Good Housekeeping Magazine, 42. sējumsPhelps Publishing Company, 1906 |
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advertisers please say baby Baked baking powder Bavarian cream beautiful beef boiling bread Breakfast Breakfast Cereal Broiled brown butter cake celery cents Cereal with cream cheese chopped clean cloth Cocoa Coffee Luncheon cold color cook cover crackers croquettes decoration Dinner dish dressing eggs fire flavor floor flour flowers French dressing fruit garden girl Grape fruit green half heat Housekeeping inches jelly juice keep kitchen Kitty lettuce light look mayonnaise meat milk mixed mother never oven parsley pepper Philanderer piece plants potatoes Roast roll salad Sally Lunn salt sauce saw adv say I saw season seed serve side silk slices soap soup spoon stove sugar summer sweet tablespoons teaspoon things tion toast tomato Wafers wash whipped cream window woman wood
Populāri fragmenti
89. lappuse - I used to visit and revisit it a dozen times a day, and stand in deep contemplation over my vegetable progeny with a love that nobody could share or conceive of who had never taken part in the process of creation.
216. lappuse - I regard the discovery of a dish as a far more interesting event than the discovery of a star, for we have always stars enough, but we can never have too many dishes ; and I shall not regard the sciences as sufficiently honoured or adequately represented amongst us, until I see a cook in the first class of the Institute.
13. lappuse - For they tha.t led us away captive, required of us then a song, and melody in our heaviness : Sing us one of the songs of Sion.
184. lappuse - I recommend that a law be enacted to regulate inter-State commerce in misbranded and adulterated foods, drinks, and drugs. Such law would protect legitimate manufacture and commerce, and would tend to secure the health and welfare of the consuming public. Traffic in food-stuffs which have been debased or adulterated so as to injure health or to deceive purchasers should be forbidden.
398. lappuse - In the early spring, as soon as the frost is out of the ground, the mound is leveled.
217. lappuse - THE HAUNCH OF VENISON. A POETICAL EPISTLE TO LORD CLARE. THANKS, my lord, for your venison, for finer or fatter Never rang'd in a forest, or smok'd in a platter ; The haunch was a picture for painters to study, The fat was so white, and the lean was so ruddy ; Though my stomach was sharp, I could scarce help regretting To spoil such a delicate picture by eating...
276. lappuse - the floors of the houses generally were made of loam strewed with rushes, constantly put on fresh, without removing the old, lying there in some cases for twenty years, concealing fish-bones, broken victuals, and other filth, and impregnated with the urine of dogs and men.