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Household Economy

Household Economy image
Parent Issue
Day
27
Month
December
Year
1878
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Before washing black and white ootton or lincn dresses, or any of these dark colors, flrst dip them in salt and water and hang them in a shady place to dry. Mix lightly one pouud of Graham flour with a pint of thick, swect cream ; add salt, roll thin and bake as other pastry, and yon will have a fine Grahain pastry. Nioe BreakfastDish. - Coldmashed j potatoeH, made into little balls, and sliglitly flattened; dip them into an egg slightly, so as to mix the yelk and white ; roll them in cracker crnmbs. Fry them in hot lard or butter. Send to table hot. Ir horsc-radish be prepared in the fall, as follows, itmay be kept all winter : To each coffee-cupftil of horse-radiah allow one table-spoonful of salt, one table-spoonful of white sxigar, and ii pint aud a half of good vinngar; bottle aud seal. Bat Traps. - Bats and mice will go into a trap more readily if a small piece of looking-glass be put in any part of the trap where they can see themselves reflected. They mistak the reflection for anothev rat, and where others go they f ollow. Fruit or wine stains can be removed from woolen or cotton goods by sponging them gently - do not rub the goods - in ammonia and alcohol ; a teaspoonful of ammonia to a wine-glass of alcohol. Then if needed the material may be washed. A piece of red peopper, the size of yonr finger-nail, put into meat and vegetables, when first beginning to cook, will aid greatly in killing the unpleasant odor arisingtherefrom. Bemember this for boiling cabbage, green beans, onions, chickens, mutton, etc. House Plants. - Tobacco smoke - under cover - will be found an effectual remedy for aphides; but the larvos of many other insects, espocially of the tipnla and the tenth-redinidoo, which occasions the wrapping np and shriveling of the leaves, can be removed by washing with lime-water, or han'l-picking. To make buckwheat cakes, mix one gillof wheat flour with one quart of buckwheat flour, add one large teaspoonful of salt, then add gradually a scant quart of warm water mixed with one gil! of yeast. Let it rise all night, and then in the morning add a quarter teaspoonful of carbonate of soda, and bake immediately. Wasting Flour. - A correspondent writes to the Christian Union: "How can I help wasting much flour when making bread, cake or pastry? So much is washed off the bread board or the cake bowl, and yet I can't see how it can be helped." Mrs. Beeclier answers : " There is no necessity for wasting any of it. Knead your bread in the bowl till it will no longer adhere to your hands ; then dip your hands in flour and rub off all the dough that clings to them. Sprinklo very little flour on the board, taking care not to scatter it, but keep it only where it will be nreded. If the bread is properly prepared, it will require but little flour to finish kneading it after yon put it on tho board. Put a little flour in the bowl and, ■with it, rub oft all the dough that remains, and work it in with the bread. Scrape off all the flour and such dough as inay stick to the molding board, which should be very little. Put what is thus scraped up in the bottom of the bread bowl, and when the dough is raised enough to go into the pans this flour at the bottom of the bowl will be light enough to work into the dough and thus be saved. When molding the dough to put into the pans, if you scatter flour or dough on the boards, more than you work in, scrape it up and put it in your yeast pot, and. do the same with all adïiering to the board when making pastry. By practice you will soon be able to make both bread and pastry and leave but very little to scrape from the board. All that sticks to the bowl in making cake should be scraped off with a thin-bladed knife anddropped into the pan with the cake."

Article

Subjects
Old News
Michigan Argus