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OLD FASHIONED TIPS SPONSOR:
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OLD FASHIONED TIPS NEWSLETTER
Down to earth advice and inspiration...
from http://www.oldfashionedliving.com
Thursday, August 2, 2007
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TODAY'S QUOTE
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Listening is a magnetic and strange thing, a
creative force. The friends who listened to us
are the ones we move toward, and we want
to sit in their radius. When we are listened to,
it creates us, makes us unfold and expand.
~Karl Menninger
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TODAY'S OFL TIPS
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HOME & HEARTH: VINTAGE ADVICE FROM 1924
Today's tips are from the 1924 Modern Priscilla Cook Book.
It was a special edition for the magazine's readers. Some
of the tips show how different things are now compared to
then as far as what is affordable and how many changes
we've made since then to the kitchen.
Time Saving: If we know just how long a dish should be
cooked, and at what temperature the oven should be held,
the time we used to spend hovering near the stove to "see
how it is coming along" is saved for something more
profitable.
Sour Milk and Lemon Juice: The addition of vinegar or
lemon juice to sweet milk makes a satisfactory substitute.
One tablespoon of acid to one cup milk will give a mixture
the acidity of which will be neutralized by one-half tsp. of
soda to a cup of the milk. This is the acidity of the average
sour milk. In most recipes sweet milk may be used instead
of sour, using two teaspoons baking powder in place of
every half teaspoon of soda called for in the recipe. If you
are using molasses and sour milk, instead of substituting
baking powder for all the soda, use just enough soda to
neutralize the acid of the molasses (one tsp. to a cup) and
substitute for the rest.
Eggs: One is especially likely to find the cupboard destitute
of eggs- and sometimes they are so high in price and so
difficult to obtain that one does not pretend to keep them
on hand. As a leavening agent baking powder may be used,
substituting one tsp. in place of each egg omitted. It is not
advisable to try to substitute for more than two eggs.
Flavorings: One often finds oneself without certain flavorings,
but it is sometimes possible to imitate them. Vanilla and almond
give pistachio. The combination of rose and almond results in
a flavor very much like sherry. Orange or lemon peel may be
used in place of the extracts. In steamed pudding or fruit cake,
orange marmalade will take the place of candied peel.
MORE: Household tips using plain or herb vinegar.
http://www.oldfashionedliving.com/vinegar2.html
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TODAY'S OFL SPONSOR
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Make an effort to listen:) ~Brenda
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SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION
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All material copyright Brenda Hyde 2001-2007
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