Storage of Foods Part Two of “Care of Food in the Home” Successful care of food in the home depends very largely on whether there is a good storeroom, suitable containers and an ice box or some other means of keeping foods cool. Storerooms. The pantry, cellar, or other rooms where food is kept should he clean, cool, airy, dry, screened against flies and other vermin, and free from musty or other disagreeable odors. If the cellar must be used as the chief storage place for food, a dumb-waiter on which supplies can be lowered and raised soon pays for itself in time and strength saved. The liberal use of whitewash and un slaked lime in the cellar helps to keep down micro-organisms and undesirable odors. Since the botton of Ihe cellar is the coolest part, foods often keep best if set on the floor, provided it is clean and dry. If the floor is damp and tarlhy, a layer of clean bricks may be arranged under the food. If there is a furnace in the main part of the cellar, it is general ly too warm and dry for the w inter stor age of fruits and vegetables, but a stor room can oftentimes be partitioned off and so ventilated that tho temperature is kept constantly cool. A cool room in a dry cellar is also a good place to store canned foods. In a cool, dry climate food may be successfully kept in an air shaft extend ing from the cellar or the lower floor of the house to the roof and equipped with a door opening into the kitchen or pan try and w ire < r perforated shelves of convenient Height. P>oth ends of this shaft should be Recured. Containers. The choice of proper containers for foods prevents much deterioration and waste. Ay a general thing each food is best la ot in its own closed container. Dry feuds may be stored in glass, earth enware. metal, wooden cr specially treated cardboard or paper containers, depending on how carefully they must be prated d from air, bght and vermin. I-or moist and watery foods the choice of containers is more limited, for not only must leakage be prevented but tho etted of acids on some mdals must' be considered. A container that has no cracks or s< ams in which dirt or micro organisms may lodge and that can be thoroughly washed and aired before fresh supplies are stored in it. is in many cases preferable. Labeling food con tainers plainly saves time when prepar ing meals and helps 1" prevent the waste ful and sometimes harmful accidents that happen when fine materia! n is mistaken fur another. /Oja The food containers used in (he {11 A refrigerators should be ronven- l\ ion' in rigo, washable, as light in W ^ weight ar possible so that undue jjl U quantifies of ice will not be melt- Jj\ j\ ed in cooling them to the tern perature of ihe refrigerator and fitted with covers to prevent the food from drying out and the I escape or absorption of odors, in | fad. ail foods and food materials > ■ that are to be used without wash ing, such as butter, cheese or sugar, should be wrapped or kepi in covered receptacles, l whether stored in the refrig- / erator or in the pantry, cel- / ' lar or any other place. Special Means of Keeping Foods Cool Under ordinary household conditions and where ice is obtainable, the refrig erator is generally the best means for keeping foods cool. When ice is placed in the refrigerator it begins to melt by absorbing heat from the surrounding air. This air becomes colder and heavier, set tles to the lower part of the refrigerator, while the warmer air rises, gives up heat by coming in contact with the ice, and in turn becomes chilled and sinks to the bottom. These currents of air come in contact with the food, absorb heat from it and so cool it. On the continuous and rapid circulation of cooled air in a refrigerator, then, in large measure depends its value as a storage place for foods. All spaces for Ihe passage of air from the ice chamber should be kept open. It is a mistake to wrap the ice in paper or cloth. Such a covering retards the circulation of air and insulates the ice from the rest of 'he refrigerator. Each article placed in the refrigerator contains a definite amount of heat that will melt a definite amount of ice. Hot foods should, whenever possible, be cooled to room temperature before being put into the refrigerator. Also, there is no excuse for using ice to chill such things as the thick paper wrappings of parcels from the market, the tops of car rots, or the outside leaves of lettuce, which will all be discarded later. Furthermore, ice is melted to no pur pose when vegetables and fruits that are to be prepared almost immediately are placed in the refrigerator only to ho taken out again after a few minutes. The coldest place in the refrigerator should be reserved for the most perish able foods such meat and milk. This is usually just below the ice chamber, bu1 it can easily h:> located with a reli able thermometer. Such a test may also show that no part of the refrigerator is as cold as was supposed and therefore that too great dependence should not he placed on it as a storage place for highly perishable foods. In older to check the growth of micro-organisms effectively, the temperature of the refrigetator should be at least fid" F. and preferably less. Tests conducted by the United States Bureau of Standards show that in order to maintain such a temperature the household refrigerator of medium size should have on the top and side's 1 i inches of insulating materia! and 'hree inches on the bottom. Barge refrigera tors need thicker insulation than this The main object in using a re frigerator i1 to save food, not* ice. IM and real ccone >nv >onsists in hav Bj|t ing well insulated wall in k< ep jPj ing the ice chamber well stocked, Jill in opening the dooi only when iicc<::;ir" and for as brief a period a- no-sible and in putting re th>n,r into ihe re frigerator that does no!, so to si eak. pay ittj way. The reftigerator hold I he 1 i pi suuieulousiv clean. Only clean food, clean ire and clean coulaim rs should be tint into it. ami an,\ food spilli d should be w iped up immediately wilh a clean, (Continued on l’ugp 13) What Do You Eat for Breakfast By MAH) I. BARBER What do you have fot breakfast? Breakfasts are said 10 mean many things to many men. The choice ranges from the simple coffee and rolls to the breakfast that could be a dinner if the fruit were served for dessert rather than for a first course. The important thing is to .start the day right with a break fast which satisfies your individual requirements. A cup of coffee and three doughnuts may not hurt a man doing physical work, but it may not only start the day wrong for the desk worker, but it may end his day wrong also! Children should be encouraged to eat a substantial break fast. It is usually well to begin with fruit because this will often stimulate a sleepy appetite. Next comes the cereal—and school children usually prefer a ready-to-eat cereal, such as cornflakes. This type of breakfast food is especially good in warm weather. The busy housewife has only to put it into ihe cereal bowls. Berries or bananas can be served in the howl with the cornflakes, and this saves both time and service. Eggs in some form, bran muffins or toast, and a beverage will complete the meal. Do you know that one egg will supply about one-tenth of the iron your body needs for a day? Wheat bran is also a good source of iron, so with an egg and a bran muffin for breakfast, you have a good beginning to which the iron from vegetables and fruits can be added during the day. We are giving you a recipe for bran muffins and several eggs. There are many interesting ways to cook eggs, yet the housekeepers serve them in the same way over and over again. Buttermilk Bran Muffins 2 tablespoons butter 1 Mi cups crumbled bran 2 tablespoons lard 1 cup flour N cup sugar 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 egg % teaspoon salt 1 cup buttermilk Cream shortening and sugar together; add egg, butter milk and bran; then flour, sifted with soda and salt. Kill muffin pans three-fourths full and bake in a moderate oven (370" F.) for 20 minutes. Baked Egg* Put one teaspoon of melted butter in each individual bak ing dish. Break one or two egg" into each dish. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, and place a small piece of butter on each. Bake in a moderate oven until eggs are firm. Tomato sauce may be poured over the eggs before they are baked. Or the eggs may be covered with white sauce and grated cheese. Eggs With Sausage Cook one half cup of sausage meat with one fourth of a chopped onion. Add six eggs which have been bi aten, and seasoned with salt and pepper. Cook slowly, stirring constantly until the eggs are thick. Serve on slices of buttered toa't. 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