TO-DAY'S DINNER.
[Specially. Written far The Dominion.] PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS BY AN ' ' EXPERT. TUESDAY. ■ Colory Soup. Stuffed. Leg of, Mutton. Ifcd Currant Jolly. Baked Potatoes. Boiled Beetroot and • Parsloj Sauce. Passion Fruit Fritters. PASSION FRUIT FRITTERS. Chop two apples and mix with them the insides of 'half-a-dozen passion fruit. (If seeds are not liked, use 10 passion fruit, and rub them on a sieve with a little sugar. The juice will run through the siove, r.nd tho seeds will remain and can bo thrown away.) See that tho applo and passion fruit are sweetened. Put three or four ounces of flour into a basin. Make a holo in it, and put in tho yolk of tho egg and a little millc. Beat .this well for at least five minutes. Then see that the fat is getting hot for deep frying the fritters. Beat the white of egg to a stiff froth. When the fat. is nearly'hot, mix the fruit 'with tho flour and egg. : 'Mix in a teaspoon of baking powder. Next lightly toss in tho whito of egg, mixing as .little, as possible when adding it. Put small spoonfuls into hot fat lind fry. The quantity of milk is about a quarter of a pint to'a quarter of a pound of flour, but it varies according to the size of the egg. The batter should be of the consistency; of thick cream that will hardly pour from-a jug.
FOR TO-MORROW. • Corned beef, Norfolk' dumplings, carrots, turnips, oyster soup,- bananas, }ib. macaroons, apricot jam, 2oz. almonds, currant jelly, lemon juice, loz. preserved'cherries, rice-, or sago. Margaret Anglin—Miss in ' her caso is' an unnecessary prefix—is perhaps tho finest emotional actress who has visited Australia this century, but that'does not prevent her •from being also one of the most domesticated of women. She' loves her own houso and her own surroundings. If her season ,is a long one, she invariably take's a house'instead of going to" an hotel, whilo short or long, her dressing'room at the theatre is always adorned - With her own hangings, and mado cosy and homeliko with her own furniture and fittings.- She absolutely adores children, and her progress, through a country generally loaves a trail of protesting mothers behind, who complain that their'offspring liavo been utterly spoilt by Miss Anglin, and regard her as several'degrees superior to their lawful parents. Miss Anglin is also an en-thusiastic-gardener (violets being her favourite flowers), : an amateur photographer, a horsewoman, and a'proficient angler with rod arid line, fly fishing being her favourite form of that sport. Altogether a woman of a hundred interests outside as well as inside her. art.
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Bibliographic details
Dominion, Volume 1, Issue 296, 8 September 1908, Page 3
Word Count
437TO-DAY'S DINNER. Dominion, Volume 1, Issue 296, 8 September 1908, Page 3
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