{ title: 'The North Westchester times ; New Castle tribune. (Mt. Kisco, N.Y.) 1959-????, February 14, 1963, Page 13, Image 13', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn2001062048/1963-02-14/ed-1/seq-13/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn2001062048/1963-02-14/ed-1/seq-13.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn2001062048/1963-02-14/ed-1/seq-13/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn2001062048/1963-02-14/ed-1/seq-13/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Chappaqua Library
SHINY RED apples which are in the bowl are the major ingredient of the German ap ple cake that Mrs. R. A. Har- ang of Appletree Lane, Pound The Kitchen Cabinet Ridge, is shown making. Be cause the Harang house is set in an old apple orchard Mrs. Harang has made a point of col lecting recipes that help use the yield of the 44 Baldwin trees.—Staff Photo by Doris B. Kirchhoff. Mrs. Harang Has Apples to Spare By PEGGY RICE POUND RIDGE— When you build a house in the middle of an old apple orchard and like to cook, apple recipes are apt to become a specialty. At least this has been the experi ence of Mrs. R. A. Harang of Appletree Lane. The recipe that she has given us for German apple cake is a family recipe, actually, since Mrs. Harang's mother was Ger man. But the fact that it uses apples is what makes it such a favorite of the Harangs when their 44 Baldwin trees yield their heavy crop in alternate years. As a matter of fact, no number of delicious apple recipes can cope with the number of apples that the Harangs harvest. But an antique cider-press that they pur chased several years ago does. With a chopper that reduces the apples to a coarse pulp, and then a press that extracts the fra grant juice, the Harangs are able to make 200 or 300 gallons of cid er each year. And there are still lots of apples left for apple cake, apple pie and applesauce, to say nothing of crisp, tart apples just to eat in their natural state. Mrs. Harang explained how the cider yield varies during the sea son. In mid-September, when the apples first start ripening, it takes up to three bushels of ap ples for one gallon of cider. By mid-autumn when the crop is at its height, one bushel of apples makes as much as two and a half gallons of cider. And by the week before Christmas when the last cider is pressed, it again takes two and a half or three bushels of apples for a gallon of cider. In addition to Philip, 14, Jef frey, 10, and Suzanne, 6, the Har ang youngsters who enjoy the apples in every form, the Har angs have Daisy, their pet don key who eats his fair share of the crop. Animals of all sorts are anoth er hobby of Mrs. Harang's. \Pre sently,\ she says, we're at rock bottom, with only the donkey, our red Manx cat, a Rhodesian ridgeback, a dog bred for lion hunting in Africa that's big, broad, burly and tough, and a parakeet. We had a possum all fall but he escaped.\ \In fact,\ continued Mrs. Har ang, \my husband says, 'Don't cut a hole in the roof, if some one gives you a girafe. I don't think we'll keep it.' \ Mrs. Harang's interests are widespread, for in addition to ap ples and animals, she collects clam recipes to use on her vaca tions at Cape Cod and she's ex perimenting with rose hip jelly so that the rose hips both from the Cape and Westchester don't go to waste. Certainly Mrs. Har ang is an interested and enter prising cook. German Apple Crumb Cake l2 l cups sifted flour J 2 cup sugar / dash of salt Vz cup soft butter or margarine 5 cups thinly sliced, peeled fresh tart apples 2 tablespoons quick cooking ta pioca *s cup sugar Jewish Women To Hold Spring Meeting Here MOUNT KISCO Mrs. Barney Elman will be local chairman for the spring conference of the Westchester- Rockland branch of the Nation al Women's League to be held at the Moun^ Kisco Jewish Community Center on May 23. Mrs. Thomas Gyory and Mrs. Maurice Cohen represented the center'when the planning com mittee met in Scarsdaleon Thursday at the home of Mrs. Sol Henkend. The conference theme will be \Sisterhood Programming for the Year,\ with national pro gram chairman, Mrs. Leon Steelman, as the keynote speak er. • Torah fund awards will be presented to the individual sis terhoods and new sisterhood presidents will be greeted by branch president Mrs. Milton Goldman. Mr., Mrs. Drahorad Have Son, Peter Jr. BEDFORD VILLAGE— Mr. and Mrs. Peter Drahorad of 85 Babbitt Road are the par ents of a son, Peter George Jr., born Jan. 27 at Northern West chester Hospital. The couple also has a daughter, Jeanette, aged 13 months. Mrs. Drahorad is the former Miss Sue Kincaid, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hazel Kincaid of 10 Allen Place, Katonah. Pater nal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Edward Drahorad of Wam pus Ave., Armonk. i f ^tj :^|^i|.|. : MRS. FREDERICK FREE Frederick Free Marries Miss Marjorie Jean Nelson CHAPPAQUA— Miss Marjorie Jean Nelson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph D. Nelson of 10 Drummond Road, Westfield, N. J., was married Saturday to Frederick James Free, tne son of Mrs. George W. Boyle of 131 Orchard Ridge Road and the late Frederick L. Free. Tne Rev. Clark Hunt perform ed the ceremony at the First Methodist Church, Westfield. A reception followed at the home of the bride's parents. Given in marriage by her fath er, the bride wore a ballerina- length gown of white peau de soie with a sweetheart neckline and ap plique of lace and pearls. Her chapel veil of French illusion was fastened to a crown of seed pearls and she carried a cascade bou quet of white orchids. Miss Barbara James of Syra cuse, college roommate of the bride, was maid of honor. She wore a blue velvet suit and car ried a cascade bouquet of yel low carnations. Best man for Mr, Free was Donald Mowers of Binghamton. Ushers were Jack Moran and Robert Nelson, brother of the bride. Mr. Mowers and Mr. Mor an are fraternity brothers of the bridegroom. Mr. and !Mrs. Free are seniors at Cornell University, where she is a home economics major and member of Kappa Kappa Gam ma, Honor society in the school of home economics. Mr. Free, a hotel administra tion major and member of its honor society, belongs to Delta Upsilon fraternity. Upon gradua tion, he will be commissioned a second lieutenant in the. U. S. Marine Corps. The couple will live at 144 Hud son St., Ithaca, % teaspoon cinnamon M teaspoon nutmeg l.Preheat oven to 425 degrees 2. Combine flour, Vz cup sug ar, dash of ^salt and butter or margarine with a fork until crumbs are formed. 3. Measure out % cup of crumbs and set aside. Press re maining crumbs into a nine inch spring-form pan covering the bot tom and about % inch up the side. 4. Mix the sliced apples, the tapioca, the other *2 cup sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg together. Arrange in the crumb shell. 5. Bake at 425 degrees for about 20 minutes. Then sprinkle with the reserved 3 A cup of crumbs 6. Reduce oven heat to 400 de grees and continue baking 20 to 25 minutes longer or until golden brown. Serve warm or cold with or without cream. Yield: 5 or 6 servings. Note: Mrs. Harang says that using brown sugar with the ap ples alters the flavor and makes an equally delicious cake. JAXE STRASSER Jane Strasser Future Bride of Mai K. Fing ar MOUNT KISCO— Mr. and Mrs. L. Van Sta- voren Jr., of Atlata, Ga., have announced the engage ment of Mrs. Stavoren's daugh ter, Miss Jane Brown Strasser, to Mai Kenneth Finger, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. David Finger of Melbourne, Fla., formerly of Mount Kisco. Miss Strasser, daughter also of the late J. R. Strasser, is a graduate of St. Pius X High School and is now attending Massey College in Atlanta. She was an officer of Sigma Theta Pi philanthropic organization. Mr. Finger will graduate from the Georgia Institute of Technology in June, where he belongs to Alpha Epsilon Pi so cial fraternity. A June 22 wedding is plan ned. Liberal Arts Classes of NYU At Boys' Club MOUNT KISCO— Raymond Wall, executive dir ector of the Boys' Club has .an nounced the continuation of the New York University liberal arts in extension program at the club. The great books course is meeting on Thursday ^afternoons and a second course? \The Ways of Man,\ will meet on Tuesday evenings, starting March 5. The Tuesday evening sessions will deal with the culture of to day and will seek to, determine values by an examination of language, terhnology, education family relationships, ethics and morality, as revealed by the pat terns of thinking, feeling and act ing of people throughout the world. Especially prepared read ings by anthropologists and soc iologists will be provided to re gistrants at no additional cost. Recorded dramatizations high lighting the impact of cultural differences on man's behavior 1*111 provide the basis for group discussions of issues\ such as> \Are We Losing Our Individual ity?\ and \Standards for Proper Conduct.\ English contains many techni cal words of Arabic origin, in cluding alkali, alcohol, alchemy, algebra, amalgam, zenith, nadir, cipher. Moslems used the cipher, or zero, more than two centuries before it appeared in Europe. North Westchester Times New Castle Tribune, Mount Kisco, N.Y., February l #,;»|JKM! Grandson Of Col. Pope Is Engaged KATONAH— Mr. and Mrs. Charles Russell Dodson of San Marino, Calif., have made known the engage ment of their daughter, Miss Anne Dodson, to Allan Melvill Pope, 2d, son of Mr. and Mrs'. Melvill Pope of Altadena, Calif., and grandson of CoL Allan Mel vill Pope of Mount Holly Road and the late Mrs. Pope. The bride-to-be was.graduated from South Pasadena High School. She is a student at San Diego State College. Mr. Pope, whose aunt, Miss Polly Pope, also resides in Ka tonah, was graduated from Flint- ridge Preparatory School and at tended. Rutgers University. He is a junior at the University of Southern California. GOLDEN wedding anniver sary was celebrated Saturday by Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Gul- isano of 62 Spring St., Mount Kisco who renewed their vows at a noon Mass in St. Francis Church. The couple, who were married in St. Patrick's Church in New York City, were feted at an evening reception for 100 guests in the Wentworth Room of the Elmsford Lanes after a buffet supper at, their home following the Mass. The party was given by their nine chil dren: Mrs. Elizabeth Dercole, Angelo, Frank, Dick, Bernard and Salvatore Gulisano, all of Mount Kisco; Charles of New York City and Santo and Jo seph Gulisano, both of Rhode Island, who recently retired from the US Navy. The couple has nine grandchildren. —Staff Photo by Fred Cerfeda. South Africa Theme for Talk, Supper MOUNT KISCO— The Couples Club of the Mount Kisco Methodist Church will hold' a pot-luck supper in Halstead Hall on Saturday at 7 p.m. The theme, \South African Sa fari,\ will also include the main course, babotie. Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Adendorff, who formerly lived in Durban, South Africa, will show color slides of life in South Africa. The Adendorffs now reside in Bedford Hills. Serving on the dinner commit tee are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Lan- MONICA HOIST —Howard Loth ;\ Stephen Strong Plans MarHage. To Monica Hoist KATONAH- The engagement of Miss Mani- » ca Hoist of Greenwich, Conn,-, to Stephen W. Strong, son of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour W. Strong of this community, has been an nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Hoist of Stockholm, Sweden. [ A June wedding is planned. Miss Hoist was born and edu cated in Europe. She is employ ed by the American Plan in surance Co., Greenwich. 7 Mr. Strong attended Westcftjes-' . ter Community College, and-Val^^ lejo College in California. He^is 3tf employed by Westchester County Publishers, Inc. caster, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hel- ber and Mr. and Mrs. William Lombardi. ©1962 VOLKSWAGEN OP AMERICA, INC. monster! <9** L /till, /foy /itoL -a/ */// ^ m a^^cAms OrOTOn-OnrHudson, N.Y. Jim McGIone, Albany Post Rd. at Harmon Sta, Elmsford, N.Y. Howard Holmes, Inc., 234 Tarrytown Road West Nyack.N.Y. Foreign Cars of Rockland, Inc., Route 59 New Rochelle N.Y. County Automotive Co., Inc., 194 Boston Post Road Yonkers, N.Y. Schumacher Auto Sales, 575 Yonkers Ave. AUTHORIZED DEALERS \... ^Mfs- • m