Archive for the ‘Food Storage’ Category

STORING MILK, CREAM, AND EGGS

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011

(We can reduce our budget expenditures by a little bit of planning and the implementation of some food storage applications.)

The information here on freezing milk and cream will be of interest to you if you have a milk goat or cow because there are probably times when you’ve probable got more milk on hand than you and your family use. You can make butter or cheese or yogurt with the extra. You can also freeze the cream and milk for later use.

Because eggs keep better longer in the refrigerator than the more perishable milk and cream, storage won’t be as much of a problem. Figure 4 to 5 weeks in the refrigerator for eggs. If you want to keep them longer, then freeze them. Because shells will crack under freezing temperature egg cannot be frozen whole. And all but the separated whites need to be stabilized which is a simple process, as you’ll find out later.

FREEZING MILK AND CREAM

To freeze, pour milk or cream into scrupulously clean glass jars or plastic containers, leaving 2-inch headspace for expansion. Glass is better than plastic because plastic, no matter how clean, often has traces of the flavor and smell of the last food storage in it. Seal tightly and place in the coldest part of the freezer so that it freezes quickly. Whole milk will keep safely in the freezer for 4 to 5 months; cream should not be stored frozen for more than 2 or 3 months.

There is a significant difference between cream stored for 2 months and that held in the freezer for 3. After 2 months, thawed heavy cream whipped very nicely. It tastes just like fresh whipped cream. But after 3 months in the freezer, the butterfat separated out. The cream still whipped, but it had a grainy texture and was much better used in frozen desserts like ice-cream than in fresh ones. If you want to use it for cooking, in soups, sauces, gravies, custards and the like– I bet it a little bit first so that the butterfat is not floating on top.

Both milk and cream should be thawed for 3 to 4 hours at room temperature before using.

PLANNING MEALS FOR THE FAMILY

Sunday, February 13th, 2011

PLANNING for anything is thinking ahead and deciding what to do about a situation. To plan meals, then, is to think ahead and decide what to have for them. In most homes the homemaker serves here meals a day, or twenty-one meal a week. It involves a great deal of money, time, and effort to produce these twenty-one meals to the enjoyment and satisfaction of everyone. With so much at stake, it seems only sensible to think ahead and plan meals for several days, or preferably for a week, in advance rather than to leave the choice to a last last-minute decision to be made three times every day in the week.

The homemaker who does not plan meals beforehand finds herself at a great disadvantage. She becomes tense and fatigued as she keeps wondering what to have for the next meal. Then confusion results because she starts meal preparation only to find that there is too little time to prepare the food, that there is too much to do at one time, or that some essential food item is lacking. Perhaps she may rush to the market and then buy impulsively an unwisely, selecting food that is quick and easy to prepare without regard to its cost or appropriateness to the other meals of the day. She is apt to neglect to include those foods that are so necessary to the health of her family. She may resort to the preparation of some foods so often that her meals become monotonous. She is often wasteful because she ignores or forgets to make use of food left from a previous meal, which, with planning, could be made into an appetizing dish.

Advantages of Planning

The homemaker who plans her meals ahead of time has these advantages over the one who does not make plans:
1. She can take into consideration her family’s nutritional needs.
2. She can consider her family’s food likes and prejudices.
3. She can make her meals varied and attractive.
4. She can save time and effort in buying, preparing, and serving meals.
5. She can save money.
6. She will experience less tension.

How to Plan
There are many things a homemaker must know if she is to profit from all the advantages of planning meals ahead. She must have some knowledge of the right foods to select for her family’s health and of the reasons why these foods are important. She must know how to distribute these foods among the three meals of the day so her family will be satisfied with both the amounts and kinds of foods and with the amounts and kinds of foods and with the appetizing quality of each meal. She must know what foods are available in the markets and their approximate cost. As she plans, she must have some knowledge also of ways to organize her work so her plans can be carried out efficiently later on. An experienced homemaker thinks of all these points more or less at the same time, but for someone less experienced it is a good idea to consider each point separately.

• If you plan menus for several days or for a week in advance, meal preparation will go more smoothly and family needs and preferences can be considered.

Follow Planning Guides
Two kinds of guides are helpful in planning meals: (1) a daily food guide based on the nutritive contribution of foods to the diet, and (2) meal patters based on courses in a meal. There are a number of daily food guides an meal patterns. The ones followed are a matter of personal choice. Meals planned with these guides, adjusted to family preferences for foods, are sure to be nutritious and pleasing.

The Daily Food Guide – The guide followed in this text gives information on the nutritive value of foods by classifying different foods into groups according to their nutritive content. For good health, the body needs substances called “nutrients” – carbohydrates, proteins, fats, minerals, vitamins, and water. Nutrients are present in foods, but no one food contains all of them. Moreover, these nutrients are present in different amounts in different kinds of foods – fruits, vegetables, and meats, for example – and are this fact on which the classification of foods in the Daily Food Guide is based. The guide lists four groups of foods: the Milk Group, the Meat Group, the Vegetable-Fruit Group, and the Bread-Cereal Group. In addition, it gives for each group (1) some representative foods, (2) the special nutrient contribution of foods in this group, and (3) recommendations for the amounts of these foods that should be eaten every day.

Meal-pattern guides. These guides are helpful because the Daily Food Guide does not include information on planning the three individual meals of the day among which the needed foods are distributed. A meal pattern is something like an outline, for it lists the parts of a meal. These parts are called “courses.” A meal pattern also suggests the kinds of foods that make up each course. There are a number of possible patterns for each meal. Meal patterns for any one of the three daily meals differ from one another in the number or kind of courses served. Which pattern is selected will depend on such things as types of activity and ages of family members, time available for preparation of meals, how family meals are served, and the amount of money which can be spent for food.

Examples of patterns for breakfast, lunch, and dinner are given at the left. A breakfast planned according to pattern 1 is nutritionally adequate, provided, the servings are ample. In fact, it is considered to be a “minimum adequate breakfast.” However, a breakfast following either Patterns 2 or 3 would be more satisfying, especially to active and rapidly growing teen-agers. These breakfasts would go further toward meeting their nutritional needs than the breakfast in Pattern 1. A lunch such as the one in Pattern 1 is a light lunch, and it may not include foods from as many of the groups in the Daily Food guide as is desirable. The other lunch patterns are more adequate because they give an opportunity to use foods from more of the groups in the Daily Food Guide. Dinners following Patterns 1 and 2 are light meals, and those following Patterns 3 and 4 are more elaborate and more suitable for a hearty dinner.

Make Menus
A menu is a list of specific foods, or “dishes” as they are sometimes called, to fit the meal pattern selected, If, in planning menus, you use for each day and combination of meal patters for breakfast, lunch, and dinner and include in your menus foods from all the groups as recommended in the Daily Food Guide, you will have good, healthful meals.

Consideration in Planning Meals
Consider the advertisements in newspapers.
Consider the nutritional needs of your family.
Consider the foods on hand. This includes your food storage. Your food storage needs to be rotated also.
Consider the time needed.
Consider the members of the family.
Consider the amount of money available.
Consider the best form of food.
Consider the method of preparation.

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YOU DON’T NEED A FORTUNE

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

YOU DON’T NEED A FORTUNE TO BE HAPPY AND EAT WELL

I was raised with the adage, “Waste not, and want not”. I was taught to use all the leftovers before they spoiled. I try to remember this while I am managing my household. Especially, when it comes to food. I truly do not ever want to go without food. I look for ways to use up leftovers. I find different ways to use up leftovers. The following is one of my favorite ways to use leftovers.

Bread Pudding
3 cups warm milk
3 to 5 cups dices fresh bread or 3 ½ cups stale bread

Cut bread into slices and trim away crusts. It should be measured tightly not packed.

Soak for 15 minutes:

Combine and beat well:
3 egg yolks
1/3 to ½ cup sugar
1/ tsp nutmeg or cinnamon

Add: Grated rind & juice of ½ lemon
Or ¼ cup orange marmalade

Pour these ingredients over the soaked bread.

Stir them lightly with a fork or until well blended in stiffly beaten egg whites.

Bake in a dish set in hot water 45 minutes at 305 degrees.

Enjoy and waste not want not.

THE BASIC PREMISE OF FOOD STORAGE

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011


THE BASIC PREMISE OF FOOD STORAGE

The basic premise of this post is that for everyone, even for us who live in bounteous America, the time may come when food and other necessities are unobtainable. This situation may be brought about by any one of a number of causes – personal sickness or injury, unemployment, war, riot, transportation strikes, and so on. Out urban society is particularly vulnerable.

With less than ten percent of the population engaged in farming and with this small group almost completely dependent upon a continuing supply of fuel, machinery, and smoothly functioning transportation network, famine could and would stalk the land within a matter of weeks if violence interrupted the operation of this highly interdependent system of food production and distribution. Food markets would empty within hours and people would be left to their own devices to provide themselves with sustenance. The magnitude of the tragedy which could result is horrible to contemplate.

The idea is not new. For years I have been reading and hearing counsel that families should prepare for such an eventuality by storing enough food and other necessities to last for twelve months. And during those years national and international conditions have worsened, making the threat more menacing.

But what foods shall we store for family needs? How can we, on the most economical basis, store foods which not only can help to ensure our healthy survival in time of famine or other emergency but can be rotated to provide good meals in normal times and thus avoid spoilage?

I was steered toward the answer by early training and environment in the shave of a wise mother. Mother a wheat grower and producer of honey; who also had a considerable knowledge of soils, of plant and animal life, and the bodily needs for health. Mother stayed on the farm after father died because she said it was the right place to raise her family.

The basic four survival foods are wheat, powdered milk, honey, and salt.

HELP FEED STARVING CHILDREN

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This is Your Answer – Why Have Food Storage

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

This is Your Answer – Why have food Storage

In response to one of my early articles a reader commented that she didn’t understand why food storage or what to do with it; but, she enjoyed reading about it.

I didn’t quite know how to respond at the time- I certainly do know why now, The answer is whatever happens to you, that prevents you from acquiring the necessary food, heat and shelter needed to provide for your family. We are not talking luxury here only basic life sustaining needs.

December 18, 2010 we ate dinner at a friend’s house. We drove home in the rain. The following morning it was still raining as we drove to church. We then drove home in the rain. The rain continued to fall. We spent the balance of the day reading and watching the fireplace.

We fell asleep in our warm bed listening to the rain. It continued raining throughout the night and all day Monday – Tuesday the 21st in the early morning hours I answered a knock on our door. To my surprise a neighbor was stand there in the rain.
This visit was his official notice that the Enterprise, Utah reservoir was nearing the overflow stage, and would we like to evacuate. We told him “NO”.

The dam did overflow on the day of the 21st, and the bridge crossing taking the spill water on its way safely, held. We stayed safely in our home, unharmed throughout this entire time.

To all of you who read my blog. This is your answer as to why we put food away. The answer is “In case we need it for what ever reason.” Flood, drought, terrorist attack, loss of income, inflation, poor heath, bad weather, crop failure, etc., whatever could happen. I hope that everyone reading this article lives there life’s as if nothing will ever happen and yet prepare and remain prepared for the very worst.

If there is a disaster, you do not want to sit helplessly by; waiting for help and food to arrive. It may not come — If it does arrive you may be very hungry before it does.
We had everything we needed to live in our own home for a long time and never need for any food, shelter or medication.

THE WAY GRANDMOTHER DID IT

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

THE WAY GRANDMOTHER DID IT

We recently moved from our lovely seven year old home in a rural agricultural town in Southern Utah, to a twenty (20) acre parcel that spreads up along the side of a mountain from the highway. We can see roof tops of neighbor’s homes miles away, scattered among the trees in the forest. I love it!

Totally off the grid, we produce our utilities, water from a deep will, electricity form wind and solar. Trash is buried or burned.

Our garden and chickens plus food storage products provide our food. We dehydrate, freeze and can our produce in season. We have practiced food storage in our home for fifty plus years, as did our mothers before us. Also, we purchase freeze dried fruits, vegetables and meats. Freeze dried has the added advantage of easier rehydrating and a savings of time over dehydrated foods.

NEVER WASTE FOOD

Food is a valuable commodity. What do you do with all those leftovers? Never fail to take advantage of left over foods.

If it’s good food, don’t throw it away. Little or big leftovers fit into many dishes, A switch in recipes here or there or a novel dessert, and your leftovers are put to work in novel ways. Egg yolks can be substituted for whole eggs, for example, If bread is a bit dry, then it is just right for French toast. Other leftovers have a way of adding food value or a fresh new touch, such as a fruit in muffins or vegetables in omelets.

SOME OF THE DISHES IN WHICH LEFTOVERS MAY BE USED

Egg yolks, in
Cakes, cookies or muffins etc.
Cornstarch pudding
Custard or sauce
Eggnog
Pie or cake fillings
Salad dressings
Scrambled eggs

Egg whites, in
Cakes
Frostings
Fruits whip meringue
Soufflés

Hard – cooked egg or yolks, in
Casserole dishes
Garnish
Salads
Sandwiches

Sour milk in
Cakes, cookies
Quick breads

Sour Cream in
Cakes, cookies
Dessert sauce
Pie or cake fillings
Salad dressing
Sauce for vegetables

Cooked Meats, Poultry, Fish, in
Casserole dishes
Hash
Meat patties
Meat pies
Salads
Sandwiches
Stuffed vegetables

Cooked Potatoes, in
Croquettes
Fried or creamed potatoes
Meat- pie topping
Potatoes in cheese sauce
Stew or chowder

Cooked snap beans, lima beans, corn, peas, carrots, in
Casseroles
Croquettes
Meat and vegetable pie
Salads
Sauces
Soufflés
Soup
Stew
Stuffed peppers
Stuffed tomatoes
Vegetables in cheese sauce

Cooked leafy vegetables, chopped in
Creamed vegetables
Soups
Meat loaf
Meat patties
Omelet
Soufflés
Cooked or canned fruits, in
Fruit cup
Fruit sauces
Jellied fruit
Quick breads
Salads
Shortcake
Upside-down cake (Be certain to measure and include this as part of the liquid.)
Yeast breads (Be certain to measure and include this as part of the liquid.)

Cooked wheat, oat, or corn cereals, in
Fried cereal
Meat loaf or patties
Soufflé’s
Sweet puddings

Cooked rice, noodles, macaroni, spaghetti, in
Casseroles
Meat or cheese loaf
Timbales

Bread
Slices, for French toast
Dry crumbs, in ..
Brown betty
Croquettes
Fondues
Coating for fried chops
Soft crumbs, in
Bread pudding
Meat Loaf
Stuffing’s

Cake or cookies in
Brown betty
Cake balls, with fruit or chocolate sauce
Cottage pudding
Crumb crust for pies
Refrigerator cake
Trifle (cake strips with custard sauce)

Substitute One Ingredient for Another
For this You may use these
1 whole egg, for thickening or baking 2 egg yolks, or 2 ½ tablespoons water
1 cup butter or margarine for shortening 7/8 cup lard, or rendered fat hydrogenated fat (cooking fat sold under brand names) with ½ tablespoon fat.

The Way Grandmother did it

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

The Way Grandmother did it

We recently moved from our lovely Seven (7) year old home in a rural agricultural town in Southern Utah, to a twenty (20) acre parcel that spreads up along the side of a mountain from the highway. We can see roof tops of neighbors’ homes miles away, scattered amount the trees in the forest.

Totally off the grid, we produce our utilities (1) water from a deep well, (2) electricity from wind and solar. We burn and/or compost most of our trash. The balance we transport to a local dump.

Our garden and chickens plus food storage provide our food. We can, dehydrate; freeze our food that we produce in season. We have practiced food storage in our home for fifty plus years; as did our mothers before us. Also, we purchase dried fruits, vegetables and meats. Freeze dried has the added advantage of easier rehydration and a savings of time.

This life style may not be for everyone. We love it. It is not like our ancestor crossing the plains to start new lives in a country they have never seen before. We have all the modern conveniences with all the safety and security of knowing were our next meal is coming from.

This life style is not for everyone, but it is certainly for us. In our new home we built a room especially for food storage.

We earn our living on the internet and our time is our own.

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Commercial Cans and Their Contents

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

Homemaker’s Handbook

For Commercial Cans and Their Contents

Commercial canning of foods has become so scientific in method, and produces foods of such uniformly high quality; it’s definitely out of date to look down on a can opener. Armed with that once despised gadget, any enterprising bride can serve her brand-new husband with a creditable meal full of vitamins, minerals, and flavor. Of course she may not know just how to buy her canned goods to get the right amounts and avoid leftovers, but she can learn and so can you, by studying this chapter.

More than 350 different kinds, varieties, and styles of canned foods including vegetables, fruit, mild, meats, poultry, fish, shell fish, soups specialties and ready-mad entrees are on the market. Some of these of course, are luxury items or are used only for convenience on rate occasions, but many are every day foods used in thousands of household in the country. Commercial canners have established an enviable record for the safety and dependability of their products throughout the years.

Commercially canned foods keep well and over a long period because the food is sealed in air-tight containers and then processed in a manner that destroys spoilage organisms already present in the food. No preservatives are used. Unless the can itself becomes damaged from outside causes, foods thus canned will keep for months without spoilage.

THE CAN ITSELF

Tin cans are safe containers. The cans themselves are made of thin sheets of steel coated with tin. The inside is sometimes enamel-coated. One type, the R enamel, is used to prevent the bleaching of red fruits and tomatoes. Another type, C enamel, is used to prevent the discoloration of either the food or can. It is used for sulphur containing foods, such as fish, meat, and canned corn. When heated, these foods may cause a discoloration on the tin in the same way that a spoon discolors if left in contact with a cooked egg. This stain is not harmful, but is not attractive.

Commercial canning preserves the vitamin content of foods to a high degree, because the air is excluded and the tins are sealed before the food is processed. The greatest losses of vitamins and minerals usually occur, not while the product is in the can, but before it is canned and after the can has been opened, and the contents are exposed to the air. This is also true of home-canned, food when the raw or blanched food is sealed before processing. In contrast, open kettle cooking of preserves and pickles will permit destruction of the vitamins in varying degrees, according to how long the food is cooked. Neither canned nor freshly cooked foods will have the same vitamin and mineral content as the raw food. The liquid in the can contains considerable nutritive value, especially minerals and vitamins, which may have dissolved out of the food during processing. This liquid should be evaporated by boiling and served with the food, or saved for use in soups or sauces. It contains only pure water with some of the juice for the food itself, plus seasonings and other added ingredient used in the packing. Canning does not affect the food value of starches, sugar, fats and protein.

AFTER THE CAN IS OPENED

It is perfectly safe to leave canned food in an opened can. The inside of the can has been sterilized so it is as clean as any dish could possibly be. The food should be kept cool and covered as for any other cooked product. Fruit juices, however, change in flavor rapidly if left in loosely covered partially empty containers. It is best, therefore, to transfer the unused juice from an open can to a smaller jar or bottle with a crew cap, so it can be tightly covered. It is not necessary to cook or even to heat commercially canned vegetables after they are removed from the can. If they are to be served cold, as in a salad, they may be chilled and used directly from the can.

STORAGE OF UNOPENED CANS

Canned foods should be stored in a fairly cool, dry place. The best temperature is around 60 deg. F. and should never be higher than 70 deg. F. If the foods are in glass containers, they should be kept in a fairly dark place. Dents in a can does not harm the contents unless the can leaks, in which case, it should never be used. A bulged can may mean spoilage, and should also be discarded.

It is a good idea when you buy new cans of food to store the recently purchased ones at the back of the shelf, so that you’ll use the oldest cans first.

Intelligent buying includes not only making you money go as far as possible, but at the same time getting foods which best fit your needs. Each style of pack of canned goods has its own particular uses. Food for casserole dishes, mixed salads, and soups can be in smaller pieces or of a lower grade than foods which are served whole and uncombined. The label on canned food should supply you with all the information necessary for your wise choice. Labeling has become increasingly more informative and helpful through the years, but there are still many improvements that should be made. Consumer education has done a great deal to bring about the present changes, and continued education and public demand will eventually bring about all the desired changes.

At the present time the Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act requires the following information besides the name of the product to be placed on the label:

1. Name and address of canner or distributor.

2. Net contents in dry weight or liquid measure, depending on the product.

3. Ingredients if the can contains a mixture-except where this is will
standardized and understood. (For example: fruit cocktail).

4. Statements about style are appropriate; for example, sliced, diced, etc; variety, sweetness of syrup for fruits, and any special flavoring.

5. *A statement of quality only if the product doesn’t measure up to the standards authorized by the Food and Drug Administration.

In addition to the information that now must appear on all canned food products, there is a definite trend toward a more informative label. Different groups have been advocating different changes, but in general the additional information may be summed up as follows:

1. Grade Labeling is a guide to the quality of the product. The grades to work effectively are standardized; U.S. Grad A, B, C, D. This would supplies the consumer with an easy guide for judging quality of different brands.

2. A description of raw products and method of processing is also helpful. This should be honest, factual, and brief.

3. Any seasonings or sweeteners that have been added should be listed.

4. The degree of maturity should be stated when it may be a factor in the use of the product.

5. The size of the product should be stated and illustrated whenever possible.

6. The size of the can should be noted.

7. The quality the can holds should be stated in cupful or units and servings.

8. How to prepare and serve including the use of liquid, and length of cooking time, should be included.

9. Recipes and other serving suggestions should be given as often as possible.

THE ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS ABOUT

Saturday, September 18th, 2010

THE ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS ABOUT
MILK AND MILK PRODUCTS

The distribution of fluid milk involves more risk of contamination than the handling of any other fresh food product. The very fact that milk contains more vital food elements than any other single food in our diets makes it just as good food for the growth of the numerous kinds of bacteria that may contaminate it. These bacteria may originate in the cow, may be introduced by the milkers or milking apparatus, may be on any of the containers used to hold the milk: pails, cans, bottles, dippers, etc., or may just come from the air in barns, commercial transportation, or in your own home. All reputable dairies recognize these risks in the handling of their products, and take every precaution necessary to guarantee a safe milk supply to their consumers. In addition, many cities and states have laws and appointed administrators to control and regulate the production, distribution and sale of milk to insure a wholesome supply of standardized quality.

Many forms and varieties of milk are available in most sections of the country. Because of milk’s perishability, manufactures have developed certain types of milk of good nutritional value which will keep for long periods of time at room temperature.

You will of course, decide which milk is best for your family, and will no doubt want to use to some extent the different forms depending on your needs. But under no condition should you take a chance with the safety of your milk supply. The milk industry has done a fine job of supervising and controlling the safety of its highly perishable product, and it is the responsibility of every homemaker to always buy pasteurized milk. If you live on a farm and have your own cows, for your personal use; pasteurize your own milk. (More about pasteurization will follow.)

Plain untreated raw milk is used on farms and is still sold in certain rural communities. Its cream content is variable and its bacterial count may cover a wide range. Because diseases such as bovine tuberculosis, typhoid and undulant fever may be transmitted by means of untreated raw milk, it is always advisable to boil raw milk 5 minutes before using. It can also be made safe be pasteurizing (as described l will describe later, but a dairy thermometer and accurate procedure are essential if good results are to be obtained.

Pasteurized milk and cream are made by “heating every particle of milk to a temperature of not less than 143 deg. F and holding it at that temperature for 30 minutes in appropriate pasteurization apparatus.” The milk is then cooled to 50 deg. F. A second and newer method of pasteurization heats milk to a higher temperature, at least 160 deg. F. For less than 15 seconds, and then cools it at once to 50 deg. F. in approved apparatus, properly operated. Pasteurization destroys all harmful bacteria that might have gotten into the milk. It changes the flavor so slightly as to be imperceptible, and does not materially affect the nutritional value. This process has proven its value by practically eliminating epidemics of milk-born diseases in areas were all milk is pasteurized. Milk correctly pasteurized sours normally, showing that desirable bacteria in the milk are not killed in pasteurization.

Homogenized milk has its fat globules (the cream) uniformly dispersed throughout the milk. This is done, in some areas, by forcing the milk under high pressure through very fine holes. Other methods also are used. Homogenized milk is uniform, and the cream does not separate and rise to the top. This thorough distribution of the cream through the milk causes many to feel that it tastes and looks richer, but actually it has the same cream content as milk of the same quality that is not homogenized. It does guarantee the same richness at the bottom of the bottle as at the top.

Certified milk is produced and distributed under carefully controlled hygienic conditions and supervised by a medical commission and the state board of health. Cows, milkers, buildings and equipment are checked periodically. The certificate awarded to an approved dairy indicates that the milk produced there is of uniform composition and that it conforms to rigid requirements as to care and bacterial count. Most certified milk is now pasteurized. It is generally somewhat more expensive than ordinary pasteurized milk, since it must carry the added costs of special supervision.

Vitamin D milk has had its natural content of Vitamin D increased by the addition of a vitamin concentrate. This milk is one of the few sources of dietary vitamin D. Since all children need this vitamin, the advisability of using vitamin D milk for your family is best determined by your family physician. In most cases, vitamin D milk can take care of the child’s vitamin D needs.

Buttermilk may be cultured or obtained directly for the churning of butter. Originally the term buttermilk meant the product left after the butter comes in the process of churning sweet or soured cream. Now it is also used to designate the product made by the addition of certain bacterial cultures to whole or skimmed milk. These bacteria are similar to the harmless types which occur normally in milk, and which are responsible for the natural souring of milk. These bacteria are similar to the harmless types which occur normally in milk, and which are responsible for the natural souring of milk. In natural souring, however, the sanitation and flavor development is not controlled. Cultured buttermilk when made from pasteurized skimmed milk has the same desirable food values and flavor appeal of natural buttermilk, But with the safety and flavor controlled. (If made from whole milk, its food value is greater due to the higher fat content.) Buttermilk is slightly acid and is usually thicker than sweet milk. Special cultured milks, such as acidophilus milk and Yogurt preparations, are sometimes prescribed on special diets, particularly for certain digestive disorders and for infant feeding when ordinary formula cannot be used.

Skimmed milk is milk with almost all the cream removed. It contains far, less fat than whole milk. Most skimmed milk shows a fat content of about 0.1 per cent/ since only butter fat is removed, the remaining milk contains almost all the minerals. Proteins and water soluble vitamins. The caloric value is only half of whole milk. Since its Vitamin A content is negligible due to its lack of butter fat, many dairies add 2000 units per quart to make its vitamin content equivalent to whole milk. Skimmed milk is pasteurized and is desirable in low caloric diets.

Flavored milk is milk such as chocolate milk, is also available and may be made from whole, partially skimmed, or skimmed milk.
Soft curd milk that has been treated by a special process so that the curd formed during digestion will be tenderer. This type of milk is sometimes used in baby formulas, since it is easier to digest. It is also prescribed in the treatment of certain digestive disorders.

Graded milk is available in many cities and is a guide to the bacterial count of the milk both before and after pasteurization. The grades are listed by the United States Public Health Service Milk Ordinance and Code as follows: Certified, Grade A Pasteurized, Grade B Pasteurized, and Grade C Pasteurized. The grade C must be plainly labeled cooking only. There have been some objections raised regarding the use of grades for milk. The main objection voiced was that it is more desirable to regulate the handling of all milk so that it will meet the standards set up for Grad A milk rather than to allow the greater bacterial count of the lower grades. All three grades are considered safe, but the higher bacterial count indicates careless handling resulting in contamination somewhere in the production.

Evaporated milk is made from fresh whole milk of high quality by evaporating 60 per cent of the water content. The milk is then sealed in cans and sterilized by heat. Most of the food value remains, but variable amounts of vitamins B1 (thiamine) and C are lost. Its fat content is about 7.9 percent and it contains not less than 25.9 per cent total milk solids. Practically all evaporated milk has a vitamin D concentrate added. It forms a fine soft curd during digestion. Since all brands of evaporated milk must conform to federal standards, they are similar, and this uniformity makes them particularly useful for baby formulas. Either the addition of an equal measure of water it may be used in almost all kinds of cookery to replace whole fresh milk. Undiluted, very cold evaporated milk will whip like cream. Since it keeps almost indefinitely when un-opened, it is convenient for emergencies and as a supplement to fresh milk. It is usually priced somewhat lower than an equivalent quality of fresh milk. No sugar is added.

Condensed milk should not be confused with evaporated milk; It is made by evaporating about one-half of the water content from a mixture of whole milk and sugar. It contains about 40 per cent sugar and at least 28 percent total milk solids and not less than 8.5 percent butter fat. It is not sterilized, but depends upon the sugar for preservation. Sweetened condensed milks re used mostly to make bakery goods, desserts, and candy. It is more expensive than an equivalent amount of fresh milk but has an individual flavor and other properties that make it pleasing to use in may foods.

Malted milk powder is made by drying and grinding a mixture of whole milk and the liquid separate from a mash of barley malt and wheat flour with additions of small amounts of slat and soda. It contains at least 7.5 percent of butter fat. It is sold in tablet and powder form.

Dry milks are the most concentrated form of milk. They require no refrigeration and little storage space because they are dry, but they must be kept in air-tight, moisture-proof containers to remain fresh. Milk is dried by removing at least 95 percent of the water from either whole or skimmed milk. The milk is either sprayed into drying chamber or on to hot rollers. In the spray process, the milk dries in a fine powder; in the roller process, it dries in a sheet which is scraped off the rollers in flakes. These flakes are then sometimes ground into a powder. The spray process powder mixes with water more thoroughly and rapidly than does the roller products, which has a tendency to settle out upon standing. They are equally satisfactory when a tendency to settle out upon standing. They are equally satisfactory when a tendency to settle out upon standing. They are equally satisfactory when sifted with other dry ingredients for baked products, but for beverages or ice cream it is best to select the spray type. The package label should give the process used.

Dry whole milk is identified by the government as “the product resulting for the removal of water from milk and contains no less than 20% milk fat, and not more than 5 percent moisture.” A quart of reconstituted milk, similar to fresh whole milk in nutritive value, except for constituted milk, similar to fresh whole milk in nutritive value, except for constituted milk, similar to fresh whole milk in nutritive value, except for variable amounts of vitamins B1 and C, may be made by placing 1 ¼ cup of spray process milk on top of 3 ½ cups of water and beating thoroughly. This milk may then be used as a beverage or in cooking.

Non-fat dry milk solids (dried skimmed milk) are identified by the government as “the solids contain the lactose, milk proteins, and milk minerals in the same relative proportions as they were contained in the fresh milk from which the solids were made. “It contains not over 5 percent by weight of moisture, and not over 1 ½ percent fat, unless otherwise indicated.” The use of dried skim milk is an easy and economical way to improve the flavor and nutritional value of foods. It is used chiefly in cookery by sifting it with other dry ingredients to make bread, cakes, biscuits, bread puddings, and as a constituent of many commercial prepared mixes. It can be used to advantage in cooked cereals, ground meats mixtures or sausage products. It can be used in the preparation of whipped chilled gelatin or frozen desserts by placing on the require amounts of water and beating.
Cream is defined “as a portion of milk which contains not less than 18 percent but fat.” In general the same rules of safety and quality that apply to milk apply to cream. : light cream, or coffee cream, usually runs from 18 to 25 percent butter fat, whipping cream from 30 to 40 percent, or even higher. The percentage of butter fat of the cream usually appears on the bottle or carton, and since it is usually true that the higher the butter fat content the more expensive the cream is, it is well to check to see that you are getting the highest butter fat content for the money.

Sour or soured cream should contain at least 18 percent butter fat. It is made by adding a culture to sweet butter. Never buy sour or butter cream in bulk, since its safety for more than a short period cannot be assured, due to hazards of contamination. See index for Sour Cream recipes.

SOME HINTS ABOUT MILK AND MILK PRODUCTS

1. The wise housewife will never allow a drop of milk or cream to spoil or otherwise be wasted. Since light destroys both riboflavin and vitamin C, milk should be taken in promptly if delivered and refrigerated or stored in a cool dark place as soon as possible. It should be kept in the refrigerator when not being used and closely covered at all times to prevent contamination. Adding old milk to fresh will hasten the spoilage of the fresh, and should only be done if the entire amount is to be used at once. Developing the habit of placing the new fresh milk behind cartons of older milk will assure the use of the older milk before it has a chance to spoil.

2. In using buttermilk or sour cream in recipes, the commercial type should always be bought. The flavor and acidity are more nearly standardized in commercially prepared buttermilk and sour cream, and can be depended upon to produce a fine cooked product. Milk that sours in the home and that has an unpleasant flavor should not be used for beverages or in cooking.

3. It is practical in small families or even when large amount of milk are used in baking and cooking, to buy some milk that is not homogenized (When it is available.) and use the cream for cereals when the rich flavor of cream is very desirable. The remaining “skimmed” milk can be made into a flavored beverage or used in cooking where the lack or richness will not be noticed. This is nutritionally practical only if each family member obtains his full quota of whole milk. The caloric and vitamin intake of a child is impaired if the cream is removed from the milk other ways. Such compensation is hard to guarantee, however. But for use on cereal and in cooking the foods that the entire family enjoys, Using the “top milk” will prove economically and practical with no nutritional loss.

DON’T BELIEVE THESE FALLACIES ABOUT MILK

1. There is no physiological or chemical evidence to support the theory that milk and fish or ice cream and fish should not be eaten at the same meal. Milk and fish are entirely compatible, are eaten together in fish chowders and oyster stews with no ill effects whatever.

2. Milk is not a fattening food. The pint of milk a day, which is the recommendation for adults, contributes a little over 335 calories. Since the average adult man requires about 3000 calories, this only 11 percent of his total caloric need. The pint of milk, however, provides three-fourths of his need for calcium and about one-half of his phosphorus need, besides contributing significant amounts of several vitamins. On Very strict reducing diets, it is advisable to use skimmed milk; this provides only about one half the amounts of calories and about the same amount of B vitamins and mineral. However, skimmed milk contains very little vitamin A. since this nutrient is found in the cream fraction only.

3. Milk and acid fruits can be mixed with no ill effect. Actually the curd formed by the action of the acid on the milk probable facilitates the digestion of milk because curd forms naturally when milk reaches the stomach.

THE ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS ABOUT FLOURS

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Homemaker’s Handbook — For Buying Staples – Article #2

All-purpose flour is a relatively low protein flour that is made by blending hard and soft wheat flours. Hard wheat is a spring-sown wheat raised in the northern states, while the soft wheat is sown in the fall in the middle and more southerly states. This flour is designed for general household use for making both quick and yeast breads, pastries, cookies, and some cakes.

Barley flour is made by removing the outer coat form barley and then putting the barley through a pearling machine a number of times. The shelled off coats are sifted together and sold for flour. It has limited uses, but is useful for thickening soups.

Bread flour is made by milling hard wheat, and has a higher percentage of protein (11-12.5 %) and lower percentage of starch than flours made of the soft wheat. Because it has greater power to absorb liquid, it will produce more loaves of bread from a given weight than does and all-purpose or soft-wheat flour. It is sold unblended, chiefly to commercial bakeries for making only bread and rolls.

Buckwheat flour is a mixture of ground buckwheat seeds and white flour. Buckwheat is an herb rather than a cereal grass. Its seeds are ground and sifted through a courser bolting cloth than that used for cereal flours, which allows particles of hull to pass through, and gives the flour its characteristic flavor and dark color. The white flour is added to modify the naturally strong, bitter flavor of buckwheat.

Cake flour is milled especially from the highest grade of soft wheat for the chief purpose of making fine cakes. It contains a high percentage of starch and a low percentage of the protein, gluten.

Corn flour is finely ground and sifter cornmeal. It is one of the flours used to replace wheat flour in the diet of those with wheat-flour allergy.

Enriched flour is ordinary white flour with vitamin B1, and iron added to improve its nutritive value. The purpose is to return to the flour some of the nutritive value that is lost in the refining process. It is not different for ordinary flour in use, appearance, or flavor, but it is much more desirable from a nutritive standpoint.

Since the average person consumes considerably amounts of bread and other bakery products daily, it is important that these foods carry a share of the vitamins and mineral necessary for health. In the process of making refined flours, meals, and many breakfast cereal, wheat and other cereals are stripped of the outer coating and the germ. These parts contain almost all of the vitamins and minerals. During World War 2 most white flour was enriched by the addition of certain vitamins and minerals making it more nearly equal to the whole grain product in food value. The enrichment of all white bread was made mandatory as a war time measure by national legislation, and in some sections of the South enriched corn meal was also available.

Graham, Entire Wheat, and Whole Wheat flours are all the same. It is made by grinding the entire wheat grain, bran and all, usually of hard wheat. It is used in making 1—percent whole wheat breads, and mixed with white flour to make fractional whole wheat breads, and to some extent pastry and cakes.

Gluten flour is a special flour designed for making bread for diabetics. It is very high in gluten, being prepared by removing a large percentage of starch from hard wheat flour.

Oat flour is made by dehulling the oats and grinding the remaining groats to the desired fineness. It is brushed, not sifted through a sieve. It cannot be sifted because of its high oil content. Oat flour is a whole grain flour with limited uses as a stabilizer for commercial ice cream, and for the making of some soap and face powder. It is also used in poultry feeding.

Pastry or Soft Wheat flour is milled from soft or winter wheat and has a high starch, low gluten content. It is used more in the South than in the North for all kinds of quick breads and pastries. A good yeast bread can be made with it, but it is different from the bread made with hard wheat flour. Soft wheat yeast breads had less liquid, requires less kneading, more yeast, and more sugar than bread made with hard wheat or all-purpose flour.

Potato flour, Prepared from dehydrated potatoes, is a white velvety flour especially suited for making muffins and sponge cakes, and for a thickening agent if pies and fruit sauces. It may b combined with other flours to provide a change in flavor and texture.

Pumpernickel flour is a dark rye flour made by grinding whole rye grain somewhat coarser than for regular rye flour. It is often called rye meal, and is used in making pumpernickel bread and Boston brown bread.

Rice flour is milled from the cracked particles, incompletely debranned, and otherwise imperfect rice grains left from making head rice. It is practically pure white in color. For best result, rice flour should be combined with other flours, or used in combination with eggs and milk. If not used in this way, a grainy heavy product results.

Rye flour is a mixture of milled rye with enough gluten added from hard wheat flours to enable it to rise when made into yeast doughs. White rye flours are made from the inner part of the kernel, whereas the dark rye flours are taken from the outer portions of the kernel.

Self-rising flour is a soft wheat flour combined with salt and baking powder and sifted many times. In some brands, one or more additional ingredients such as sugar, powdered milk, and shortenings are added. The quick breads, cakes, and pastry mixes on the market are types of self-rising flours.

Stone-ground whole wheat or Buckwheat flour is prepared by grinding the grains or seeds between stones. The hear or germ is left in as these flours are not bolted (sifted). They make breads of superior flavor.

Soy flour manufacture began as a by-product in the extraction of oils used in producing foods, paints, etc. from soy beans. These flours are designated as full-fatted, low-fat, and defatted. The full-fat flour contains all the natural oil of the bean, the low-fat flour has 5 to 7 percent of the oil, and the defatted, 1 to 3 per cent of the oil, and most of the coloring matter removed. The low-fat flour is most commonly used in the home; the full-fat is sold in largest quantities to the food industry.

In the making of the full-fat flour beans of high quality are cracked between corrugated rolls and dehulled. They are then debittered by one of the several heat and moisture treatments, dried, cooled and milled into flour. In making of low fat flour, the dehulled debittered, dried beans are cracked and passed to a continuous screw expeller fitted with a cold water shaft to prevent scorching . When the required oil is extracted, the beans are cooled and milled. In the making of defatted flour, the oil is removed from the dried beans by a solvent extraction process, and then milled. There is relatively little of the defatted flour on the market. Soy flour is used alone, or in combination with wheat flour in the making of quick and yeast breads, cakes, cookies, and pastry; and it is commonly used as a meat “extender.” It has a high protein content, and the use of soy flour is highly recommended as a source of this and other essential nutrients.