-
-TO ROAST A LEG OF PORK
-
-Choose a small leg of fine young pork; cut a slit in the knuckle with
-a sharp knife, and fill the space with sage and onions, chopped, and a
-little pepper and salt. When one-half done, score the skin in slices,
-but do not cut deeper than the outer rind. Apple sauce should be served
-with it.
-
-
-SALT PORK, CREAM GRAVY, SOUTHERN STYLE
-
-Cut sweet cured salt pork into half-inch slices, put into saucepan,
-cover with cold water and bring to boiling point. Drain off water, add
-cold water, stand a few minutes, roll in Gold Medal Flour, two parts,
-corn starch, one part, mixed and seasoned with white pepper. Have
-one tablespoonful of hot bacon fat in the frying pan to prevent pork
-from sticking. Pour off fat as it melts while frying, brown and fry
-until reduced one-half. For one and one-half cups cream gravy allow
-three spoonfuls melted fat, add two level tablespoonfuls corn starch.
-Cook three minutes in the hot fat without browning, then add one and
-one-half cups milk, one-quarter teaspoonful salt, and cook until
-smoothly thickened. Serve for breakfast with baked potatoes and hot
-biscuit.
-
-
-ROAST SPARE-RIB
-
-Trim the ragged ends of a spare-rib neatly, crack the ribs across the
-middle, rub with salt and sprinkle with pepper. Fold over, stuff with a
-turkey dressing, sew up tightly, place in dripping pan with a pint of
-water, baste often, turning it once or twice so as to bake both sides a
-rich brown.
-
-
-PORK CHOPS WITH TOMATO GRAVY
-
-Trim off skin and fat; rub the chops over with a mixture of powdered
-sage and onion; put small pieces butter into frying-pan; put in the
-chops and cook slowly, as they should be well done. Place chops on hot
-dish; add a little hot water to gravy in pan, one large spoon butter
-rolled in Gold Medal Flour, pepper, salt and sugar, and one-half cup
-juice drained from can tomatoes. Stew five minutes and pour over the
-chops and serve.
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER Small Percentage of Alcohol,
- Large Percentage of Extracts
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-PORK AND BEANS
-
-Soak one quart white beans over night in cold water. Drain, add fresh
-water and simmer till tender. Put in baking pan and place in center
-one-half pound fat salt pork, parboiled. Mix one teaspoon salt,
-one-half teaspoon mustard and one tablespoon molasses; add this to
-the beans, with enough boiling water to cover. Bake eight hours in a
-moderate oven, adding more water as necessary.
-
-
-FILLET OF MUTTON
-
-Cut a fillet, or round, from a leg of mutton; remove all the fat from
-the edges, and take out the bone; rub it all over with a very little
-pepper and salt; have ready a stuffing of finely minced onions, bread
-crumbs and butter, well seasoned and mixed; fill with this the place of
-the bone; make deep incisions or cuts all over the surface of the meat
-and fill them closely with the same stuffing; bind a piece of cloth
-around the meat to keep it in shape, and stew with just enough water to
-cover it; let it cook slowly and steadily from four to six hours, in
-proportion to its size and toughness, skimming frequently. When done,
-serve with its own gravy.
-
-
-SHOULDER OF VEAL
-
-Remove the bone, and fill the space it occupied with a dressing made
-as for turkey or chicken; keep well basted and proceed as with above.
-A fillet of veal may be prepared in the same way, by removing the leg
-bone with a sharp knife.
-
-
-TO FRY TRIPE
-
-Cut in pieces convenient for serving; beat an egg lightly and dip each
-piece in the egg. Have your frying-pan hot and fry brown in butter. It
-will take a good deal of butter to make it nice and keep from burning.
-
-
-BEEF OMELET
-
-One and one-half pounds of good beefsteak chopped fine, one cup suet,
-two slices of wheat bread soaked in water, two eggs and half a cup of
-sweet cream; season well with salt and pepper. Mold into a loaf or roll
-and bake three-fourths of an hour, basting frequently.
-
-
-ROAST BEEF
-
-To roast in a cooking stove, the fire must have careful attention
-lest the meat should burn. Lay it, well-floured, and seasoned, into a
-dripping pan, with rather more than enough water to cover the bottom;
-turn the pan around often, that all parts may be equally roasted, and
-baste frequently. The oven should be quite hot when the beef is first
-put in that the outside may cool quickly and thus retain the juices. A
-large roast of eight or ten pounds is much better and more economical
-than a small one, even in a small family. Allow a quarter of an hour
-for every pound of meat if you like it rare. It can be re-roasted on
-the next day. If much remains serve cold on the next, or in very thin
-slices; dip each one in flour, then chop two onions fine, place a layer
-of meat in a baking dish and sprinkle it with salt, pepper and onion;
-above this place a layer of sliced or canned tomatoes; alternate the
-layers till the dish is nearly full, moisten with the gravy, place a
-layer of tomatoes upon the top, fill with boiling water, cover with a
-plate and bake two hours.
-
- * * * * *
-
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
- | K | | K |
- | I | WESTERN MUSIC CO. | I |
- | M | | M |
- | B | | B |
- | A | PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS | A |
- | L | | L |
- | L | 12-14 EAST FOURTH ST. RENO, NEV. | L |
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
-
- * * * * *
-
- _California
- Market_
-
- _James Daniel, Prop._
-
- PHONE 537
-
- _Finest class of_
-
- _Beef, Pork, Mutton and
- Sausage_
-
- _always ready and on sale to families at
- Popular Prices_
-
- _We handle Poultry also_
-
- _Wagon will call and make deliveries_
-
- TRY OUR MEATS
-
- _355 N. Virginia Street_ _Reno, Nevada_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-ROAST LOIN OF VEAL
-
-Leave in the kidney, around which put considerable salt. Make a
-dressing the same as for fowls; unroll the loin, put the stuffing well
-around the kidney, fold and secure with several coils of white cotton
-twine wound around in all directions; place in a dripping pan, with the
-thick side down, and put in a rather hot oven, letting it cool down to
-moderate; in one-half hour add a little hot water to the pan, and baste
-often; after half an hour turn over the roast and when done sprinkle
-lightly with Gold Medal Flour and baste with melted butter. Before
-serving carefully remove the twine. A roast of four or five pounds will
-bake in about two hours. For a gravy skim off some of the fat if there
-is too much in the drippings; dredge in Gold Medal Flour; stir until
-brown, add hot water if necessary; boil a few minutes, stir in sweet
-herbs as fancied and put in a gravy boat. Serve with green peas and
-lemon jelly.
-
-
-ENTREE OF VEAL
-
-Take a piece of butter the size of an egg, three pounds of raw veal,
-one teaspoonful salt, one of pepper and two eggs. Chop fine and mix
-together, adding two tablespoonfuls of water. Mold this into a loaf,
-then roll into two tablespoonfuls of pounded crackers and bake two
-hours. When cold, slice.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-FRIED SWEETBREADS
-
-For every mode of dressing they should be prepared by half boiling, and
-then putting them in cold water; this makes them whiter and firmer.
-Dip in beaten egg and then in bread crumbs, pepper and salt and fry in
-lard. Serve with peas or tomatoes.
-
-
-VEAL CUTLETS, BREADED
-
-Trim and flatten the cutlets, add pepper and salt, and roll in beaten
-egg, then in cracker crumbs. Fry in good dripping, turn when the lower
-side is brown. Drain off the fat, squeeze a little lemon juice upon
-each, and serve in a hot flat dish.
-
-
-CALVES LIVER AND BACON
-
-Cut liver in one-half inch slices, soak in cold water twenty minutes,
-drain, dry and roll in Gold Medal Flour. Have pan very hot. Put in
-bacon thinly sliced, turn until brown; put on hot platter. Fry liver
-quickly in the hot fat, turning very often. When done, pour off all
-but one or two tablespoons fat, dredge in Gold Medal Flour until it is
-absorbed, and stir till brown. Add hot water gradually to make smooth
-gravy, season and boil one minute. Serve separately.
-
- * * * * *
-
-MARRIED LIFE
-
-START RIGHT
-
-BUY A PIANO
-
-WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER If purchased by the Wife will keep
- Husband Home. RENO BREWING CO.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-VEAL LOAF
-
-Three pounds chopped veal, one pound fresh pork chopped fine, three
-well beaten eggs, butter size of an egg, one pint of bread crumbs, 1
-tablespoon of salt, 1 teaspoon black pepper, one-half teaspoon each of
-thyme and sage. Make into loaf, take piece of white muslin and wrap
-securely, also the ends. Place in a baking pan with very little water.
-Baste often. Turn so as to brown both sides. Leave in cloth until cold.
-
-
-BEEFSTEAK AND ONIONS
-
-Take thick beefsteak (that which is not so tender will answer), cut it
-in pieces ready to serve; put into a spider with a little hot water;
-slice up three or four onions, and stew very slowly several hours. Let
-the water boil out and the meat become brown, then stir flour into the
-fat which has come from the meat. If there is too much, take some out
-and pour on boiling water, and stir until the flour is cooked. Pour the
-meat and gravy into a deep dish or platter and serve. Pieces of cold
-roast or steak can be used.
-
-Bay leaves, which can be obtained at the druggist’s, are a good
-substitute for those who do not like onions, but the leaves should be
-taken out before sending to the table.
-
-
-BROILED STEAK
-
-Select your steak carefully. The wide end of the slice of “Porterhouse”
-is nice, or the “loin.” Have the gridiron hot and buttered, and over
-hot coals; place the beef upon the gridiron, and cook till the blood
-begins to start upon the upper side before turning, if the fire is not
-too hot. To retain the juice, beef should be cooked rapidly at first.
-Turn frequently rather than scorch. When done, remove to the platter
-and season to the taste. Use no salt while cooking. This prevents the
-blood from escaping. Serve with mushrooms.
-
-
-BEEFSTEAK ROLL
-
-Select a nice, tender, sirloin steak; pound it well, season with salt
-and pepper; then make a nice dressing of chopped bread, well buttered,
-salted and peppered, with a little sage, and mixed together with a
-very little warm water. Spread this on the meat, then begin at one end
-and roll it together; tie with strings. Put into a dripping pan with a
-little water. Bake about three-quarters of an hour. To be eaten warm,
-or sliced cold for tea.
-
-
-SPICED VEAL
-
-Chop three pounds of veal steak and one thick slice of salt pork, as
-fine as sausage meat; add to it three Boston crackers, rolled fine;
-half a teacup of tomato catsup, three well-beaten eggs, one and
-one-half teaspoons of salt, one teaspoon of pepper, and one grated
-lemon; mould it in the form of a loaf of bread, put it into a small
-dripping pan, cover with one rolled cracker, and baste with a teacupful
-of hot water and two tablespoons of butter. Bake three hours, basting
-very often.
-
-
-CREAMED DRIED BEEF
-
-Pick in small pieces one-fourth of a pound of thinly-cut rather moist
-dried beef and brown in a little butter. When brown pour in it a
-coffecupful of milk and cream. Let it come to a boil and slightly
-thicken with a little butter and Gold Medal Flour creamed together.
-When it boils, pour it over a platter of brown toast and serve it at
-once.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-BEEF BALL
-
-Three pounds choice beef (rare) chopped fine, ten butter crackers
-crushed thoroughly, half teacup butter, pepper and salt to taste, half
-cup water. Mix all well together, press down hard in pans, dip a few
-spoonfuls of the water in which the beef was boiled over the top, and
-bake one and a half or two hours. Slice when cold.
-
-
-VEAL OR LAMB PATTIES
-
-Use cold veal or lamb; chop fine, taking equal parts of meat and bread
-crumbs; season with sage, salt and pepper, and moisten with eggs and
-melted butter, or gravies from the meat; make into little cakes, and
-fry in butter till well browned.
-
-
-VEAL LOAF
-
-Three pounds of veal, one and one-half pounds of salt pork, both
-chopped fine; two pounded crackers, two eggs well beaten, one nutmeg,
-two teaspoons of pepper, two teaspoons of chopped parsley, two
-teaspoons of celery, and the rind and juice of one lemon. Put batter on
-the loaf after kneading. Bake in
-
-
-TO BOIL CORNED BEEF
-
-Wash it thoroughly and put into a pot that will hold plenty of water;
-the water should be cold; skim with great care; allow forty minutes for
-every pound after it has begun to boil. The goodness depends much on
-its being boiled gently and long. If it is to be eaten cold, lay it in
-a vessel which will admit of its being pressed with a heavy weight, as
-salt meat is very much improved by pressing.
-
-
-MUTTON CHOPS
-
-Trim off the superfluous fat, and broil over a bright fire; season and
-butter them when cooked; do not have them rare. They can also be fried
-by first dredging with flour or bread crumbs.
-
-
-BAKED TONGUE
-
-Season with common salt, a very little saltpetre, half a cup of brown
-sugar, pepper, cloves, mace and allspice, powdered fine. Let it remain
-for a fortnight, then take out the tongue, put it in a pan; lay on some
-butter; cover with bread crumbs, and bake slowly till so tender that
-a straw will easily go through it. To be eaten cold. Will keep a long
-time, and is very nice for tea.
-
-
-FRIED LIVER
-
-Cut it in slices, and lay in cold salt water to draw out the blood.
-Some place it over a slow fire till the liver turns white. Take it out,
-roll each piece in flour or bread crumbs, season and put in hot lard.
-Cover, and cook slowly, till the liver is tender, then uncover and fry
-quickly till brown. Another way is to pour boiling water on the liver
-for a few moments, and proceed as above.
-
-
-IRISH STEW
-
-Take five or six mutton chops; the same quantity of beef, veal and
-pork; six or eight Irish potatoes, peeled and quartered; three or four
-onions sliced, and salt and pepper to taste; add a pint of good gravy,
-flavored with catsup, if liked. Cover all very closely, and let it
-simmer slowly for two hours (never allowing it to stop simmering). A
-slice or two of ham is an improvement. Stir occasionally to prevent
-burning.
-
- * * * * *
-
- HARMONY IN THE HOME
- THAT HAS A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- SIERRA BEER Closer to a Temperance Drink
- Than Any Other Beer. Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-BOILED BEEF’S TONGUE
-
-Boil a medium sized tongue three hours, or until so tender a broom corn
-will go through it easily; skim frequently when it begins to boil. When
-first removed from the fire skin it and set away to cool. If a pickled
-tongue, the water should be cold when put on to boil; if a fresh one
-salt thoroughly half an hour before taking it up.
-
-
-HASH ON TOAST
-
-Cold pieces of beefsteak are nice, chopped fine, cooked in a little
-butter and water, and thickened with flour; pour over pieces of toast
-laid on a platter, and moisten with hot water, salted. Garnish with
-hard-boiled eggs.
-
-
-HASH, WITH POTATOES
-
-Cold pieces of beef, either boiled, broiled or baked, can be used for
-the dish. Free the meat from all pieces of bone, chop fine, and mix
-with two parts of potatoes to one of beef. Potatoes boiled with the
-skins on are best. They should be cold, and chopped not quite so fine
-as the meat. Put them in a spider with melted butter or clarified
-drippings, and just enough hot water to keep from burning. Season to
-taste, and keep stirring till the whole is cooked together. If liked
-crisp, let it remain still long enough to bake a crust on the bottom,
-and then turn out on a flat dish. Other meats may be used instead of
-beef.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-TO ROAST A SHOULDER OF MUTTON
-
-Season and roast the same as beef, basting with butter and water till
-there is gravy enough to use. It requires to be cooked more than beef.
-Serve with currant jelly.
-
-
-SOUSE
-
-Clean pigs’ feet and ears thoroughly, and soak them a number of days in
-salt and water; boil them very tender and split open. (They are good
-fried.) To souse them cold, pour boiling vinegar over them, spiced with
-pepper corns and a little salt. They will keep good, pickled, for a
-month or two.
-
-
-LAMB WITH RICE
-
-Partly roast a small fore-quarter of lamb; cut it in pieces, and lay in
-a dish; season, and pour over a little water; boil a pint of rice till
-dry, salt it, and stir in a piece of butter, also the yolks of four
-well-beaten eggs, only reserving enough to put over the top; spread the
-rice and the remainder of the eggs over the lamb, to form a covering;
-bake a light brown.
-
-
-TO GLAZE HAM
-
-The ham should be a cold boiled one, from which the skin was removed
-when hot. Cover the ham all over with beaten egg; make a thick paste of
-cream, pounded cracker, salt and a teaspoonful of melted butter. Spread
-this evenly over the ham and brown in a moderate oven.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER If purchased by the Wife will keep
- Husband Home. RENO BREWING CO.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-BEEF’S HEART STUFFED
-
-After washing the heart thoroughly cut it into dice one-half inch long;
-put into a saucepan with water enough to cover. Remove scum. When
-nearly done add a sliced onion, a stalk of celery chopped fine, pepper
-and salt and a piece of butter. Stew until the meat is very tender.
-Stir up a tablespoonful of Gold Medal Flour with a small quantity of
-water and thicken the whole. Boil up and serve.
-
-
-BEEF STEWED WITH ONIONS
-
-Cut two pounds of tender beef into small pieces, season with pepper and
-salt; slice one or two onions and add to it, with water enough to make
-a gravy. Let it stew slowly, till the beef is thoroughly cooked, then
-add some pieces of butter rolled in Gold Medal Flour, enough to make
-a rich gravy. Cold beef may be cooked in the same way, but the onions
-must then be cooked before adding them to the meat. Add more boiling
-water if it dries too fast.
-
-
-BEEF TIMBALES
-
-Free left-over meat from fat and gristle, put through meat chopper,
-cutting finely. To one pint of meal add one teaspoonful of salt,
-one-eighth teaspoonful of pepper, put one-half cup of stock or water,
-two tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs and one tablespoonful of butter
-together in a saucepan over the simmering burner; when hot, add to it
-the meat; take from the fire and stir in carefully two whole eggs,
-well beaten. Put mixture in buttered custard or timbale cups, stand in
-baking pan half filled with hot water. Bake in moderate oven fifteen to
-twenty minutes. Serve with tomato sauce.
-
-
-FRIED TRIPE
-
-Should be washed in warm water and cut into squares of three inches;
-take one egg, three tablespoonfuls of Gold Medal Flour, a little salt
-and make a thick batter by adding milk; fry out some slices of pork,
-dip the tripe into the batter and fry a light brown.
-
-
-TRIPE STEW
-
-Melt in stew kettle two tablespoonfuls lard, one of butter; add three
-medium-sized onions, three cloves and garlic, all chopped very fine;
-one cup chopped greens, a little parsley; one-quart can strained
-tomatoes, a pinch of dried mushrooms, if handy; pepper and salt to suit
-taste; six large potatoes cut in quarters, lastly, three pounds plain
-boiled tripe cut in thin strips. Add boiling water if too dry. Serve
-hot.
-
-
-HASH
-
-Take cold pieces of beef that have been left over and chop them fine;
-then add cold boiled potatoes chopped fine; add pepper and salt and a
-little warm water; put all in a frying-pan and cook slowly for about
-twenty minutes.
-
-
-BEEF A LA MODE
-
-Take a piece of meat, cross-rib is best, put a slice of bacon or some
-lard in the bottom of pot, then the meat, and fill up with water till
-the meat is covered; then take two onions, some pepper-corns, cloves,
-bay leaves, one carrot and a crust of brown bread, salt and some
-vinegar; pepper, sprinkle flour over top and boil slowly.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
- START RIGHT
- BUY A PIANO
-
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-
- * * * * *
-
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- Than Any Other Beer. Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-OX-TAIL SAUTE
-
-About twenty cents worth of ox-tail for three people. Have them
-disjointed in pieces about an inch long. Take one large onion and brown
-in butter, one carrot, one turnip, one small piece of garlic, enough
-water to cover and cook slowly for four hours.
-
-
-BOILED BEEF WITH CABBAGE—German Style
-
-Take one head of cabbage, and after removing all soiled and bruised
-leaves, cut in sections lengthwise making about eight or nine pieces,
-leaving the piece of heart attached to each piece to hold it together.
-Place in the kettle on top of beef, which has been boiling some time;
-boil together for one hour. Salt to taste and pepper. Lift out the
-meat, let the cabbage boil a few moments longer in the beef broth and
-send it to the table.
-
-
-HOT BEEF LOAF
-
-Take three pounds of steak from the round and grind it through a
-chopper. Beat two eggs, pepper and salt, one and one-half of fresh,
-soft bread crumbs. Press this into a shallow, oblong, tin loaf-shaped
-pan and cover with about eight slices of salt pork, cut thin. Add
-one-half cupful of water to the pan, bake an hour, basting often, then
-put in on a warm platter, removing pieces of pork. Thicken the gravy in
-the pan with a little Gold Medal Flour, and one-half canful of stewed
-mushrooms; pour over and around the meat and serve hot. It is good when
-cold if cut in slices and served with lettuce salad.
-
-
-BEEF PIE WITH POTATO CRUST
-
-When you have used the best of a cold roast of beef take the small
-pieces, or as much as will half fill a granite baking pan; also any
-gravy, a lump of butter, a bit of sliced onion, pepper and salt, and
-enough water to make plenty of gravy; put over a fire, thicken by
-dredging in a tablespoonful of Gold Medal Flour; cover it up where it
-may stew gently. Now boil a sufficient quantity of potatoes to fill up
-your baking dish, mash smooth and beat light with milk and butter and
-lace in a thick layer on top of meat. Brush it over with egg, place
-the dish in an oven and let remain long enough to become brown. There
-should be a goodly quantity of gravy left with the beef, that the dish
-be not dry and tasteless.
-
-
-ROLLED STEAK
-
-Take a good rump steak, flatten and lay upon it a seasoning made of
-bread crumbs, parsley, pepper and salt, mixed with butter beaten to a
-cream. Roll up the steak, bind it evenly, and lay it in a dish with a
-cup of boiling water. Cover with another dish and bake forty minutes,
-baste often.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-SAUCES
-
-
-CAPER SAUCE
-
-Two tablespoonfuls butter, one tablespoonful Gold Medal Flour; mix
-well; pour on boiling water till it thickens; and one hard-boiled egg,
-chopped fine, and two tablespoonfuls of capers.
-
-
-GIBLET SAUCE
-
-Take the liver, heart, gizzard and neck of a chicken, wash and boil in
-salted water. Let boil till tender. Take them out with a skimmer and
-chop into coarse pieces. Put them back, add a little butter and thicken
-to a cream. Pepper and salt, boil a few minutes and serve.
-
-
-SAUCE ROBERT
-
-One cup brown sauce made with stock, one teaspoonful sugar, one
-teaspoonful mustard, one tablespoonful vinegar. Simmer five minutes.
-
-
-TOMATO MUSTARD
-
-One peck of ripe tomatoes, boiled with two onions, six red peppers,
-four cloves of garlic, for one hour; then add a half pint or half
-pound salt, three tablespoonfuls black pepper, half ounce each ginger,
-allspice, mace, cloves; boil again for one hour longer, and when cold
-add one pint of vinegar and a quarter pound of mustard; and if you like
-it very hot, a tablespoonful of cayenne.
-
-
-MINT SAUCE
-
-Mix one tablespoonful of white sugar to a half teacupful of good
-vinegar; add the mint and let it infuse for half an hour in a cool
-place before sending to the table. Serve with roast lamb or mutton.
-
-
-CELERY SAUCE
-
-Mix two tablespoonfuls Gold Medal Flour with half teacupful butter,
-have ready a pint of boiling milk; stir the flour and butter into the
-milk; take three heads of celery, cut into small bits and boil for a
-few minutes in water, which strain off; put the celery into the melted
-butter and keep stirred over the fire for five or ten minutes. This is
-very nice with boiled fowl or turkey.
-
-
-CURRANT JELLY SAUCE
-
-Melt one-half glass currant jelly over slow fire. Add one cup hot brown
-sauce; stir well and simmer one minute.
-
-
-CREAM OR WHITE SAUCE
-
-One cupful milk, a teaspoonful Gold Medal Flour and a tablespoonful of
-butter, salt and pepper. Heat butter in pan when hot, but not brown,
-add the flour. Stir until smooth; gradually add the milk. Let it boil
-up once. Season with salt and pepper and serve. This is nice to cut
-cold potatoes into and let them heat through. They are then creamed
-potatoes. It also answers as a sauce for other vegetables, omelets,
-fish and sweetbreads, or, indeed, for anything that requires a white
-sauce. If you have plenty of cream, use it, and omit the butter.
-
-
-HOLLANDAISE SAUCE
-
-Cream one-half cup butter. Add four well-beaten egg yolks, then the
-juice of one-half of a lemon, one-half teaspoonful of salt and a dash
-of cayenne. Pour a cupful of hot water in slowly. Mix and set in a
-saucepan of hot water. Stir until the sauce becomes a thick cream. Do
-not allow it to boil. Stir a few minutes after removing from the fire.
-It is a fine sauce for fish, asparagus or cauliflower.
-
- * * * * *
-
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-
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-
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-
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- Large Percentage of Extracts
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-GOVERNOR’S SAUCE
-
-Slice one peck of green tomatoes, sprinkle heavily with salt and let
-them stand over night. Drain well in the morning; cover them with
-vinegar; simmer them with six large onions, three red peppers, one
-teaspoonful each of mustard, ginger, pepper, a pinch of red pepper, a
-cupful of brown sugar, and a cupful of grated horseradish. Let them all
-simmer a trifle over two hours.
-
-
-SAUCE PIQUANTE
-
-To one cup brown sugar add one tablespoonful each of chopped capers and
-pickles and simmer five minutes.
-
-
-SALMON SAUCE
-
-Yolk of one egg, well beaten, one-half cupful of vinegar. Stir
-in rapidly one-half tablespoonful of sugar, salt and pepper, two
-tablespoonfuls of milk, two tablespoonfuls of cream. Let come to a
-boil, then cool and put over salmon.
-
-
-APPLE SAUCE
-
-Peel, quarter, and core, rich, tart apples; put to them a very little
-water, cover them, and set them over the fire; when tender, mash them
-smooth, and serve with roasted pork, goose or duck.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-HORSERADISH SAUCE
-
-A good-sized stick of horseradish is required, which should be grated
-into a bowl and a teaspoonful of mustard, a little salt, one-quarter of
-a pint of cream and vinegar to taste added. Stir all well together.
-
-
-CHILI SAUCE
-
-Two quarts of ripe tomatoes, four large onions, four chili peppers;
-chop fine, then add four cupfuls vinegar, three tablespoonfuls brown
-sugar, two of salt, two teaspoonfuls each of cloves, cinnamon, ginger,
-allspice and nutmeg; boil all thoroughly together and bottle after
-straining through a colander.
-
-
-MUSHROOM SAUCE
-
-Dissolve one-half teaspoonful of extract of beef in one-half pint of
-boiling water. Fry one minced onion and one chopped carrot in a little
-butter or dripping until lightly browned; pour the liquid over them,
-let all boil together for ten minutes and add a dessert-spoonful of
-mushroom ketchup, skim, strain, and it is ready for the table.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-EGGS
-
-
-HAM AND EGGS
-
-Fry the ham quickly; remove from the pan as soon as done. Drop the
-eggs, one at a time, into the hot fat; be careful not to let the yolks
-break and run, and keep the eggs as much separated as possible, to
-preserve their shape. The ham should be cut in pieces the right size to
-serve and, when the eggs are done, one should be laid on each piece of
-ham. If any eggs remain, they can be placed uniformly on the edge of
-the platter.
-
-
-CURRIED EGGS
-
-Slice two onions and fry in butter, add a tablespoonful curry powder
-and one pint good broth or stock, stew till onions are quite tender,
-add a cupful of cream thickened with arrowroot or rice flour, simmer a
-few moments, then add eight or ten hard-boiled eggs, cut in slices and
-beat them well, but do not boil.
-
-
-OMELET SOUFFLE
-
-Take three eggs, two ounces of butter, one dessert-spoonful of chopped
-parsley, one salt-spoonful of chopped onions, one pinch of dried herbs.
-Beat the whites of the eggs to a very stiff froth; mix the yolks with
-the parsley and a little salt and pepper. Stir the herbs gently into
-them and continue as in a plain omelet. Fold the omelet and serve
-immediately.
-
-
-OMELET
-
-Six eggs, whites and yolks, beaten separately; half pint of milk,
-teaspoonful corn starch, one teaspoonful baking powder, and a little
-salt; the whites, beaten to a stiff froth, last; cook in a little
-butter.
-
-
-SPANISH OMELET
-
-Mince very fine enough ham, fat as well as lean, as will fill a small
-teacup and add two finely-chopped small onions, such as are used for
-pickling. Beat six eggs, stir the ham into them and fry the omelet the
-usual way, folding it over when done.
-
-
-SCRAMBLED EGGS
-
- 3 eggs,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- ⅓ cup milk or water,
- Sprinkle with pepper,
- 1 teaspoonful butter.
-
-Beat the eggs slightly, add the milk and seasoning. Cook in a hot,
-buttered frying pan, stirring constantly until thick. Serve hot.
-
-
-OMELET AU NATURAL
-
-Break eight or ten eggs into a basin; add a little salt and pepper,
-with a tablespoonful of water; beat the whole well with a spoon or
-whisk. In the meantime put some fresh butter into an omelet pan, and
-when it is nearly hot, put in an omelet; while it is frying, with a
-skimmer spoon raise the edge from the pan that it may be properly done.
-When the eggs are set and one side is a fine brown, double it half over
-and serve hot. These omelets should be put quite thin in the pan; the
-butter required for each will be about the size of a small egg.
-
- * * * * *
-
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
- | K | | K |
- | I | WESTERN MUSIC CO. | I |
- | M | | M |
- | B | | B |
- | A | PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS | A |
- | L | | L |
- | L | 12-14 EAST FOURTH ST. RENO, NEV. | L |
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sierra Beer for Health Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-EGGS A LA MODE
-
-Remove skin from ten tomatoes, medium size, cut in a saucepan, add
-butter, pepper and salt; when sufficiently boiled, beat up five or six
-eggs, and just before you serve turn them into the saucepan with the
-tomatoes, and stir them one way for two minutes, allowing them time to
-be well cooked.
-
-
-OMELET
-
-Six eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately. One cupful milk, one
-tablespoonful of butter melted in the milk, one tablespoonful of Gold
-Medal Flour; cook slowly in a buttered skillet, on top of the stove,
-without stirring.
-
-
-POACHED OR DROPPED EGGS
-
-Fill a pan with boiling, salted water. Break each egg into a wet saucer
-and slip it into the water; set the pan back where water will not boil.
-Dip the water over the eggs with a spoon. When the white is firm and
-a film has formed over the yolk, they are cooked. Take them up with a
-skimmer, drain and serve hot, on toast. Season with salt.
-
-
-EGGS AND BACON
-
-Cut eight slices of bacon very thin, and fry until crisp; take them out
-and keep hot in the oven. Break four eggs separately into the boiling
-fat and fry until brown. Serve with the eggs laid over the bacon, and
-small fried pieces of bread placed round. Hash may be used instead of
-bacon.
-
-
-POACHED EGGS
-
-Have the water boiling, and the toast moistened in a little salt water,
-and buttered. Break the eggs, one by one, carefully into the water, let
-them boil till the white sets, remove with an egg slice, pare off the
-ragged edges and lay each egg upon a slice of toast; put over bits of
-butter, salt and pepper. Eggs require to be quite fresh to poach nicely.
-
-
-EGGS A LA CARACAS
-
-Chop finely two ounces smoked dried beef freed from the fat and
-outside skin. Add one cupful tomatoes, one-fourth cupful grated Old
-English cheese, a few drops of onion juice and a few grains each of
-cinnamon and cayenne. Melt two tablespoonfuls butter, add mixture and
-when heated, add three eggs slightly beaten. Cook until of a creamy
-consistency, stirring continually and scraping from bottom of pan.
-
-
-CURRIED EGGS
-
-Boil eight eggs hard, and cut into thick slices. Cook together in a
-saucepan a tablespoonful of butter and a heaping tablespoonful of Gold
-Medal Flour into which has been stirred a teaspoonful of curry powder.
-Stir until smooth, then add a large cupful of skimmed soup stock and
-cook, stirring all the time, to a smooth sauce. If too thick, add more
-stock. When smooth and of the consistency of cream, add salt and pepper
-to taste and lay into the sauce the sliced eggs, sprinkled lightly with
-salt. Cook until very hot.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER Small Percentage of Alcohol,
- Large Percentage of Extracts
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-SHIRRED EGGS
-
-Butter an egg shirred or small vegetable dish, cover bottom and side
-with fine bread crumbs. Add an egg very carefully, cover with seasoned
-bread crumbs, and bake in a slow oven until white is firm and crumbs
-are brown.
-
-
-FRIED EGGS
-
-Fried eggs are cooked as buttered eggs without being turned. They are
-usually fried with bacon fat, which is taken by spoonfuls and poured
-over the eggs. Do not have the fat too hot as that will give the egg a
-hard, indigestible crust.
-
-
-BUTTERED EGGS
-
-Melt one tablespoonful of butter, slip in an egg and cook until the
-white is firm. Turn over once while cooking, and use just enough butter
-to keep it from sticking.
-
-
-BREAD OMELET
-
- 2 tablespoonfuls bread crumbs,
- 1 speck salt,
- 1 speck pepper,
- 2 tablespoonfuls milk,
- 1 egg,
- ½ teaspoonful butter.
-
-Soak the bread crumbs in the milk for fifteen minutes, then add the
-salt and pepper. Separate the yolk and the white of the egg and beat
-until light. Add the yolk to the bread and milk and cut in the white.
-Turn in the heated buttered pan and cook until set. Fold and turn on
-heated dish.
-
-
-ASPARAGUS OMELET
-
- Omelet,
- 1 cup white sauce,
- 1 can asparagus.
-
-Follow any of the above omelet recipes. Make white sauce. Add
-asparagus, drained and rinsed, to the white sauce, spread some of the
-mixture over half of the baked omelet, fold over the other half, turn
-on platter and pour over the rest of the sauce. Use the cut asparagus.
-Cooked peas, cauliflower, or remnants of finely chopped cooked chicken,
-veal or ham may be used in place of the asparagus.
-
-
-EGGS AND TOMATOES
-
-Scrambled eggs with tomatoes make an appetizing luncheon dish. Take two
-good-sized tomatoes, peel, cut them in pieces, and fry them in a little
-hot olive oil. When cooked drain off the liquid and take four eggs well
-beaten, add some cream, and scramble. Mix the tomatoes with the eggs,
-seasoning with salt and pepper to taste. Serve on thin slices of toast.
-
-
-EGGS AND SPAGHETTI
-
-Take spaghetti and cook it with a cupful of grated cheese. When the
-spaghetti and cheese are cooked, add slices of hard-boiled eggs. Serve
-in a bowl garnished with pieces of soft toast.
-
-Among many other excellent dishes made with this paste are fried
-chicken with spaghetti and tomato jelly and macaroni au gratin in an
-Edam cheese case.
-
-
-EGGS IN BAKED POTATOES
-
- 6 eggs,
- 6 potatoes,
- 6 tablespoonfuls grated cheese,
- 6 tablespoonfuls butter.
-
-Bake the potatoes, cut off the top and remove half of the inside
-of potato, in its place drop an egg raw, salt, cayenne pepper, 1
-teaspoonful cheese in each and 1 teaspoonful butter. Put back into a
-hot oven for 4 minutes.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
- START RIGHT
- BUY A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-VEGETABLES
-
-
-SWEET POTATOES—Southern Style
-
- 4 boiled sweet potatoes,
- ¼ pound butter,
- 1 tablespoonful water,
- Lemon juice,
- ¼ cup brown sugar.
-
-Skin boiled potatoes and quarter. Place in baking dish, with butter on
-top; sprinkle with the brown sugar; add the water and a little lemon
-juice. Brown in oven and serve hot.
-
-
-GLAZED SWEET POTATOES
-
- 6 medium sized potatoes,
- ½ cup sugar,
- ¼ cup water,
- 3 tablespoonfuls butter.
-
-Wash and pare potatoes. Cook ten minutes in boiling, salted water.
-Drain, cut in halves lengthwise, and put in a buttered pan. Make a
-syrup by boiling three minutes the sugar and water; add butter. Brush
-potatoes with syrup and bake 15 minutes, beating twice with remaining
-syrup.
-
-
-SPINACH WITHOUT WATER
-
-The following method is very little known and has the advantages of
-preserving all the nutriment in the spinach and avoiding the use of
-boiling water.
-
-Having washed and drained the spinach very thoroughly, cut it up in
-coarse pieces and put it in a saucepan in which you have heated three
-and a half ounces of butter to every pound of spinach. Add salt, grated
-nutmeg and cook sharply.
-
-
-SPINACH “AU NATURAL”
-
-Having cooked the spinach in salt water as before, wash and drain the
-leaves carefully, then remove all water and give them a few strokes
-with the knife without chopping them up. Put them into a frying pan in
-which you have heated some butter; salt to taste and serve very hot.
-
-This method of preparing spinach is very much appreciated in Italy,
-where they add filets of anchovies to it.
-
-
-DUCHESSE POTATOES
-
- Mashed potatoes,
- 1 egg.
-
-Take freshly boiled and mashed potatoes or some that are left over,
-add to them the beaten yolk of egg, place in a greased tin and form in
-balls, hearts or flat cakes, brush with the beaten white, and brown in
-oven.
-
-
-POTATOES WITH CHEESE
-
-Hash eight cold boiled potatoes, mix them with one-half cupful of
-cream, half an ounce of good butter, a pinch of salt and pepper and a
-very small dash of grated nutmeg. Place them in a dish, sprinkle over
-them two tablespoonfuls of grated American cheese, two tablespoonfuls
-of grated bread crumbs, a large teaspoonful of melted butter, and brown
-in the oven for ten minutes.
-
-
-BAKED PEPPERS
-
-Cold rice and stewed tomatoes can be made into a delicate filling for
-peppers by seasoning highly with spices and a little onion. These can
-either be baked directly or can first be fried in hot butter or olive
-oil, then put in a baking dish covered with a cupful of white stock
-and baked for half an hour or more. All baked peppers are better when
-cooked in stock.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-LYONNAISE POTATOES (No. 1)
-
-Cook one onion thickly sliced in three tablespoonfuls butter until
-delicately browned. Remove onion and keep in a warm place. Add three
-cups cold boiled potatoes, cut in slices; sprinkle with salt, pepper,
-and stir until well mixed with butter. Press to one side of spider and
-let brown richly underneath, then sprinkle onions over potatoes; let
-heat thoroughly; turn on a hot serving platter, top side down; sprinkle
-with finely chopped parsley. Cooking the onion separately lessens the
-danger of burning.
-
-
-LYONNAISE POTATOES (No. 2)
-
- 1 pint boiled potatoes, cold,
- ½ teaspoonful salt,
- Speck of pepper,
- 1 teaspoonful chopped onion,
- 2 tablespoonfuls beef dripping or butter,
- 2 tablespoonfuls chopped parsley.
-
-Cut the potatoes into slices, season with the salt and pepper. Fry the
-onions in the dripping till light brown, put in the potato and cook
-till it has taken up the fat. Add the chopped parsley and serve.
-
-
-ARTICHOKE SAUTE
-
-Cut six fine, green artichokes into quarters and remove the chokes.
-Trim the leaves neatly and parboil them five minutes in salted water,
-drain. Lay them in a casserole, season with salt, pepper and one-fourth
-cupful butter; one-fourth cupful mushrooms, chopped fine, may be added.
-Cover and cook in a moderate oven twenty-five minutes. Serve with any
-desired sauce. Hollandaise is best.
-
-
-BAKED BEANS
-
- 1 quart navy beans,
- ½ pound fat salt pork, or
- 1½ pounds brisket of beef,
- ½ tablespoonful mustard,
- 1 tablespoonful salt,
- 2 tablespoonfuls molasses,
- 3 tablespoonfuls sugar,
- 1 cup boiling water.
-
-Wash, pick beans over, cover with cold water and let soak over night.
-In the morning cover with fresh water, heat slowly and let cook just
-below the boiling point until the skins burst, which is best determined
-by taking a few on the tip of the spoon and blowing over them; if done,
-the skins will burst. When done, drain beans and put in pot with the
-brisket of beef. If pork is used scald it, cut through the rind in
-half-inch strips, bury in beans, leaving rind exposed. Mix mustard,
-salt, sugar, molasses and water, and pour over beans and add enough
-more water to cover them. Cover pot and bake slowly six or eight hours.
-Uncover pot the last hour so that pork will brown and crisp.
-
-
-BRUSSELS SPROUTS
-
-For Six Persons. Time of Preparation, Two Hours
-
- 3 pounds Brussels sprouts,
- 3 ounces butter,
- 1 tablespoonful Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 pint stock,
- A pinch of nutmeg,
- A pinch of carbonate of soda,
- A pinch of pepper,
- Salt,
- 1 teaspoonful chopped parsley,
- ½ teaspoonful chopped onion.
-
-Throw the sprouts, after removing the outer leaves, into three quarts
-boiling water, with salt and a pinch of carbonate of soda. After
-bringing up to the boil again, take the sprouts out and drain on a
-sieve and then on a dry cloth, so that no water remains in them.
-
-Brown an ounce of the butter with the flour and sugar, add the stock,
-chopped onion and parsley, pepper, nutmeg and the remaining butter.
-Boil up well, then put in the sprouts and allow all to simmer gently
-for half an hour.
-
- * * * * *
-
- HARMONY IN THE HOME
- THAT HAS A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- SIERRA BEER Closer to a Temperance Drink
- Than Any Other Beer. Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CARROTS A LA CYRANO
-
-To make the dish, the tenderest young, sweet carrots are chosen. These
-are scraped and boiled tender. Then they are cut lengthwise in halves,
-dipped in thickest honey and placed in a baking dish, with the bottom
-thinly covered with olive oil. They are then thickly sprinkled with
-grated cheese and salt and placed in a hot oven and browned over for
-perhaps fifteen minutes.
-
-
-BAKED CAULIFLOWER
-
- 1½ pounds cauliflower,
- 2 ounces butter,
- 1 gill cream,
- ½ tablespoonful meat extract,
- 2 tablespoonfuls flour,
- A pinch of ground mace.
-
-Boil the cauliflower. Heat one and a half ounces butter and two
-tablespoonfuls Gold Medal Flour to a golden brown, add the cream and
-half a pint of the water in which the cauliflower has been boiled,
-with half a teaspoonful meat extract dissolved in it. Boil this sauce
-till thick, then flavor with ground mace. Strain and pour over the
-cauliflower, which has been placed in a deep dish. Melt the remaining
-half ounce butter, pour it over, sprinkle with grated Parmesan cheese
-and bake in a hot oven, standing the dish in a pan of boiling water.
-
-
-ESCALLOPED CORN
-
- 6 ears of cooked corn, or
- 1 can of corn,
- ½ cup corn liquid,
- 3 tablespoons cream,
- 1 teaspoonful sugar,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- ⅛ teaspoonful pepper,
- 2 tablespoonfuls Gold Medal Flour,
- 1 cup bread crumbs,
- 1 tablespoonful butter.
-
-Cut fresh boiled corn, too old to serve on cobs, from the cob; or use
-the pulp of one can of corn.
-
-Mix corn with the salt, pepper, flour and sugar and add the liquids.
-Melt the butter, mix with the bread crumbs and cover bottom of a
-pudding dish with half of the crumbs, add the corn mixture and cover
-with the rest of the crumbs. Bake in a moderate oven about twenty
-minutes, and serve hot in pudding dish.
-
-
-MACARONI WITH TOMATOES AND MUSHROOMS
-
- ½ pound macaroni,
- 2 quarts boiling water,
- 2 teaspoonfuls salt,
- 1 tablespoonful butter,
- 1 small onion, cut fine,
- 1 teaspoonful Gold Medal Flour,
- Cup of hot beef or chicken stock,
- 1 pint stewed tomatoes,
- 1 tablespoonful finely chopped mushrooms,
- 1 teaspoonful salt,
- Cayenne pepper,
- 1 teaspoonful parsley, chopped,
- 3 tablespoonfuls grated Parmesan cheese.
-
-Add salt and then the macaroni to the boiling water. Let boil 20
-minutes, stirring to avoid sticking to the bottom of the kettle. Drain
-in colander; pour 1 cupful of cold water through it; then return to
-cleared kettle.
-
-
-DUTCH ONION PIE
-
-Slice six onions, fry in butter to delicate brown, add one-half cupful
-of milk, one-half cupful of cream, one tablespoonful Gold Medal Flour,
-one well beaten egg; salt to taste. Have ready a baked pie crust in
-usual pie pan and pour in onion mixture. Return to oven and bake to
-good brown. White of egg may be added to top. This is a most excellent
-Holland Dutch dish.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER If purchased by the Wife will keep
- Husband Home RENO BREWING CO.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-SPAGHETTI ITALIENNE
-
- ¾ pound spaghetti,
- 3 quarts boiling water,
- 1 tablespoonful salt,
- 2 tablespoonfuls butter,
- ⅛ teaspoonful salt,
- ⅛ teaspoonful white pepper,
- A little nutmeg,
- 1 cup tomato sauce,
- 2 ounces grated Parmesan or Swiss cheese or 1 ounce of each.
-
-Slide spaghetti without breaking it, in the boiling water gradually and
-boil 25 minutes. Drain, place butter in sauce pan, salt, pepper and
-nutmeg, let cook a few minutes, add the hot tomato sauce, gently mix
-with a fork, then add cheese and mix well again with a fork for one
-minute or longer. Dress on a hot dish and serve.
-
-
-SPINACH COOKED IN BUTTER
-
-Cook the spinach leaves in a pan with salted water. Wash them freely
-with water to remove the sand which they may contain completely. Drain
-them, press out the moisture and chop them up very fine. Heat some
-butter in a saucepan, add the chopped spinach, stir them up with a long
-wooden spoon, adding a little butter. This will work out the moisture.
-Season them to taste with salt and a little scraped nutmeg. Finish by
-adding an ounce and a half of fine butter.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-MACARONI ESCALLOPED
-
-Break half a pound of macaroni into short lengths and cook until tender
-in plenty of salted water. Make a sauce of two level teaspoonfuls each
-of Gold Medal Flour and butter mixed together and one cupful of cream
-cooked together five minutes. Add half a level teaspoonful of salt
-and a saltspoonful of pepper. Stir in one egg and take from the range
-at once. Put the macaroni into a buttered baking dish in alternate
-layers with the sauce and pour over all one-quarter cupful of milk and
-one-quarter pound grated cheese melted together. Pour this mixture all
-over the top, so that it will be well distributed through the dish.
-Cover with fine bread crumbs and brown in a quick oven.
-
-
-CHILI CON CARNE
-
-One and one-half pounds Mexican Chili beans, 6 good sized onions, 6
-cloves garlic, 1 can tomatoes, ½ teaspoonful paprika, a bay leaf, 1½
-pounds hamburger, 3 tablespoonfuls of Gebhardt’s Eagle Chili Powder,
-salt to taste. Soak the beans overnight, then cook until done, add can
-of tomatoes and paprika, bay leaf, salt, slice the onions and garlic,
-fry until done.
-
-Put the hamburger into a perfectly dry frying-pan, no grease, cook
-until it is separated and dry, make a paste of the chili powder, add
-all to the beans and cook a little longer.—Mrs. E. F. Kiessling.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Pickles and Spiced Fruits
-
-
-FRENCH PICKLES
-
-Slice green tomatoes with onions, add salt, let stand over night, drain
-thoroughly and let boil one-half hour with vinegar; sugar to taste;
-white mustard seed, allspice, cloves, cinnamon, ginger and little
-mustard.—Mrs. Cora Dixon.
-
-
-GREEN PEPPER MANGOES
-
-Secure nice large peppers; cut a slit in them and take out the seed.
-Slice a head of cabbage very fine, salt it as for slaw, and mix very
-thick with black mustard seed; fill the peppers with this dressing and
-sew up the slit. Lay them in a jar and pour over enough cold vinegar to
-cover them.
-
-
-GREEN TOMATO PICKLE
-
-Slice one peck of green tomatoes; add one cup of salt, and let them
-stand over night; drain the water from them and add one gallon of
-vinegar, one large spoon of allspice, one teaspoonful of cloves, one
-tablespoonful of cinnamon, a half teaspoonful of ground mustard, four
-cups of sugar, one cup of grated horseradish, and simmer together ten
-minutes; add more sugar.
-
-
-SWEET TOMATO PICKLES
-
-Eight pounds of ripe tomatoes, four pounds of sugar, a half ounce of
-cloves, a half ounce of allspice and a half ounce of cinnamon. Peel the
-fruit and boil one and a half hours; when partly cold add a half pint
-of vinegar. Put away in jars.
-
-
-PICCALILLI
-
-Mix tomatoes, chopped and drained, with chopped onions, red and green
-peppers and horseradish; add spices, sugar and a little curry powder;
-cover with vinegar and boil one hour.
-
-
-WATERMELON PICKLES
-
-Boil the melon until you can stick a fork through it readily. To seven
-pounds of fruit take three pounds of sugar, one quart of vinegar and
-one ounce each of cinnamon, cloves and allspice. Scald the vinegar,
-put sugar and spices in, and pour over the melon. Do this for three
-mornings.
-
-
-BRINE FOR CUCUMBERS
-
-Wash them in clear water, lay them in a jar, and sprinkle them well
-with salt; as you lay in fresh cucumbers, add more salt. They will make
-their own brine.
-
-
-CHOW CHOW
-
-Twenty-five young, tiny cucumbers, fifteen onions sliced, two quarts
-of string beans, cut in halves, four quarts of green tomatoes, sliced
-and chopped coarsely, two large heads of white cabbage. Prepare these
-articles and put them in a stone jar in layers with a slight sprinkling
-of salt between them. Let them stand twelve hours, then drain off the
-brine. Now put the vegetables in a kettle over the fire, sprinkling
-through them four red peppers, chopped coarsely, four tablespoonfuls of
-mustard seed, two tablespoonfuls each of celery seed, whole allspice,
-and whole cloves and a cupful of sugar. Pour on enough of the best
-cider vinegar to cover; cover tightly and simmer well until thoroughly
-cooked. Put in glass jars when hot.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- Sierra Beer for Health Phone 581
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-TOMATO CATSUP
-
-Cut the tomatoes in two and boil for half an hour, then press through
-a hair sieve and add spices in the proportion given below, after
-which boil for about three hours over a slow fire. Remove from fire,
-turn it out, and let stand till next day, when you must add half a
-pint of vinegar for each peck of tomatoes. For every like amount of
-the vegetable, add, while boiling, one-eighth of an ounce of red and
-one-quarter of an ounce of black pepper. Half an ounce each of mace,
-allspice and cloves, and two ounces of mustard. Salt to suit, put in a
-little ginger, and essence of celery, if you so desire. Bottle, seal
-and cork and put in a dark, cool place.
-
-
-MIXED PICKLES
-
-Slice in an earthen jar one peck of green tomatoes, six large onions,
-and pour over them one cupful of salt. Let stand twenty-four hours and
-drain. Add one quart of cider vinegar, three pounds of brown sugar,
-one-eighth of a pound of white mustard seed, one teaspoonful of ground
-cloves, one teaspoonful of ginger, two teaspoonfuls of mustard, one
-teaspoonful of cayenne pepper and cook slowly for fifteen minutes.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-PICKLED CHERRIES
-
-Stone five pounds of cherries. Take one quart of vinegar, two pounds of
-sugar, one-half ounce each of cinnamon and mace. Grind the spices and
-tie them in a muslin bag; boil the spices, sugar and vinegar together
-and pour hot over the cherries.
-
-
-ECONOMY VINEGAR
-
-Save the sound cores and the parings of apples used in cooking. Put
-into a jar, cover with cold water, stand in a warm place, add one-half
-pint of molasses to every two gallons. Cover the jar with gauze; add
-more parings and cores occasionally. This will make a good vinegar.
-
-
-PICKLED BEETS
-
-Take the beets when cold, slice them across. Make a liquid of half
-vinegar and water, a little salt and pepper, a tablespoonful of sugar
-and put the beets in this. This is only for present use, as if they
-stand too long they turn white. You can make a bag of spices and boil
-with them, also a few whole cloves.
-
- * * * * *
-
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
- | K | | K |
- | I | WESTERN MUSIC CO. | I |
- | M | | M |
- | B | | B |
- | A | PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS | A |
- | L | | L |
- | L | 12-14 EAST FOURTH ST. RENO, NEV. | L |
- +——-+——————————————————————————————————+——-+
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Jams and Jellies
-
-
-APPLE JELLY
-
-Select sound, red, fine-flavored apples not too ripe; wash, wipe and
-core; place in a granite kettle, cover with water and let cook slowly
-until the apples look red. Pour into a muslin bag and drain; return
-juice to a clean kettle and boil one-half hour; skim. Now measure and
-to every pint of juice, allow a pound of sugar; boil quickly for ten
-minutes. Red apples will give jelly the color of wine while that from
-light fruit will be like amber.
-
-
-SPICED FRUITS
-
-These are also called sweet pickle fruits. For four pounds prepared
-fruit allow one pint vinegar, two pounds brown sugar, one-half cup
-whole spices—cloves, allspice, stick cinnamon, and cassia-bude. Tie
-spices in thin muslin bag, boil ten minutes with vinegar and sugar.
-Skim, add fruit, cook till tender. Boil down syrup, pour over fruit
-in jars, and seal. If put in stone pots, boil syrup three successive
-mornings and pour over fruit. Currants, peaches, grapes, pears and
-berries may be prepared in this way, also ripe cucumbers, muskmelons,
-and watermelon rind.
-
-
-PLUM JELLY
-
-Take plums not too ripe, put in a granite pan and set in a pan of water
-over the fire. Let the water boil gently till all the juice has come
-from the fruit, strain through a flannel bag and boil with an equal
-weight of sugar twenty minutes.
-
-
-CRAB-APPLE JELLY
-
-Select juicy apples. Mealy ones are no good. Wash and quarter and put
-into a preserving kettle over the fire with a teacupful of water. If
-necessary add more water as it evaporates. When boiled to a pulp strain
-the apples through a flannel bag, then proceed as for other jelly.
-
-
-PRESERVED PEACHES
-
-Select the yellow red-cheeked ones if possible (skin same as tomatoes,
-by pouring on boiling water, then thrusting them in cold water and
-separate in halves). Proceed as for preserving cherries, only using
-three-quarters of a pound of sugar to every pound of fruit.
-
-
-PRESERVED CHERRIES
-
-Select the large cherries, remove the stems and stone them carefully.
-To each pound of sugar allow one pound of cherries. Put fruit in
-granite pan and pour over them the sugar. Stir up and let stand over
-night to candy. In the morning put all into the preserving pan, place
-on the stove and boil gently until the cherries look clear, skimming
-off the scum as it rises. When the cherries have become quite clear,
-remove the pan from the stove and seal. Keep in dry, dark closet.
-
-
-PRESERVED TOMATOES
-
-A pound of sugar to a pound of tomatoes. Take six pounds of each; the
-peel and juice of four lemons and a quarter of a pound of ginger tied
-up in a bag; put on the side of the range and boil slowly for three
-hours.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
- ROYAL BEER Small Percentage of Alcohol,
- Large Percentage of Extracts
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-STRAWBERRY JAM
-
-To six pounds of strawberries allow three pounds of sugar. Procure
-some fine scarlet strawberries, strip off the stalks and put them into
-a preserving pan over a moderate fire, boil them for half an hour,
-keeping them constantly stirred. Break the sugar into small pieces and
-mix them with the strawberries after they have been removed from the
-fire. Then place it again over the fire and boil for another half hour
-very quickly. Put it into pots, and when cold cover it over with brandy
-papers and a piece of paper moistened with the white of an egg over the
-tops.
-
-
-LEMON MARMALADE
-
-Peel as many lemons as you wish and take out every seed. Boil the peel
-until very soft, add juice and pulp with a pound of sugar to a pound of
-lemons. Boil until thick and bottle.
-
-
-GRAPE MARMALADE
-
-Take sound grapes, heat and remove the seeds, then measure, and allow
-measure for measure of fruit and sugar. Place all together in a
-preserving kettle and boil slowly twenty-five minutes; add the juice of
-one lemon to every quart of fruit. Set away in jelly glasses.
-
-
-TO PRESERVE PLUMS
-
-To every pound of fruit allow three-quarters of a pound of sugar.
-Divide the plums, take out the stones, and put the fruit on a dish with
-pounded sugar strewed over; the next day put them into a preserving pan
-and let them simmer gently by the side of the fire for about thirty
-minutes, then boil them quickly; removing the scum as it rises, and
-keep them constantly stirred, or the jam will stick to the bottom of
-the pan. Crack the stones and add the kernels to the preserve when it
-boils.
-
-
-QUINCE PRESERVES
-
-Pare and core the fruit and boil till very tender. Make a syrup of a
-pound of sugar for each pound of the fruit and after removing the scum
-boil the quinces in this syrup for one-half hour.
-
-
-PRESERVED LEMON PEEL
-
-Make a thick syrup of white sugar, chop the lemon peel fine and boil it
-in the syrup ten minutes; put in glass tumblers and paste paper over. A
-teaspoonful of this makes a loaf of cake, or a dish of sauce nice.
-
-
-BLACKBERRY JAM
-
-Crush a quart of fully ripe blackberries with a pound of the best loaf
-sugar pounded very fine; put it into a preserving pan, and set it over
-a gentle fire until thick, add a glass of brandy, and stir it again
-over the fire for about a quarter of an hour; then put it into pots and
-when cold tie them over.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MARRIED LIFE
- START RIGHT
- BUY A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-As you start married life you may want select apartments If so, come
-and see us; we will make you feel at home
-
- Saturno Hotel
-
- MRS. W. FUNK, Proprietor
-
- Furnished Housekeeping Apartments
-
- Rooms Single or En Suite. Steam Heat, Hot and Cold Water
-
- Cor. West and Second Streets RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- Phone Main 1162-J
-
- Sierra Vulcanizing
- Works
-
- H. A. DE LUCA
-
- Tube Repairing, Surface Patches
- Reinforcements
-
- Sections, Retreading, Recapping
- Etc.
-
- All Kinds of Rubber Goods Repaired and Vulcanized
- Tubes Vulcanized, 25c
-
- 232 Sierra Street RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- Phone 1097 Opp. City Hall
-
- KWONG-CHUNG CO.
-
- Manufacturers of
-
- LADIES’ SILK WEAR, FANCY GOODS, ETC.
- TOILET ARTICLES OF ALL KINDS
-
- Give us a trial. We carry a full line and can
- sell as cheap as San Francisco merchants
-
- BUY AT HOME
-
- 102 No. Center Street RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-CANDY
-
-Sweets to the Sweet
-
-
-CREAM TAFFY CANDY
-
-Two cups sugar, one cup of water, one teaspoonful of cream tartar, one
-tablespoonful of vinegar, butter size of a walnut, flavor with vanilla;
-boil until threads; cool and pull.—Mrs. Mary Bowland, Dayton, Nev.
-
-
-PEANUT CANDY
-
-Two cups granulated sugar, put in an iron or granite vessel and stir
-until it boils; be careful not to let it burn. When the sugar is melted
-and begins to boil, stir in one cup of hulled peanuts; stir in and
-remove from fire; cool in buttered tins.
-
-
-OLD-FASHIONED MOLASSES CANDY
-
-Stir and boil one quart New Orleans Molasses and one-fourth quart of
-water until it crisps in cold water; add butter size of an egg; pull
-and flavor with vanilla.
-
- * * * * *
-
- DIAMONDS | _Watchmaker_ | ROSARIES
- WATCHES | | CROSSES
- RINGS | _Emilio C. Pesce_ | IVORY SETS
- LAVALLIERES | | CLOCKS
- CHAINS | _Jeweler_ | PRECIOUS STONES
-
- 245 LAKE ST. PHONE 1592 RENO. NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-FUDGE
-
-One cup milk, two cups sugar, one cup molasses, two squares chocolate,
-butter size of an egg, vanilla; cook until crisp; beat until it sugars;
-pour on buttered pan; cut into squares.
-
-
-PINOCHE CANDY
-
-Three cups brown sugar, one cup cream or one-half cup milk, and a large
-piece of butter, one cup chopped walnuts. Cook sugar and cream until
-done; add nuts. Take off stove and let cool five minutes. Then beat
-till right consistency.—Abbie Blanche Wightman.
-
-
-MARSHMALLOWS
-
-Four cups sugar dissolved in twelve tablespoonfuls of water and boil
-four minutes; one package of Knox’s gelatine dissolved in twenty
-tablespoonfuls of water; beat together for twenty-five minutes. Cut in
-squares and roll in powdered sugar and a little cornstarch.—Ethel Allen.
-
- * * * * *
-
- HARMONY IN THE HOME
- THAT HAS A PIANO
-
- WESTERN MUSIC CO. RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- PEERLESS CARS HUDSON
- and TRUCKS SUPER SIX
-
- More Miles Per Dollar
- FIRE STONE TIRES
- Red Side Wall, Black Tread
-
- L. L. GILCREASE CO.
- MOTOR CARS
-
- A. L. PETERSON, Sales Manager
- 35 West Plaza Street
- RENO, NEVADA
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- =MAXWELL $685, F. O. B. Reno=
-
- =MAXWELL ROADSTER $670 F. O. B. Reno=
-
-Compare a MAXWELL with any other car costing less than $900. There
-isn’t one that can afford you the great, big real value that is in the
-MAXWELL. Just for example, consider the equipment.
-
-The MAXWELL has electric lights and starter, demountable rims,
-rain-vision windshield, speedometer, mohair top, irreversible steering
-gear, linoleum covered running-boards and many other refinements such
-as are found on cars costing $1,100 and more.
-
-And these MAXWELL features are included at the price of $685. Did you
-ever hear of any other car at anywhere near this price that affords
-such big values? You may take our word for it, there is none.
-
-When you consider further, that the MAXWELL is a good looking car; that
-it is easy riding; that it carries five passengers in comfort; that
-it is the World’s Endurance Champion; that it is light in weight and
-inexpensive to operate—than you will agree with us when we say that the
-MAXWELL is absolutely the biggest value in the automobile field today.
-
-Just phone or drop into our new Sales Room and let us show you the
-cars. We shall gladly give you a ride.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-TIME TABLE
-
-
-BAKING BREAD, CAKES, PUDDINGS, ETC.
-
- Loaf Bread 40 to 60 m.
- Rolls, biscuit 10 to 20 “
- Graham Gems 30 “
- Gingerbread 20 to 30 “
- Sponge-cake 45 to 60 “
- Plain cake 30 to 40 “
- Fruit cake 2 to 3 hrs.
- Cookies 10 to 15 m.
- Bread pudding 1 hr.
- Rice and Tapioca 1 “
- Indian pudding 2 to 3 “
- Plum pudding 2 to 3 “
- Custards 15 to 20 m.
- Steamed brown-bread 3 hrs.
- Steamed puddings 1 to 3 “
- Pie-crust about 30 m.
- Potatoes 30 to 45 m.
- Baked beans 6 to 8 hrs.
- Braised meat 3 to 4 “
- Scalloped dishes 15 to 20 m.
-
-
-WHAT TO SERVE WITH MEATS
-
- Roast Beef—Grated Horseradish.
- Roast Mutton—Currant jelly.
- Boiled Mutton—Caper sauce.
- Roast Pork—Apple sauce.
- Roast Lamb—Mint sauce.
- Venison or Wild Duck—Black currant jelly.
- Roast Goose—Apple sauce.
- Roast Turkey—Oyster sauce.
- Roast Chicken—Bread sauce.
- Compote of Pigeon—Mushroom sauce.
- Broiled Fresh Mackerel—Sauce of stewed gooseberries.
- Broiled Bluefish—White cream sauce.
- Broiled Shad—Rice.
- Fresh Salmon—Green peas with cream sauce.
-
-
-BAKING MEATS
-
- Beef, sirloin, rare, per lb. 8 to 10 m.
- Beef, sirloin, well done, per lb. 12 to 15 m.
- Beef, rolled, rib or rump, per lb. 12 to 15 m.
- Beef, long or short, filet 20 to 30 m.
- Mutton, rare, per lb. 10 “
- Mutton, well done, per lb. 15 “
- Lamb, well done, per lb. 15 “
- Veal, well done, per lb. 20 “
- Pork, well done, per lb. 30 “
- Turkey, 10 lbs. wt. 3 hrs.
- Chickens, 3 to 4 lbs. wt. 1 to 1½ “
- Goose, 8 lbs. 2 “
- Tame duck 40 to 60 m.
- Game duck 30 to 40 “
- Grouse, pigeons 30 “
- Small birds 15 to 20 “
- Venison, per lb. 15 “
- Fish, 6 to 8 lbs.; long, thin fish 1 hr.
- Fish, 4 to 6 lbs.; thick Halibut 1 hr.
- Fish, small 20 to 30 m.
-
-
-FREEZING
-
- Ice Cream 30 m.
-
-
-BOILING
-
- Coffee 3 to 5 m.
- Tea, steep without boiling 5 “
- Corn meal 3 hrs.
- Hominy, fine 1 hr.
- Oatmeal, rolled 30 m.
- Oatmeal, coarse, steamed 3 hrs.
- Rice, steamed 45 to 60 m.
- Rice, boiled 15 to 20 “
- Wheat granules 20 to 30 m.
- Eggs, soft boiled 3 to 6 “
- Eggs, hard boiled 15 to 20 “
- Fish, long, whole, per lb. 6 to 10 “
- Fish, cubical, per lb. 15 “
- Clams, oysters 3 to 5 “
- Beef, corned and a la mode 3 to 5 hrs.
- Soup stock 3 to 6 “
- Veal, mutton 2 to 3 “
- Tongue 3 to 4 “
- Potted pigeons 2 “
- Ham 5 “
- Sweetbreads 20 to 30 m.
- Sweet corn 5 to 8 “
- Asparagus, tomatoes, peas 15 to 20 “
- Macaroni, potatoes, spinach,
- squash, celery,
- cauliflower, greens 20 to 30 “
- Cabbage, beets, young 30 to 45 “
- Parsnips, turnips 30 to 45 “
- Carrots, onions, salsify 30 to 60 “
- Beans, string and shelled 1 to 2 hrs.
- Puddings, 1 qt., steamed 3 “
- Puddings, small 1 hr.
-
-
-FRYING
-
-Croquettes, fish balls 1 m. Doughnuts, fritters 3 to 5 “ Bacon, small
-fish, potatoes 2 to 5 “ Breaded chops and fish 5 to 8 “
-
-
-BROILING
-
-Steak, one inch thick 4 m. Steak, 1½ inch thick 6 “ Small, thin fish 5
-to 8 “ Thick fish 12 to 15 “ Chops broiled in paper 8 to 10 “ Chickens
-20 “ Liver, tripe, bacon 3 to 8 “
-
- * * * * *
-
-This Page Will Interest Hubby
-
-
-Don’t Hesitate About Clothes
-
- _If You Would
- Dress Well_
-
-Let us demonstrate how we can give you the utmost satisfaction in the
-latest fabrics, latest style and perfect fit.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- LEWIS & LUKEY
-
- CLOTHERS and HATTERS
-
- Gent’s and Children’s
- FURNISHERS
-
- We Carry a Full and
- Up-to-Date Line
-
- Trunks, Suit Cases, Bags
-
-
- 221 N. Virginia Street Reno, Nevada
-
- * * * * *
-
- Phone Main 1123-J
-
- Dr. George M. Smitten
-
- Dentist
-
- Rooms 10-11-12-14 Journal Bldg. 16 East Second Street
-
- RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- Jersey Farm Milk Co.
- For
- Good Cream and Milk
-
-Best of Sanitary Conditions
-
-[Illustration]
-
- S. MURRAY RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- Palace Postal Card
- House
-
- MILLER & HORGAN
-
- We Carry the Largest Assortment of Postal Cards in the City
-
- Opp. S. P. Depot RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Weights and Measures
-
-
- 1 cup, medium size ½ pint or ¼ pound
- 4 cups, medium size, of flour weigh 1 pound
- 1 pint flour weighs ½ pound
- 1 pint white sugar weighs 1 pound
- 2 tablespoonfuls of liquid weigh 1 ounce
- 8 teaspoonfuls of liquid weigh 1 ounce
- 1 gill of liquid weighs 4 ounces
- 1 pint of liquid weighs 16 ounces
-
-
-HOW TO MEASURE AN OUNCE
-
-Housekeepers are often confused by the mingling of weights and measures
-in a recipe, therefore an accurate schedule is a good thing to have
-around. The following of the most generally used articles will be found
-correct:
-
-One ounce granulated sugar equals two level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce flour, four level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce butter, two level teaspoonfuls.
-
-One ounce ground coffee, five level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce cornstarch, three level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce thyme, eight level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce grated chocolate, three level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce pepper, four level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce salt, two level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce mustard, four level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce cloves, four level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce cinnamon, four and a half level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce mace, four level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce curry, four level tablespoonfuls.
-
-One ounce chopped suet, a fourth of a cupful.
-
-One ounce olive oil, two tablespoonfuls.
-
-
-TABLE OF MEASURES
-
- 60 drops equals 1 teasp.
- 3 teaspoonfuls “ 1 tabsp.
- 4 tablespoonfuls “ ¼ cup.
- 1 cup “ ½ pint.
- 1 round tablespoonful butter “ 1 ounce.
- 1 solid cup butter, granulated sugar, milk, chopped meat “ ½ pound.
- 2 cups flour “ ½ pound.
- 9 large eggs “ 1 pound.
-
-
-TABLE OF PROPORTIONS
-
- 1 cup liquid, 3 cups flour for bread.
- 1 cup liquid, 2 cups flour for muffins.
- 1 cup liquid, 1 cup flour for batters.
- 1 teaspoonful soda to 1 pint sour milk.
- 1 teaspoonful soda to 1 cup molasses.
- ¼ teaspoonful salt to 1 quart custard.
- 1 teaspoonful salt to 1 quart water.
- ⅛ teaspoonful salt is a pinch.
- ¼ square inch pepper is a shake.
-
-
-ROLLED OATS—A Perfect Infant’s Food
-
-Put two teacups Rolled Oats into three pints of boiling water into
-which has been put one-half teaspoonful salt. Boil this about two hours
-or until the quantity is reduced to one quart. Press the liquid portion
-through a sieve with a tablespoon until the meal remaining in the sieve
-is dry. Put away in bottle, and at feeding time use one-half Rolled
-Oats and one-half milk. This quantity should last twenty-four hours.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Eat Chism’s Quality Ice Cream_
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Household Hints
-
-
-Mildew in white clothes may be removed by soaking for a short time in a
-pail of water to which has been added a heaping teaspoonful of chloride
-of lime. Then hang in sun. Repeat if necessary.
-
-When frying potatoes, etc., try chopping with empty baking powder can
-instead of knife. You will find it much more handy and quicker.
-
-Try greasing cake and bread pans with a small five-cent paint brush.
-Keep grease in round tin can; cut hole in cover and insert handle of
-paint brush when not in use. It is then always ready for use and does
-not soil the hands.
-
-To prevent cake from burning when using new tins, butter the new tins
-well and place them in a moderate oven for fifteen minutes. After this
-the cake may be cooked in them without danger of burning.
-
-When ironing with gas, place a lid of the coal stove over the gas
-burners and place the irons over this. The irons will always be clean
-and heat much better than if they are put directly over the gas flame.
-
-To clean plaster of paris figures, use toilet soapsuds and a shaving
-brush. Rinse well. Dipping them in a strong solution of alum water will
-give them the appearance of alabaster.
-
-To preserve gilt frames, cover them when new with a coat of white
-varnish. All specks can be washed off with water without injury.
-
-To keep lemons, put them in water. Change once a week. Will keep a long
-time.
-
-
-DO YOU KNOW—
-
-That a small piece of butter added to the water prevents vegetables,
-macaroni or rice from boiling over?
-
-That the water from macaroni or rice after they have been cooked should
-be saved for soup and gravies?
-
-That a teaspoonful of vinegar added to boiled meat, while cooking,
-makes the meat tender?
-
-That after peeling onions if celery salt is rubbed over the hands
-before washing the odor will disappear?
-
-That if you add a pinch of salt to ground coffee before boiling it will
-improve the flavor?
-
-That if kid gloves are rubbed gently with bread crumbs after each time
-they are worn they will remain clean much longer than otherwise?
-
-That a poultice made of tobacco and warm water, put between two
-cloths and placed over the breast and pit of the stomach will relieve
-convulsions when nothing else will? It will do no harm.
-
-That any one who has aching feet, if the feet are placed in kerosene
-for about ten minutes each day will receive the greatest relief. If
-used regularly for a month is said to cure all corns and callous places
-on the feet. Will not blister or do any injury.
-
-To relieve burns get a small bottle of picric acid and with a feather
-paint the burned or scalded parts, allowing it to dry. In a few minutes
-all the pain will be gone and you will never feel it again. Where the
-burns are very severe more than one application is sometimes necessary.
-This is an invaluable remedy, especially where there are children in
-the home, for they are getting burned continually.
-
-There is nothing better than sulphur tea for the hair. It cures
-dandruff, promotes the growth, makes the hair soft and glossy and is
-very good to keep the hair from turning gray.
-
-The whitish stain left on a mahogany table by a jug of boiling water or
-a very hot dish may be removed by rubbing in oil and afterward pouring
-a little spirits of wine on the spot and rubbing it dry with a cloth.
-
-Wash your weathered oak woodwork and furniture with milk.
-
-To rid your home of ants mix thoroughly two parts borax with one part
-powdered sugar and put around where the ants come. For two or three
-days the ants will come in swarms, but after that they will disappear.
-Leave the powder around for a week or two and you will never be
-bothered again with ants.
-
-If food becomes slightly burned in cooking, set the saucepan in cold
-water and it will take away burned taste.
-
- * * * * *
-
- S. Goldstein
-
- _High Class_
-
- _Ladies Tailor
- and Furrier_
-
- [Illustration]
-
- _Fit Guaranteed_
-
- _SUITS MADE TO ORDER
- REASONABLE PRICES_
-
- _OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 O’CLOCK_
-
- _228 North Virginia Street
- Up-Stairs_
-
- _Reno, Nevada Phone Main 154_
-
- * * * * *
-
-You now have the wife! Let us furnish the home and save you money.
-
-It will pay you to investigate the =TA BED=, three pieces of furniture
-in one. Nothing on the market so convenient.
-
- Kitchenware, Dry Goods
- Gents’ Furnishings
- and Farming
- Machinery
-
- All Moderately Priced
-
- Nevada Implement and
- Supply Co.
-
- 214 Sierra Street RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- The Motoraid
-
- [Illustration]
-
- Thor and Lightweight Cleveland
- MOTORCYCLES
-
-
- ODEN, _The Cyclist_
-
- and
-
- Ford Specialist
-
- All Kinds of Repairing Promptly Done
- Baby Buggy Wheels Re-tired
- New and Second-Hand Wheels
- Bought, Sold and Exchanged
-
- Agency For
- The Diamond Squegee Tires
-
-
- 15 West Fourth Street
-
- RENO :: :: NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
- A Rare Opportunity
-
- _The highest class sub-division in the
- State of Nevada_
-
- _University
- Terrace_
-
- Large Lots—Beautiful View
- No Taxes—No Assessments
- All Improvements Free
-
-Cement Sidewalks: 14 feet from curb to property line, 8 feet for
-parking; cement curbs and gutters, 22 in. wide; streets graveled,
-rolled and finished; electric lights, telephone; city water piped to
-every lot; pillars and arches at main entrances and every lot well
-drained.
-
-Why not make the wife a present of one of these lots? They are
-increasing in value all the while.
-
-We sell on very easy payments. Do not delay. The lots are being sold
-rapidly.
-
- We are the owners
-
- Bonham Realty and Trust
- Company
-
- 131 N. VIRGINIA ST. RENO, NEVADA
-
- Phone 756
-
- * * * * *
-
-MRS. HOUSEWIFE:
-
-We guarantee that your dollar will buy as much dependable merchandise
-from us as can be had anywhere, _and further_ that if for any reason,
-what you buy is not satisfactory, we will gladly exchange it or refund
-your money. You are _insuring_ satisfaction when you come here to do
-your shopping.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _We Open Monthly Accounts
- with Responsible People_
-
-
- COMMERCIAL HARDWARE CO.
-
- 24 W. Commercial Row
- Phone 460 RENO, NEVADA
-
- * * * * *
-
-
- NEVADA PRESS [Illustration] GAZETTE BLDG., RENO
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-Obvious punctuation errors repaired. Varied hyphenation and spacing was
-retained as in saucepan, sauce-pan and sauce pan. Recipe oddities were
-retained except where a clear solution could be found. These are noted.
-
-Page 3, “Muffiins” changed to “Muffins” (Bread, Muffins, Rolls)
-
-Page 6, “Orchesta” changed to “Orchestra” (Parker’s Harp Orchestra)
-
-Page 11, twice, “over” changed to “oven” (Flour in oven) (very hot oven
-for ten)
-
-Page 12, same, (quick oven 45 minutes)
-
-Page 14, Boston muffins, “bafle” changed to “bake” (should bake in)
-
-Page 15, “making” changed to “baking” (teaspoonfuls baking powder)
-
-Page 18, “separte” changed to “separate” (and white separate)
-
-Page 18, same line, “tetaspoonful” changed to “teaspoonful”
-(teaspoonful baking powder)
-
-Page 23, “marshmellow” changed to “marshmallow” (ice with marshmallow)
-
-Page 23, “minues” changed to “minutes” (Bake 20 minutes)
-
-Page 24, “Contiue” changed to “Continue” (Continue the beating)
-
-Page 25, Sponge Cake, “teaspoonfuls” changed to “teaspoonful” (1
-teaspoonful baking powder)
-
-Page 25, “marhsmellows” changed to “marshmallows” (about 24
-marshmallows) (marshmallows until cool)
-
-Page 28, Jam Cake, “making” changed to “baking” (teaspoonful baking
-powder)
-
-Page 29, “whisp” changed to “whisk” (with a clean whisk)
-
-Page 31, Rolled Oats Crisps, “making” changed to “baking” (on greased
-baking pan)
-
-Page 31, “mor” changed to “more” (more than is necessary)
-
-Page 32, Graham Wafers, “tablspoonfuls” changed to “tablespoonfuls” (2
-tablespoonfuls milk)
-
-Page 33, “wripper” changed to “whipper” (patent cream whipper)
-
-Page 34, “nutmg” changed to “nutmeg” (nutmeg; cover with)
-
-Page 34, “carmel” changed to “caramel” (want caramel custard)
-
-Page 34, Raisin Layer Pudding, “and” changed to “add”, “heaten” changed
-to “beaten” (add stiffly beaten whites)
-
-Page 37, Russian Cream, “whick” changed to “whisk” (fire, whisk briskly
-and)
-
-Page 39, Hard Sauce, word “of” added to text (add whites of)
-
-Page 39, Brandy Sauce, “fourts” changed to “fourths” (add three-fourths
-of)
-
-Page 41, “APPPLE” changed to “APPLE” (APPLE MERINGUE PIE)
-
-Page 42, Famous Cream Pie, “over” changed to “oven” (and brown in oven)
-
-Page 42, “wit htwo” changed to “with two” (of butter with two)
-
-Page 45, “flexability” changed to “flexibility” (flexibility that gear)
-
-Page 50, Macaroni Soup, “tablespoonfuls” changed to “tablespoonful”
-(with one tablespoonful)
-
-Page 52, “skin” changed to “skins” (skins will rise to top)
-
-Page 57, Crab Salad, “lttuce” changed to “lettuce” (leaves of lettuce)
-
-Page 61, “CABBABE” changed to “CABBAGE” (CABBAGE SALAD a la CALAIS)
-
-Page 68, Pigeon Pie, “over” changed to “oven” (quick oven for one)
-
-Page 69, “of” changed to “or” (hung a day or two)
-
-Page 74, “stil” changed to “stir” (Medal Flour; stir until)
-
-Page 78, Veal Loaf, the recipe seems to be missing the final
-instructions as it stops mid-sentence. Research on Veal Loaf of this
-era seems to recommend cooking it in a slow oven for two hours just in
-case the reader wishes to try it.
-
-Page 79, Beef Pie with Potato Crust, “over” changed to “oven” (the dish
-in an oven)
-
-Page 81, Apple Sauce, “emash” changed to “mash” (when tender, mash them)
-
-Page 82, “SOULFLE” changed to “SOUFFLE” (OMELET SOUFFLE)
-
-Page 85, Baked Peppers, “opion” changed to “onion” (and a little onion)
-
-Page 86, Lyonnaise Potatoes No. 2, “teh” changed to “the” (season with
-the salt)
-
-Page 88, Spinach Cooked in Butter, “Finished” changed to “Finish”
-(Finish by adding)
-
-Page 88, “humburger” changed to “hamburger” (Put the hamburger)
-
-Page 90, Mixed Pickles, “earthern” changed to “earthen” (in an earthen
-jar)
-
-Page 92, Blackberry Jam, “bset” changed to “best” (the best loaf sugar)
-
-Page 95, “MARSHMELLOWS” changed to “MARSHMALLOWS” (MARSHMALLOWS)
-
-Page 98, “Roome” changed to “Rooms” (Rooms 10-11-12-14)
-
-Page 100, Household Hints, “over” changed to “oven” (a moderate oven
-for fifteen)
-
-Page 100, “them” changed to “they” (each time they are worn)
-
-Page 100, “furniure” changed to “furniture” (furniture with milk)
-
-Page 21, “Medeira” and “Meleira” changed to “Madeira” (Sherry or
-Madiera)
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Just-Wed Cook Book, by Various
-
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