| Kind | Quantity | Water | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rolled Oats | 1 c. | 2 c. | 20 min. |
| Corn Meal | 1 c. | 3½ c. | 2 hrs. |
| Hominy (Fine) | 1 c. | 4 c. | 1 hr. |
| Hominy (Whole, canned) | 1 can | heat in own liquid | 15 min. |
| Rice (Steamed) | 1 c. | 2 to 3 c. | 45 min. |
| Wheat Cereals | 1 c. | 2¾ c. | 30 min. |
| Macaroni | 1 c. | 2 qts. | 20 min. |
| Spaghetti | 1 c. | 2 qts. | 20 min. |
Stir cereals gradually into required quantity of boiling water, allowing one teaspoon salt to each cup of cereal. Fine granular cereals may be mixed first with a small amount of cold water to prevent lumping, then add boiling water. Stir flaky cereals with a fork. Cook rapidly at first over flame five or ten minutes, then in double boiler. For prepared cereals, allow plenty of time to cook thoroughly as their palatability and ease of digestion depend largely on this.
For variety, stir figs, dates or marmalade into cereals before serving. Serve with canned fruits, baked apples, or fresh fruits sliced over the cereal.
Cold cooked cereals may be sliced, dipped in flour, or in eggs and crumbs and fried. In preparing corn meal mush for frying, a little flour added to the corn meal will make it slice more easily.
SERVE MORE FRUITS
During the season when fruits are plentiful serve them plain, uncooked and well ripened. Small fruits and berries should be thoroughly chilled. All fruits should be washed and drained or wiped before serving. To wash berries, place in a colander and pour water over them, handling as little as possible. If washed under the faucet turn to a small stream. Wash strawberries before removing the stems, otherwise they will become water soaked.
CANNED FRUITS
Serve canned fruits with their juices as a dessert for luncheon and dinner, as an appetizer for breakfast, in cocktails for dinner, and in various desserts in which fruit is used as a base. The flavor of canned fruit is improved by removing from the can to a dish and allowing to stand in the air one hour before using. The juice which is not served with the fruit should be used in fruit gelatins, sauces, or drinks. Do not waste any fruit juice.
Certain fruit juices contain a neutral substance called pectin, which, when properly cooked, causes them to solidify or jell. In this form much of our excess fruit and juices are preserved. Apples, grapes, currants, cranberries, and plums are the best known jell makers.