Part 4
Always read the label when buying and be sure to look for the U. S. Government inspected and passed legend on every can of meat you buy.
MEAT LOAF
Meat loaf is made from choice selected Government Inspected meats. Prepared commercially by chefs who daily use the same accurate measurements of beef and pork trimmings combined with macaroni, eggs, cheese and seasonings. The results are standard products. When whole, the loaves average about six pounds in weight.
Meat loaves are widely popular, time and energy savers for the housewife and may be purchased in any amount desired, from your butcher, grocer or delicatessen.
VARIETY OF LOAF GOODS
Special Loaf—Selected beef and pork, macaroni, eggs, cheese and seasonings. Meat Loaf— “ “ “ “ bread crumbs, eggs and seasonings. Veal Loaf— “ veal “ “ cracker meal and seasonings.
In more elaborate form are jellied loaves. Such meats as tongue, tripe, pigs’ feet, corned brisket of beef and ox lips are selected, cooked whole, covered with gelatine and molded into loaf form. They require no home preparation, are ready to slice and serve.
JELLIED LOAVES
Jellied Lambs’ Tongue Jellied Tripe Jellied Pigs’ Feet Corned Beef and Gelatine Jellied Luncheon Tongue Jellied Ox Tongue
LUNCHEON MEATS
Luncheon meats are made of selected pork trimmings cut in somewhat larger portions than for the loaf meats. These meats, carefully seasoned, mixed and cooked, suggest a great variety of dishes.
As an appetizer, sandwich fillers, sliced cold on lettuce or in salad, luncheon meats have come into great favor.
New England Style Veribest Luncheon Meat Berliner Style “ “ Minced Style “ “
EXTRACT OF BEEF
Extract of Beef adds the distinctive touch to many meat and fish sauces, soups and gravies. It is a valued meat extender as it adds the meat flavor necessary to make a small amount of meat, flavor a large amount of cereal in a loaf or croquettes. Many salads and vegetable dishes are greatly improved by the addition of a bit of Extract of Beef to the sauce.
VARIETY OF SAUSAGES
(Continued from page 19)
=DRY SAUSAGE SMOKED= Summer Sausage, Salami, Scandinavian, Mettwurst, Nola.
=DRY SAUSAGE UNSMOKED= Milan Salami, Coppa, Capicolli, Arles, Menage, Sopressata, Peperoni, Mortadella.
=FRESH SAUSAGE= Veribest Farm Style Pork Sausage, Blood Pudding, Bologna Style Sausage, Frankfurt Style Sausage, Garlic or Knoblach, Head Cheese, Liver Pudding, Pure Pork Sausage.
A wide variety of superior sausage is put up in cans for convenience in keeping. Available under the quality brand are the following:
Luncheon Sausage Frankfurter Style Bratwurst Oxford Style Sausage Vienna Style Sausage
_Select Armour’s Canned Meats for your pantry_ (_See pages 14-17_)
FATS FOR SPREADS AND COOKING
[Illustration]
A properly balanced diet contains a regular supply of fat. The ideal diet determined by weight, height, occupation and general health of the individual contains just sufficient quantity of fat and carbohydrates to give the required amount of heat and energy. In popular terms, one-fifth of the diet should consist of fat. Much of this may be fat of vegetables or meats, but some of it should be butter fat or its equivalent, especially for children because of the vitamines it contains. Scientists agree that oleo oil also contains the growth-promoting elements.
The necessity of fat in the diet has been proven by numerous experiments. Animals lacking certain fats do not grow and cannot reproduce. Disastrous results have attended nations where shortage of supplies made it impossible to include the necessary fat in the diet.
Fats supply a large part of the heat and energy required, an ounce giving two and one-half times as much heat and energy as an ounce of carbohydrates. Butter, oleomargarine, nut margarines, pure leaf lard, bacon, salt pork, the fats of beef, mutton, pork and fowl, vegetable fats and oils and peanut butter are our principal sources of fat. A certain percentage is found in all nuts, cereals and vegetables. For the average healthy person fats are not difficult to digest if not taken in too large quantities and if the fat is properly used in the food.
SPREADS
Butter, oleomargarine, nut margarine and peanut butter are the spreads in general use. In a well balanced diet these may be used interchangeably. The food value is principally in the heat and energy furnished, which is practically equal in all the spreads. Butter and highest grade oleomargarine contain certain growth elements not found in the nut butter, but milk or the average well varied diet corrects this.
Butter is one of the best sources of fat for the daily diet. High grade creamery butter, such as Cloverbloom, is made in the heart of the rich dairy districts, from sweet pasteurized cream.
Oleomargarine has a well recognized place among spreads, due to a growing understanding among intelligent housewives as to its composition and the ideal conditions under which it is made. It is made by churning pure, sweet animal oils and vegetable oils in pasteurized milk and salting to taste. Since the housewife knows that materials used in oleomargarine are used daily in one form or another in her home and that it is given Government Inspection, oleomargarine has become a most generally used spread.
The vegetable or nut margarines are made from pure cocoanut and peanut oils churned in pasteurized milk. They are daily growing in public favor. The low moisture content of nut margarine and the care in preparation make it a rich and tasty spread. Nut-ola is the popular Armour nut margarine.
Peanut butter, although used as a spread, has become universally known as one of our most excellent protein sources to replace meat. Easily digested, it is not only popular with adults, but a good food for children.
_There is an Armour Oval Label Product for every need of fat in the diet or in cookery_
THE PROPER FAT FOR EVERY COOKERY USE
For shortening purposes, fats are used to improve the texture of the product. The fat in the mixture protects the starch grains from the moisture until the proper time in baking, allowing the leavening agent to act and the starch grains to swell, resulting in a light even-textured product.
[Illustration: Delicious, Nutritious Doughnuts]
It is possible to use a great variety of fats for cooking. Animal fats have been popular shortenings. Recent fat shortage has acquainted us with the value of vegetable fats as shortening and in spreads. Armour’s vegetable fat is Vegetole. It contains the same fuel value and has the same shortening value as lard. Pure Leaf Lard or vegetable fats are the ideal shortenings. Salad Oil, highly refined vegetable fat, Oleomargarine, Nut-ola, butter, and drippings from bacon, ham, beef and pork are used with entire satisfaction for shortening purposes.
The fats best suited to deep frying and sautéing are those which have a very high burning point. For general “all purpose” satisfaction, pure leaf lard ranks first. There is an Armour product especially suited to every cookery need.
FATS
Bacon drippings may be substituted for lard in frying, baking, or in gravies, providing the drippings are clarified and not too strong. A great many people prefer the flavor of bacon drippings to any other shortening.
Beef suet drippings, for reheating meats or for frying or shortening purposes, take the place of lard and are much more economical.
Pork fat, left from roast, chops or ham, can be used in the same manner.
Mutton drippings need no longer be set aside, since the housewife has learned how to sweeten them.
Smoky kitchens indicate the improper use of fat in cooking. Too high a temperature causes a chemical change to take place which results in smoke and disagreeable odor, and also renders the fat less digestible.
Put cold fat into a cold pan before placing it over the heat. Bringing into contact with the hot pan frequently results in burning the fat.
For deep frying and sautéing, care should be taken not to heat the fat to too high a temperature, as burning decomposes the fat and renders it less digestible. In deep fat frying, place the food to be fried in the hot fat a small amount at a time. The addition of the cold food reduces the temperature of the fat.
Do not pile fried articles. Drain on unglazed paper.
Strain fat after using, save, and use again.
FOODS SOAK FAT
When fat is not hot enough, when mixture is too rich, when mixture is too moist, and when too much soda or baking powder has been used, deep-fried foods will take up too much fat and be greasy.
TEST FOR TEMPERATURE
A piece of soft bread will brown in 40 seconds in deep fat that is just hot enough for cooked articles, or in 60 seconds in fat at the right temperature for uncooked foods.
Fat is too hot if it smokes.
TO CLARIFY FAT
To clarify the frying medium for second or third use, melt, add raw potato cut in quarter inch slices, and allow to heat gradually; when it ceases to bubble and the potatoes are well browned, strain through double cheesecloth, placed over the wire strainer into a pan.
SALAD OIL USED IN COOKING
Vegetable salad oil meets all the requirements for a rich, delicately flavored oil for salad dressing. Highly refined cottonseed oil and cocoanut oil are American products, made from highly refined vegetable oil. Both have proved entirely satisfactory and economical as salad oil. Highly refined cottonseed oil for frying has a high smoking point, and, properly used, gives off no unpleasant odor.
HOW TO USE FATS
-------------+-------+--------+---------------+----------------------- NAME |SMOKING| 100 | USE | COMPARATIVE | POINT |CALORIES| | QUANTITIES TO USE -------------+-------+--------+---------------+----------------------- “Simon | | |Shortening | Pure” |468° F.|1 scant |Deep Frying | Standard Shortening Leaf Lard | | tbsp. |Sautéing, or | | | |Pan Frying | -------------+-------+--------+---------------+----------------------- White | |1 scant |Shortening | Cloud |446° F.| tbsp. |Deep Frying | Same as “Simon Pure” Shortening | | |Sautéing | -------------+-------+--------+---------------+----------------------- | |1 scant |Shortening | Vegetole |473° F.| tbsp. |Deep Frying | “ | | |Sautéing | -------------+-------+--------+---------------+----------------------- | | |Salad Dressing,| Veribest |510° F.|1 scant |Deep Frying, | A trifle less than of Oil | | tbsp. |Sautéing | “Simon Pure” | | |Shortening | -------------+-------+--------+---------------+----------------------- | | |A satisfactory | To replace butter use Veribest |425° F.| 1 tbsp.|economy | 1/8th less for Oleomargarine| | |Spread and | shortening; a bit more | | |Shortening | than of “Simon Pure” -------------+-------+--------+---------------+----------------------- Nut-ola |420° F.| 1 tbsp.|An economy | ” | | |Spread | -------------+-------+--------+---------------+----------------------- Cloverbloom |400° F.| 1 tbsp.|The Ideal | For shortening use Butter | | |Spread and | 1/5th more than | | |Shortening | “Simon Pure” Leaf | | |for cakes | Lard =============+=======+========+===============+=======================
CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF ARMOUR FATS
--------------+-------+------+--------+-------------+--------+-------- |Protein| Fat |Moisture|Carbohydrates|Salt and|Calories | | | | | Ash | per lb. --------------+-------+------+--------+-------------+--------+-------- Butter | 1.00 | 80.5 | 15.5 | | 3.00 | 3310 Oleomargarine | 1.0 | 85.5 | 11.00 | | 2.5 | 3820 Nut-ola | 2.17 | 85.15| 11.77 | | 2.17 | 3610 Peanut Butter | 29.3 | 46.5 | 2.1 | 17.1 | 5.0 | 2825 Pure Leaf Lard| |100.00| | | | 4220 Salad and | | | | | | Cooking Oil| |100.00| | | | 4220 Vegetole | |100.00| | | | 4220
_The Armour Oval Label takes the guesswork out of your food buying_
FRUITS TO COMPLETE THE MEAL
The dietetic value of fruits lies in the fruit sugar, mineral salts, and organic acids which they contain. Fruits are body regulators.
Fruit sugar or carbohydrates are the chief sources of fuel value in fruit. Most fruits also contain the substance which is necessary for jelly making. A fruit which does not contain pectin, such as pears and pineapple, must be combined with some fruit containing pectin. Apples, grapes, and currants contain great quantities of pectin.
Fresh fruit eaten the first thing in the morning acts as a cleanser. Care must be taken in the selection of fruit, it should be ripe, but not overripe. If overripe, it is liable to cause fermentation in the alimentary tract.
Science has perfected the drying process to such a degree that dried fruit has become a great convenience when the fresh product is not obtainable.
Because it is impossible to wholly consume all fruits at the harvesting time, great quantities are canned for later consumption. To retain the highest natural flavor and full fruit sugar value, it is necessary to can fruits and vegetables just as they ripen and immediately after picking. Commercial canning of fruits has reached such a high degree of excellence that the average home manager prefers to buy a reliable brand she knows to be uniform, rather than run the risk of having fruits spoil that she uses her own time and material to “put up.”
The wide variety of fruits on the market under reliable brand names makes it possible to serve practically any fruit at any season. Even the special types of fruits may be purchased canned, as Royal Anne Cherries, Muscat Grapes, Bartlett Pears, Egg Plums, etc.
The Fruits to Serve with Various Meats
Apricots Roast Lamb, Baked Ham Pineapple Boiled Ham, Cheese Apples Roast Pork Pears (spiced) Cold Beef, Cheese Peaches (spiced) Veal, Cheese
All fruits combine in fruit salads, cocktails, ices.
VEGETABLES
Vegetables contain a large amount of water, cellulose, and mineral matter. They are included under the classification of carbohydrates, or mineral salts according to the predominance of starch or mineral matter. Leafy vegetables are rich in vitamines.
The mineral salts afford bone building material, while the large amount of cellulose which they contain furnishes bulk in the diet.
Canned vegetables are preserved by sterilization. Salt is used to bring out the flavor, acts as a preservative, and increases the mineral content.
Dried vegetables are being used in soups and ragouts. The dried vegetables have not yet reached as extensive use as have the dried fruits.
Commercially canned vegetables add year round variety to practically every American table. The selection of a reliable brand simplifies the marketing.
The Vegetables to Serve with Various Meats
Tomatoes—Broiled Steak, Lamb Chops. Asparagus—Planked Steak, Roast Beef, Lamb Chops, Veal Chops. Spinach—Ham, Tongue, all meats, eggs, fish. Peas—Lamb Chops, Chicken, Meat croquettes. String Beans—Ham, Boiled Lamb, Chicken. Okra—Chicken, Tuna, Ham. Celery—Cheese Dishes.
All vegetables combine in vegetable casseroles and salads.
MINCE MEAT
Mince Meat nearly conforms to the requisites of a perfect food. It contains protein from the meat content, carbohydrates, both sugar and starch in the form of fruits, and moisture. Spices and flavoring make it complete. Its fuel value is considerable. It should not merely be used as a holiday food, but as an all year round product.
Mince meat contains only the best and most wholesome ingredients. On the market are two varieties, the condensed and moist. Moist mince meat requires more attention because of its aptness to ferment. In making it, green apples and fresh cider are used. As cider makes vinegar and raisins and currants make wine, fermentation is possible. This does not mean that the mince meat is no longer good. The alcohol formed acts as a preservative.
Concentrated mince meat contains dried apples and boiled cider. In this respect only does it differ from moist mince meat. By the addition of water, the condensed becomes equal to moist. Condensing is done merely to aid in packing and delivery.
VARIETY OF USES
Pie Patties, Brown Bread and Mince Meat Sandwich, Pudding, Tomato stuffed with Mince Meat, Mince Meat Salad, Mince Meat Relish, Mince Meat Cookies.
_Armour’s Veribest Mince Meat is made of most carefully selected materials expertly combined_
[Illustration: ARMOUR QUALITY PRODUCTS FOR THE PANTRY SHELF
The Products that Eliminate Waste and Simplify Meal Preparation. Always Buy by Brand Name to be Sure of Quality. The Armour Oval Label is a Dependable Food Buying Guide.]
THE HOUSEWIVES’ CHOOSING LIST
OF ARMOUR’S DEPENDABLE PRODUCTS
THAT MAKE THE QUALITY PANTRY COMPLETE
Dairy Products
Cloverbloom Butter Evaporated Milk (Veribest) Cheese (Full Cream) (Veribest) Cheddar (Veribest)
FOREIGN TYPE CHEESE
Cream Brick (Veribest) Limburger (Helmet) Roquefort (Veribest) Swiss Cheese (Veribest)
Meats (Canned)
Beef Loaf (Veribest) Ham Loaf (Veribest) Veal Loaf Luncheon Sausage (Veribest) Luncheon Beef (Veribest) Lunch Tongue (Veribest) Ox Tongue (Veribest) Pork Sausage Meat (Veribest) Potted Meats (Veribest) Sliced Bacon (Veribest) Frankfurter Bratwurst (Veribest) Deviled Ham (Veribest) Corned Beef (Veribest) Sliced Dried Beef (Veribest) Roast Beef (Veribest) Corned Beef Hash (Veribest) Hamburger Steak (Veribest) Tripe (Veribest) Cooked Brains (Veribest) Boned Chicken (Veribest) Vienna Style Sausage (Veribest) Potted Ham (Veribest) Potted or Deviled Tongue (Veribest) Chili Con Carne (Veribest)
Loaf Meats
Special Loaf (Veribest) Veal Loaf (Veribest) Meat Loaf (Veribest) Chili (in loaf) (Veribest) Jellied Ox Lip (Veribest) Corned Beef in Gelatin (Veribest) Jellied Tripe (Veribest) Whole Boned Pigs Feet (in gelatin) (Veribest) Cooked Beef Tongue (Veribest) Cooked Luncheon Tongue (Veribest) Jellied Luncheon Tongue (Veribest) Jellied Ox Tongue (Veribest) Souse with Tongue (in jelly) (Veribest)
Luncheon Meats
Cooked Pressed Roast Beef (Veribest) New England Style (Veribest) Minced Luncheon Meat (Shield) Loin Roll (Veribest) Cottage Picnic Butts (Armour’s)
Smoked Meats
Star Stockinet Ham Star Bacon Dried Beef (Veribest) Star Boiled Ham (Armour’s) Tongue Flat Pressed Ham (Star)
Sausage (Fresh and Smoked)
Pure Pork Sausage (Veribest) Farm Style (Veribest) Sausage—Links and Bulk (Veribest) Bologna Style Sausage (Veribest) Garlic or Knoblach Sausage (Veribest) Frankfurt Style Sausage (Veribest)
LIVER PUDDINGS:
Liver Cheese (Veribest) Head Cheese (Armour’s) Blood Pudding (Armour’s)
Dry Sausage
(SMOKED)
Summer Sausage or Cervelat (Star) Gothaer (Armour’s) Salami (Veribest) Scandinavian-Goteborg Mettwurst (Star) Holstein (Armour’s) Farmer (Armour’s) Landjaeger (Armour’s) Lachsschinken (Armour’s) Austrian Pork Sausage (Armour’s) Klobask Italian Pork Sausage (Armour’s) Lebanon Style Sausage (Armour’s) Hispanosa (Spanish) (Armour’s) Nola (Armour’s)
(UNSMOKED)
Milan Salami (Star) Coppa (Armour’s) Capacola (Armour’s) Arles (Armour’s) Caserta Peperoni (Armour’s) Mortadella (Star) Genoa Salami (Veribest) Alesandria Salami (Armour’s) Alpino Salami (Armour’s) Lombardia Salami Menage (Star) Sopresotta (Armour’s) Lyons (Armour’s) Sicilian (Armour’s) Prosciutto (Armour’s) Gold Band Sausage (Armour’s) Frisses (Star)
Meat Alternatives
Peanut Butter (Veribest) Pork and Beans (Veribest)
Shortenings and Frying Mediums
“Simon Pure” Leaf Lard Vegetole Veribest Oil (for salads and cooking) Oleomargarine (Veribest) Nut-ola Cloverbloom Butter 3X Oleomargarine Golden Wedding Oleomargarine
Spreads
Cloverbloom Butter Oleomargarine (Veribest) 3X Oleomargarine Nut-ola Peanut Butter (Veribest) Golden Wedding Oleomargarine
Mince Meat
Condensed (Veribest) Moist (in pails) (Veribest)
Eggs
In cartons (Veribest)
Poultry
Broilers Milk Fed (Veribest) Fryers Milk Fed (Veribest) Roasters Milk Fed (Veribest) Fowl Milk Fed (Veribest) Ducks (Helmet Fatted) Geese (Helmet Fatted) Turkeys
_Armour package foods save your time and are dependable_
THE PANTRY STOCK
Perhaps one of the greatest simple helps toward a well-ordered home is a well-stocked pantry. With this to rely upon, one is always ready for any demand that can interfere with the regular plans of the household.
Besides a carefully selected assortment of quality foods already prepared, a number of menus and the recipes to accompany them should be easily accessible, so that in case the home-manager herself is away from home or is ill, almost any member of the family can keep the meals going satisfactorily.
The pantry shelf should contain CANNED soups, fish, meats, milk, vegetables, fruits; jams, jellies, condiments, a few packages of cookies and crackers. A few cans of evaporated milk come in handy, even on the farm, now and then, and will keep until needed.
Let the Armour Housewives’ Choosing List be your guide in stocking this shelf. When a package is used, replace it at once so that the shelf will be ready for all staple and emergency calls, sure to come when least expected. During the warm months, many of the foods illustrated on pages 24-25 will be kept in the refrigerator.
PANTRY SUPPLIES
_Cereals and Flour_
Oats Rice Hominy Corn Flakes Wheat Flour Pastry Flour Bread Flour Corn Meal
_Canned Vegetables_
Beets Corn String Beans Peas Tomatoes Asparagus Spinach Lima Beans
_Canned Fruits_
Peaches Pears Pineapple Plums Apricots Cherries
_Canned Sea Foods_
Lobster Shrimp Tuna Salmon Sardines Crab Meat
_Canned Soups_
Tomato Oxtail Mock Turtle Bouillon Mixed Vegetable Chicken
_Spreads, Shortenings and Frying Mediums_
*Butter *Oleomargarine *Salad and Cooking Oil *Vegetable Shortening *Pure Leaf Lard
_Products Easily Served_
*Pork and Beans Chili Con Carne *Bacon, sliced in cartons *Dry Sausage *Ham Spaghetti and Tomato Sauce *Cheese *Peanut Butter Plum Pudding *Evaporated Milk Grape Juice Coffee Tea
_Miscellaneous_
Sugar Cookies in Pkgs. Crackers in Pkgs. Package Potato Chips Bottled Pickles Bottled Salad Dressing Jelly and Jam Olives
_Flavoring Extracts_
Vanilla Lemon Orange Almond and Baking Powder
_Condiments_
Chili Sauce Ketchup Tomato Relish Salad Dressing *Salad Oil Vinegar
_Seasonings_
Salt Pepper Paprika Nutmeg Cinnamon Allspice Cloves Mustard
_Fresh Vegetables_
Potatoes Onions
MENUS TO KEEP READY FOR UNEXPECTED DEMANDS
BREAKFASTS
Sliced Pineapple Corn Flakes Plain Omelet Bacon—Toast Coffee—Evaporated Milk Canned Apricots Rolled Oats Fried Ham Muffins Coffee—Evaporated Milk
LUNCHEONS
Tomato Soup with Crackers Tuna Fish Salad Hot Biscuit Halved Peaches Baked Beans Tomato Relish Corn Bread Hot Chocolate Canned Pears
(_also see page 40_)
DINNERS
Canned Ox Tongue Steamed Spinach Asparagus Salad Salad Dressing Plum Pudding—Hard Sauce Wafers Coffee—Evaporated Milk Canned Bratwurst Sausage Canned Sweet Potatoes Steamed Canned String Beans Pineapple and Cheese Salad Salad Dressing Coffee—Evaporated Milk
FOOD CLASSIFICATION CHART
FOR A BALANCED RATION
-------------+-------------+-------------+----------------+----------------- PROTEINS | FATS |CARBOHYDRATES| MINERALS | WATER -------------+-------------+-------------+----------------+----------------- Amount needed|Amount needed|Amount needed| At least 1 |Amount needed 1-5 of meal | 1-5 of meal | 3-5 of meal | serving daily |1 quart daily -------------+---------------------------+----------------+----------------- Build Muscle | Supply Heat | Supply Heat |Body regulators,|Body regulator, and Tissues | and Energy | and Energy |make bone, hair,|aids in digestion | | |teeth and nails |keeps body normal | | | |temperature -------------+-------------+-------------+----------------+----------------- Milk |Butter |Cereals |Fruits (Canned, |In all Vegetables | | | Fresh) | Cheese |Lard |Starchy Veg. |Vegetables | “ “ Fruits Eggs |Oleomargarine|Sugars |Milk | “ “ Beverages Fish |Nut Margarine|Flours |Egg Yolks +----------------- Beans |Salad Oil |Syrups | | VITAMINES Peas |Vegetable |Candy | +----------------- | Shortening | | | Necessary to Poultry | | | | growth and Fresh Meat | | | | reproduction Smoked “ | | | +----------------- Dried “ | | | | Contained in Canned “ | | | |Milk and Milk | | | | Products Nuts | | | |Egg Yolks Peanut Butter| | | |Leafy Vegetables | | | |Yeast -------------+-------------+-------------+----------------+Glandular Meat Place in |Used as |Place in | Place in menu, | Organs menu, usually|shortenings |menu, | fruit and | main dish. |and spreads |vegetables, | vegetables | | |cereals, | | | |desserts | | -------------+-------------+-------------+----------------+-----------------
* _The star indicates there is an Armour Brand of this product_
HOW TO PREPARE FOODS
Cookery, to meet the present day standards, is necessarily an art and a science. (_See page 46 for measures and abbreviations._)
Skill in blending flavors, and arranging dishes to please the eye as well as the palate, is an art of which every home manager may be proud. Still more important, however, is the scientific preparation of nutritious and economical dishes to supply the body needs of every member of the family.
In these pages devoted to cookery we have covered important cookery points which influence the palatability, digestibility, and combination of materials for best results. Our aim is to present to the American home manager a valuable cooking manual, not a recipe book. Below are listed many splendid books of recipes in your public library:
POPULAR COOK BOOKS
(According to vote of leading libraries throughout the country.)
=Book= =Author= =Subject Matter= Boston Cooking School _Fannie Merritt Foods, cookery, recipes Cook Book Farmer_
Mrs. Rorer’s New Cook _Mrs. S. T. Rorer_ Foods, cookery, recipes Book
Practical Cooking and _Janet McKenzie Cookery, recipes, Serving Hill_ serving
Feeding the Family _Mary Swartz Rose_ Foods—Their place in the menu and economical use
Boston Cook Book _Mary J. Lincoln_ Foods, cookery, recipes
Home Canning, and _A. Louise Andrea_ Use of dried foods Preserving
Mrs. Allen’s Cook Book _Ida C. Bailey Foods, cookery, recipes Allen_ Canning, Preserving, _Marian Harris Canning, preserving, and Pickling Neil_ pickling
Food and Household _Kinne & Cooley_ Food values and home Management management