Weston Times (1966), 31 Mar 1966, p. 10

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Modern Cooks Reach For Parsley To Prepare Appetizing Concoctions â€"Phat Roman roving reporter, Caius Plinius Secundus, in the 1st Century A.D. heard akk saw all, tusted all and wrote his observaâ€" in his 37â€"volume ‘Natural Mistory." Among many . other things he got around to parsley. This, he declared, could "give a ESE IP tal foods." ‘ty ® ~In parsley‘s long reco In parsley‘s long record of comâ€" pliments there are these loving comments by gastronomers who are etherwise . forgotten. . "Parsley makes. food more healthful, more agreeable," wrote one. "It stimuâ€" lates the appetite and helps digesâ€" tion." Then another very opinionâ€" ated Frenchman stated, "Take parsâ€" ley away from the cook and you leave him in a situation where it is next to impossible for him to pracâ€" tice his art." A more recent lover of fine flaâ€" vors observed about pork cookery, "With the onion and that priceless herb parsley, which stimulates the appetite, facilitates digestion, and renders nearly all sauces more atâ€" tractive, he (the pig) forms one of the most indispensable adjuncts of alimentation. Deprived of his lardâ€" ship, the onion tribe, and parsley, cookery would soon decline if inâ€" deed the skilled practitioner would not find it wellâ€"nigh impossible for him to practice his art." Then ‘there are the unprinted words of so many modern cooks who say to themselves, "This conâ€" eoction needs parsley?" and then reach for their container of bright green, . super â€" convenient . parsley flakes. As spice history goes, deâ€" hydrated parsley is a Johnnyâ€"comeâ€" lately. The parsley dehydrating process wasn‘t perfected until right after World War 11. But, this everâ€" available form of parsley has been so popular that more and more and bigger and bigger containers of flakes are being sold. You can use parsley flakes in scads of good dishesâ€"in mashed or scalloped potatoes; scrambled eggs; butters and sauces for meats and fif);mffings of all kinds; vegeâ€" tables such as carrots, peas and sumemer | squash. | Parsley flakes 160 Lakeshore Rd. E. 1496 Kipling Ave. N. EAST OF NO. 10 HWY. AT TABORRD PORT CREDIT REXDALE 278.5284 241â€"3581 OPEN FRIDAY EVENING UNTIL 8 P.M. ®» No. 1 DEALS ON No. 1 TIRES See ‘Us Now Ffor condimen â€"â€" Thursday, March 31, 1966 CLAM PANTRY PASTA Easy, economical and flavorful is this pasta "bake" seasoned with parsley flakes and other spices, layered with cottage cheese and clams. have almost unlimited uses in good cooking. As a forâ€"instance, do try these parsleyâ€"seasoned recipes from the test kitchens of the Canadian Spice Association. Grated Parmesan cheese Cook macaroni and green noodles in boiling salted water for 10 minâ€" utes; rinse and drain. Set aside. Drain clams; reserve % cup liquid. Soften onion flakes in 2 tableâ€" ‘s cup milk _ 2 tablespoons parsley flakes ‘; pint creamed cottage cheese margarine 1 tablespoon flour 16 teaspoon instant garlic powder 16 teaspoon ground black pepper CLAM PANTRY PASTA cup elbow or shell macaroni cup green noodles quarts boiling water teaspoon salt cans (752 oz. each) annced clams cup clam fuice ( tablespoon omon flake tablespoons butter or spoons of clam liquid; let stand 10 minutes. Cook softened onion in hot butter or margarine over low heat until golden. Remove from heat; stir in clam liquid and next 4 inâ€" gredients. Stir constantly over low heat until smooth and slightly thickened. Stir in parsley flakes. In wellâ€"buttered shallow 1%% quart baking dish, layer half of cooked pasta. Spread evenly with cheese and then drained minced clams. Cover clams with remaining pasta and pour clam sauce over all. Sprinkle top with Parmesan cheese. Cover with foil and bake in a preâ€" heated moderate oven (350° F.) % minutes or until hot and bubbly. YIELD: 4 to 6 servings. & LPARSLEY POTATO CAKES 1 cup water ‘, eup light cream ‘» teaspoon onion salt 1. 16 teaspoon ground black pepper 2 tablespoons parsley flakes 1 envelope (4 servings) instant mashed potatoes 1 large egg, beaten 3 tablespoons butter or margarine | In a medium size saucepan, heat water, cream, onion salt, ground black pepper and parsley flakes just to boiling. Remove from heat. With fork or wire whip, stir in instant mashed potatoes and whip briskly. Add egg and 1 tablespoon butter or margarine. Beat well unâ€" til blended and light. Shape into cakes using * cup mixture for each. In a medium skillet heat reâ€" maining 2 tablespoons butter or margarine. Use to sauté potato cakes until nicely browned on each side. Serve hot with meat or fish. YIELD: 6 servings. ASPARAGUS WITH PARSLEY SAUCE 2 tablespoons butter or margarine: 2 tablespoons flour 1 cup chicken stock 12 cup light cream % teaspoon salt !@ teaspoon ground black pepper 2 large egg yolks â€" ‘; cup parsley flakes 2 to 2"2 lbs. fresh cooked asparagus Melt butter or margarine in a saucepan. Remove from heat and blend in flour. Stir in chicken stock or 1 chicken bouillon cube dissolved in 1 cup boiling water and !4 cup of the cream. Return to heat; stir and cook over low heat until the mixture begins to thicken, about 5 minutes. Add salt and ground black pepper. Beat egg yolks, mix with remaining cream and stir into the sauce. Cook over low heat only unâ€" til hot, 2 minutes. Just before servâ€" ing. add parsley fiakes. Heat ‘2 minute. Serve over hot cooked asâ€" paragus. YIELD: 6 servings. Fuster parents give children the guidance and security they need to help them to grow to healthy adultâ€" hood. Phone your Children‘s Aid Societyâ€"Metro or Catholic. But having said all this, I would like to ask why doctors are so reluctant to visit patients in their homes today. I want to know why doctors are reluctant to pass on patients‘ caseâ€"histories, when requested to do so by llihundrqoet-ddodm; most people feel the same way. Today‘s competent doctor probably has three times as much medical knowledge as old Doc in the horse carriage, who wiped his hands on his handkerchief before examining a patient and took his fees in chickens and vegetables when times were hard. And it‘s ‘u:u,he: to hlus in cce s cesA c nc ts con> s tds s > BP canaichs ul Wais es Te 3t be a doctor today ; the great leaps in technical data have to be kept up with, the public is more healthâ€"conscious and there is more tendency to question what was once regarded as the doctor‘s semiâ€"divine pronouncements. All this makes for an interesting but tough workingâ€"life and, of course, only a doctor knows the anguish and frustraâ€" tion of losing his running battle with death or ‘having to tell parents that there is no hope for their child. a patient who is changing doctors. Somewhere in the old records of a family‘s medical history, there may be the clue to new symptoms. And, finally, I want to know why many doctors refuse to respond to an emergency call out of office hours. Just recently an acquaintance of mine died of a brain haemorrhage; John came home on a Tuesday evening about 10 p.m., complained of feelâ€" ing tired but was apparently otherwise normal and went to bed. His wife heard him making odd noises a few minutes later and discovered he was semiâ€"conscious and having difficulty in breathing. She called in a neighbour and phoned for a local doctor immediately. Two doctors refused to come and by the time the third one got there, John was cyanotic and dead for all practical purâ€" poses. Probably he couldn‘t have been saved anyway, even if the first doctor had come at once (on the other hand. he might have been saved), but that‘s not the point â€" it is a doctor‘s duty to respond to any emergency call on his skill I am sure that most doctors have a mental blacklist of patients who are always calling them out of office hours for no real reason, but John and his family weren‘t this type. Surely a doctor acquires an instinct which tells him when an unknown caller is desperate and in real need? And if he cannot trust his instincts, then it is his job to drag himself out of bed or away from the party and at least see the patient. But there is a frightening tendency on the part of many doctors to diagnose by remote control, if possible, and failing that, to get the patient to come into the office. Lakeshore B&EPW Hear On Brief Presented To The Lakeshore Business and Proâ€" fessional Women‘s Club held its monthly meeting at the Pickfair Restaurant on Monday, March 21, with Mrs. Dorothy Brown in the chair. and at head table Miss Janette Johnson, Mrs. Anne L‘Heureux, Naâ€" tional Publicity and Public Relations Chairman; Miss Anne Gerrie, Memâ€" bership Chairman and Employment flOmillI(lOllS committee . was appointed; Miss Lillian Clayton, MrA Muriel Dawson, Miss Noreen Proue, Mrs. Barbara Jamieson and Miss Edith Teskey. Mrs. Anne L‘Heureux gave an account of the delegation which presented a brief Conditions Norah Herd One nice Sunday afternoon about three years ago, I found myself haemorrhaging excessively and conâ€" tinuously; I was three months‘ pregnant so realized that I was miscarrying. I was alone in the house and I phoned the doctor who had attended us for years and told the partner on duty what was happening. He was brusque and disinterested and after I‘d stopped, he asked abruptly, "Well, do you want me to come?" Now I‘m a fairly tough old bird, in good health, but any doctor knows that a miscarriage has a psychological effect too, apart from the physical and he knows he should at least check on a woman who is in the process of losing an embryo. But he obviously didn‘t want to come so he tossed the ball into my court â€"‘and being an independent type, I said I thought I could manage, though I could have done with some reassurance. "Okay." he said, "Come and see me in six weeks‘ time and I‘ll give you a check up." And that‘s how it was. As it turned out, I was fine and no harm was done, but he was taking a chance, when he needn‘t have done. 1 must add that I think my own doctor, who, had been with me for two previous births, would have come if he‘d been on duty. â€" S Two weeks‘ ago, when Joni had her mild concussion (I‘ve told the horrendous tale in a previous column) and appeared worse the morning after her fall, I phoned the doctor at 8:30 a.m. (a different doctor, necessitated by our move to Aurora), to ask him to come to see her. He‘s a man I admire and like‘and regard as a compasâ€" sionate person, and it was disappointipg to hear him ask me to bring her to the surgery. It could have been unwise to move her, with a head injury of then unknown extent. Last summer, this doctor‘s younger colleague asked me to bring Julie ‘into the office, when I phoned to report that she had measles. On this occasion, I stuck my toes in and refused, pointing out that she had a high temperature and was quite sick, so he made a house call later in the day. I agree that our personal beefs with doctors have been minor ones, and we try to remember that doctors are human and we try not to make unreasonable demands. But we‘ve beeyU('k)' â€" John‘s family wasn‘t. These are‘isolated instances. but nearly everyone | know has experienced a doctor‘s reluctance to visit a patient. and if you get enough of apparently isolated incidents. it becomes obvious that this is a trend in modern medicine. I suppose they hope to. save time this was and that most doctors are overworked (though certainly not underpaid), but medicine cannot be pracâ€" tised successfully on an. assemblyâ€"line basis. It can‘t be hurried and it is part of a doctor‘s job, if he‘s going to do it properly, to take time to get to know his patients. Often his knowledge of them as individuals can help him to make a better diagnosis in a difficult case. It‘s not enough to have the latest equipment or to know three new ways to peel eyeballs â€" a good doctor has to care for people. Many of them do, of course. It isn‘t enough just to care about his own patients who are old friends and pay their bills regularly â€" a doctor‘s compasâ€" sion should reach out to anyone in need of his skill. In John‘s case, why did two doctors refuse to come to a local home in good weather. when someone needed â€"â€" In John‘s case, why did two to a local home in good weather them? LAKESHORE FLOWER SHOP Ch al mal and & OBLIVERY ANYWHERE & §st. over 30 vears "OnO( Flowers Say It So Well!‘ & FLOWE®S for EvERY Occasion Miss New Toronto at 9th St. By JOAN SEAGER to â€" Prime Minister Lester Pearson reporting _ that he _ was _ most gracious. Their appointment was for half an hour but they had one and a half hours with Mr. Pearson who complimented them upon the quality of their brief and for leaving tie for discussion. . Miss Anse Gerrie: spohe on Eimâ€" ployment _ Conditions â€" and â€" recomâ€" mended "Women at Work in Canâ€" ada" . published by The Queen‘s Printer. She quoted an Automation Evaluation _ of _ offices run _ like plants; even to shift work, She conâ€" cluded that women need retraining and advocated Automation Study. Hall on April 30 Plans were made for a Rummage Sale at the Long Branch Legion 251â€"2287 Report PM Mr. Walke spoke on the religious This group of lay people would be unable to instruct the students if it were not for Father Bennett, who has presided over them each Friday evening instructing in Theology and pointing the way to the modern catechetical method, As a result,; the lay persons involved have developed confidence in presenting themselves before the students and all have gained in sacred knowledge and spirituality. Thanks to the Sisters of St. Joseph, These people have facilities at St. Joseph‘s High School to conduct classes with space alloted to each grade. The league commends them for their devotion to duty over the past three years. Anyone interâ€" ested in helping to teach these young people should present themâ€" selves at the church on any Friday evening at 7 p.m, Speaker At Our Lady of Peace CWL Meet Requests Assistance For School Of Religion The March meeting of Our Lady of Peace CWL had as guest speaker Frank Walke, chairman of the High dents attending secular high schools in the area. He asked the C.W.L. to help with this work even if only with the task of recruiting students to take part. Mrs. Helen Kamac reported that Mrs. B. Durack and Mrs. J. O‘Neill drove for the Red Cross Blood Donors‘ Clinie held at St. Matâ€" thew‘s Church,. Six volunteers are needed to canvass for the Cancer Drive on Friday, April 1. Mrs. Ruth Polzer, Immigration Convenor, attended a U.N.LC.E.F. luncheon with Mrs. S. Flahiff. Mrs. O. Brown and Mrs. B. Cuirâ€" luini were congratulated by Mrs. R. Dupuis on the success of the Fashion Show. Mrs. R. Dupuis asked the meeting if they would consider dividing funds this year three ways. The Missionaries‘ project this year need help ‘ desperately but the Good Shepherd Refuge is also in dire need:; so a motion was made by Mrs. L. Luckiewiecz that the funds be divided three waysâ€"*‘s to each of Mrs. M. England gave a report on the Secondary Schools Scholarâ€" ships and University Scholarships available. Mrs. L. Luckiewicz and Mrs. R. Dupuis told of the bursaries available for grade 13 pupils. the Missionaries and 4 to the Good Shepherd Refuge; seconded by Mrs. McQuaid and carried by the memâ€" bers. Librarian Mrs. U. Luckiewicz will be leaving for another Parish in June. She told the members how much she enjoyed working with them and suggested they continue making use of the library. During her term of office they were interâ€" she had read and recommended for their reading."She will be missed by NATIONAL ,;A[ EMPLOYMENT _ "« | â€" SERVICE 2968 DUNDAS ST. W. TORONTO, 9 E MPLOYERS the members. ~â€"|that a tea for the Senior Citizens “hh-rh.nyup’umhoh'ilthhfilhhunufinj. Mrs. O. Brown made the motion‘May. She will convene the affair, 4 Will you please give us advice on friendly gossip? have a club, and we indulge quite a lot. Is it right or wrong ? Friendly gossip helps to build close relationships. Be, however, the bearer of glad tidings, for such a person is regarded as good comâ€" pany. Do not repeat malicious gossip or listen to it or let yourâ€" self be drawn into a feud between two persons with whom you are friendly. Just say that you are sorry there is trouble and refuse to take sides. Another way to beâ€" come lovable is to refrain from spreading another‘s good news; each person should have the joy of announcing his or her own headâ€" lines. When a friend tells her news, and you have already heard it, don‘t say so. Just indicate your pleasure and interest. Dear Sally Dear "Oune of the gang" Dear Sally Scott: Is a girl expected to live where Friendly Gossip Helps To Build Close Relationships $100 FOR A NEW LAWN MOWER? $500 . FOR HOME IMPROVEMENTS? $1,000 FOR A USED CAR? $2,500 (or more) FCOR A NEW CAR? SPECIAL LOW RATE Available ON NEW AND LATE MODEL USED CAR LOANS Sally Scott Says: 2479 BLOOR ST. W DO YOU KNOW . ... That local offices of the NES have conâ€" tinuing liaison with secondary schoolsâ€" to help graduates find their first jobs. That students register with the NES in early Spring so that our officers may present their qualifications to employers. That interviews can be arranged through the NES prior to graduation. That experienced employment officers, knowledgeable about the potential of graduates are available to discuss this matter with you. Can You Use...... JANE & BLOOR CAR LOOP COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN LTD. 766â€"8131 ACT _.NOW CALL RO 3â€"3611 * Mrs. Anne Langley * Mr. George Dunstan are at your service "One of the Gang" PHONE OR VISIT US AT Sally Scott your We in it is it OR her husband wants to? I am 23 years old and my boy friend is 24. He wants to get married within a year, and he wants to live in his hometown, which ‘is over 1,000 miles away from mine. My folks are getting up in years, and both are in poor health, His tolk& are still in their late forties. I wahit to compromise, but this is our biggest problem. He is very considerate, but is very firm in wanting to live mear his folks. What should I do, Sally ? Ve Dear Bess M: With your marriage ceremony you sever your major tie with your parâ€" ents, and your first duty is the care of your husband. You live where he lives, and your life and his become one. If you feel that your first alleâ€" giance is to your parents, then you are not ready for marriage, or you just do not love this man enough. (fonsider the matter carefully and prayerfully before you go into this marriage, ; _ If his move is just to be near his mother and father, then he is not ready for marriage either, and its responsibilities. T766â€"6859 396 PACIFIC AVE. CORNER DUNDAS & PACIFIC Bess M

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