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Thursday, June 22, 2023

Lemonade Pie Recipe by Ruth Paget

Lemonade Pie Recipe by Ruth Paget 

Serves 4 

Ingredients: 

For Crust: 

-3 tablespoons butter 

-1½ cups coconut 

For Filling: 

-1 cup evaporated milk 

-1 (1-ounce) envelope gelatin 

-1/4 cup cold water 

-1/2 cup boiling water 

-2/3 cup sugar 

-6 ounces lemon juice 

Steps: 

1-Melt butter in a 10-inch skillet. Add coconut and stir over medium heat until coconut is golden brown. 

2-Press coconut mixture firmly on the bottom and sides of a 9-inch pie pan. Let stand at room temperature until cool. 

3-Chill evaporated milk in an ice tray until almost frozen around the edges. 

4-in a 3-quart bowl, soften the gelatin in cold water. Add boiling water and stil until the gelatin is dissolved. Add sugar and lemon juice and stir. 

5-Chill the mixture until it is thick in the refrigerator, but not set. 

6-Whip evaporated milk until stiff. Mix evaporated milk with the thickened gelatin. 

7-Pour lemon-milk mixture into the coconut shell. 

8-Chill the pie in the refrigerator for about 3 hours. 

Source: Rose Pennington – circa 1950s 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France


Click for Ruth Paget's Books




Sugar Drop Cookies Recipe by Ruth Paget

Sugar Drop Cookie Recipe by Ruth Paget 

Makes 24 Cookies 

Ingredients: 

-2½ cups flour 

-1 cup sugar 

-2 beaten eggs 

-1 teaspoon almond extract 

-1 cup softened butter 

-1 egg white beaten stiff 

Steps: 

1-Preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit. \

2-Mix flour and sugar together. 

3-Mix eggs and almond extract together. Combine eggs with flour mixture and blend thoroughly. Add in beaten egg white and stir. 

4-Drop cookies using one spoon to scoop and the other to push onto a cookie sheet lined with parchment paper. 

5-Bake for 10 to 12 minutes and cool on a rack. 

Source: Rose Pennington – circa 1950s 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France


Click for Ruth Paget's Books




Stuffed Flank Steak Recipe by Ruth Paget

Stuffed Flank Steak Recipe by Ruth Paget 

Serves 4 

Ingredients: 

-4 tablespoons butter 

-1/2 cup chopped onion 

-3/4 cup chopped celery 

-1/2 cup chopped celery leaves 

-1 (4-ounce) can drained sliced mushrooms 

-1 teaspoon salt 

-1 teaspoon pepper 

-1 teaspoon thyme 

-4 tablespoons chopped parsley 

-2 cups crumbled blue cheese crackers 

-1/4 cup milk 

-1 2-pound flank steak 

-1 cup water 

Steps: 

1-Sauté onions and celery in butter in a sauce pan. Add celery leaves, mushrooms, salt, pepper, thyme, parsley, crumbled blue cheese crackers, and milk. 

2-Pound steak to a ¼-inch thickness. Score one side. Spread sauce on unscored side. Roll and secure with toothpicks or string. 

3-Preheat oven to 425 degrees Fahrenheit. 

4-Brown meat on all sides in fat in a shallow baking pan. Bake for 30 minutes. 

5-Place meat in a covered pan. Lower heat to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Cook for 1½ to 2 hours or until tender. Slice and serve with pan juices. 

Source: Rose Pennington – circa 1950s 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France


Click for Ruth Paget's Books




Insurance Adjuster Interview by Ruth Paget

Insurance Adjuster Interview by Ruth Paget 

When I started high school, I attended a private Friends School in Detroit (Michigan) to learn about my Quaker ancestors from New Jersey and Pennsylvania. 

The Friends School taught standard high school subjects as well as electives such as non-violence workshop where we read the works of Gandhi and Martin Luther King, non-violent games that promoted happiness for all such as caring for an egg for a week, meditation and journaling for conflict resolution, and the World of Work for vocational training. 

For World of Work, we began our studies by reading Working by Chicago writer Studs Terkel, who interviewed people from all sorts of jobs about job satisfaction and the skills needed to perform them. 

We all took the Myers-Briggs Interest Inventory which tests on which kinds of jobs that are suited for you based on skills and interest. I wanted to be a writer, but my quantitative skills came out first and writing came out second. The best job for me was listed as accountant. I was mortified. However, my Quaker teacher told me, “Just use math when you write.” 

After the Myers-Briggs Interest Inventory, I set up informational interviews. The first one I did was with an insurance adjuster: Mr. H. acts as a liaison between the insurance company and its claimants. He works for xxx, which is an independent insurance adjusting company. Mr. H. settles insurance losses for the company.

He wishes he made more money, but what he receives is fine with him. Mr. H. does not think he would go into another field of work. 

He feels his job is interesting. It is not a get rich scheme. To Mr. H. work should be challenging, rewarding, and something you can get a lot of satisfaction and pride out of. He could have a better paying job, but does not want to sacrifice time with his family. He enjoys working. He likes meeting people everyday, the competition, and the satisfaction of helping people. 

An insurance adjuster position requires a college degree, but most of the training is done on the job. He suggests taking courses in economics and business. 

In his free time, he spends time with friends. He will talk about work, if he is with friends from the office. Aside from that, he talks about sports. Mr. H. likes his boss and thinks that he has his best interest at heart.  

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France


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Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Accountant Interview by Ruth Paget

Accountant Interview by Ruth Paget 

When I started high school, I attended a Friends School in Detroit (Michigan) to learn about my Quaker ancestors from New Jersey and Pennsylvania. 

 The Friends School taught standard high school subjects as well as electives such as non-violence workshop where we read the works of Gandhi and Martin Luther King, non-violent games that promoted happiness for everyone such as caring for an egg for a week, meditation and journaling for conflict resolution, and the World of Work for vocational training. 

For World of Work, we began our studies by reading Working by Chicago writer Studs Terkel, who interviewed people from all sorts of jobs about job satisfaction and the skills needed to perform the job. We all took the Myers-Briggs Interest Inventory which tests on which jobs that are suited for you based on skills and interests. I wanted to be a writer, but my quantitative skills came out first and writing came out second. I was mortified! However, my Quaker teacher told me, “Just use math when you write.” 

After the Myers-Briggs Interest Inventory, I set up informational interviews to find out about the world of work. I found some of my write-ups recently and wanted to share what I learned during my teen years, because the jobs still exist with some changes brought about by technology. I had a very good interview with an accountant from Coopers and Lybrand – Certified Public Accountants. This is still a position that exists in the 21st century and might interest readers studying business. I retained my ninth grade English: 

Ms. S. likes her job as an accountant. She has worked at Coopers and Lybrand since last May. She graduated from college in April. She works Monday through Friday. She has been expected to work overtime and accepts that as part of her job. She says 55 hours a week is a lot. 

Ms. S. told me certified public accountants work with facts. They go out and review clients’ systems, document them, and make sure they are functioning as documented by the clients. The accountants perform various tasks to make sure that the clients’ business functions as documented. 

I asked for more details. Ms. S. said accounting is a recording of what is happening at the business. Businesses have cash coming in and goods going out. These activities are recorded. This is where business begins. This is the exchange of goods and services. 

For two years, she was a liberal arts student at the University of Michigan. This course of study consisted of art, history, calculus, chemistry, and French. Then, she applied for business school. At the University of Michigan, you need approximately 21 hours of accounting. 

At UofM, that is 7 classes with 3 credit hours each. These classes involve a wide array of accounting: asset, corporate, cost, and tax. Auditing is included in these classes also. (I though asset accounting sounded interesting, if you got to go through safe deposit boxes.) 

Ms. S. said business law is required to become an accountant. Business law is included on the CPA (Certified Public Accountant) Examination. You must take and pass this examination to be certified. In addition to passing the examination, you must work with a public accounting firm in order to be certified. Business law is essential. An accountant has a legal liability towards the client. There are certain things you can and cannot do. 

Every accountant who comes into the firm must have a college degree. Ms. S. has many bosses. Each time she goes to a different client, she is on a different auditing team. Each new boss evaluates her work in the field. She chose to be an accountant, because she reached a decision point in college where she asked herself, “Do I need a French degree? Do I need a degree in painting? Shouldn’t I develop something practical with my degree?” If she had not become an accountant, she would have looked for a job with languages. Ms. S. noted she would probably still be looking for a job. (Note: 1979 was not the global era.) She has seen many people with anthropology degrees have a hard time finding a job. She said 15,000 people graduate with anthropology degrees and there are 15 job openings.

In business school, there are a few choices of what job you can go Into: 

-Marketing – this is basically salesmanship, but it is not sales work. An example, would be IBM. At IBM, you sell computer systems. They send you through training courses to learn everything about computers. You go through training for 1½ years. You have to be extremely confident, know your stuff, and have a quick memory.

-Retail Sales – sales management 

-Actuarial – I was very interested in this. Their function is very mathematical. They analyze life insurance tables. These tables estimate how long people live on the average and what kinds of risks they are running with different factors in their lives. An example of these factors would be old age and sickness. They also deal with pension plans. Actuarial work is very challenging. 

I asked her to explain the promotion system at Cooper and Lybrand. Promotions occur in January and July. Personnel looks at employee evaluation forms that various supervisors and managers filled out. These people observe your attitude, leadership, maturity, how well you get along with other people, how well you work on teams, technical competence, and assertiveness. Ms. S. explained to me that with 4 or 5 years of experience at Coopers and Lybrand, you were eligible to be a supervisor. 

After the supervisor level comes manager. You need more talents to become a manager. Some people are not born leaders. If you do not attain manager in three tries, that is a subtle clue to look for another firm. Personnel does executive searches to help people find other jobs.

Becoming a partner is an entirely different ballgame. The partners do not have to promote anyone to partner, if they do not want to. A special kind of politics comes into play. If a manager is up for partner twice but does not make it, they should look for another job. 

Night school is discouraged, because employees are expected to work overtime. Courses are offered in the office and self-study materials are available to employees, so that they can keep up with the times. They are expected to read the Wall Street Journal and other magazines dealing with business. Ms. S. said, “Studying for the annual Certified Public Accountant Exam will occupy your time.

Many of the client systems are computerized, so it is wise to know at least one computer language. A group of computer specialists always accompanies the audit team, but if you do not understand how a computer system works, you cannot tell the computer team what results you need. (Note: I first used a desktop Apple computer in my senior year of college.) 

Coopers and Lybrand takes up 3½ floors of the Renaissance Center. I got to go on an office tour. I thoroughly enjoyed learning about accounting. Later in life, I worked for two major accounting firms (EY and Deloitte) in Chicago and Paris using math in my writing. 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France


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Newspaper Columnist Interview by Ruth Paget

Newspaper Columnist Interview by Ruth Paget 

When I started high school, I attended a private Friends School in Detroit (Michigan) to learn about my Quaker ancestors from New Jersey and Pennsylvania. 

The Friends School taught standard high school subjects as well as electives such as non-violence workshop where we read the works of Gandhi and Martin Luther King, non-violent games that promoted happiness for all such as caring for an egg for a week, meditation and journaling for conflict resolution, and the World of Work for vocational training. 

For World of Work, we began our studies by reading Working by Chicago writer Studs Terkel, who interviewed people from all sorts of jobs about job satisfaction and the skills needed to perform the job. 

We all took the Myers-Briggs Interest Inventory, which tests on which kinds of jobs you are suited for based on your interests and skills. 

I wanted to be a writer, but my quantitative skills came out first and writing second. The best job for me was accountant. I was mortified! 

However, my Quaker teacher told me, “Just use math when you write.” 

After the Myers-Briggs Interest Inventory, I set up informational interviews to find out about the world for work for jobs I would like and those that used a lot of math. I found some of my interview write-ups recently and think much is still relevant today. I have left the interviews in most of my ninth-grade English. One of my first interviews was with Detroit Free Press columnist JF: 

JF likes his job. He says it is fun to be making a living doing something you like. He finds ideas for his columns everywhere. His is constantly taking notes and reads a lot. JF works in the city room at the Detroit Free Press. 

He spends 25 hours a week typing his column. JF said he is actually working all the time. When he thinks of an idea while he is sleeping, he gets up and immediately writes it down. 

Before coming to the Free Press, he worked on a weekly newspaper – the Lapeer County Press. He worked there for 25 years. The last 15 years, he was the editor. 

JF was an advertising salesman when he got out of college. He wrote a column for the paper entitled “My Customers.” Gradually, it became a general interest column.  Eventually, he became a reporter and, then, editor. JF still continued to write his column while he was editor. Other papers caught on to his column. He was at one time in all the weeklies in Michigan. 

Through the years, the Free Press made him several offers while he was editor. Finally, he decided it was time to make the change and went to work at the Free Press. I was interested in what an editor does, so I asked more about this subject. An editor works 50 to 60 hours a week. It is a time consuming and boring job. The editor takes care of the day-by-day business of running a newspaper. (I thought he was being sarcastic.) 

The Lapeer County Press had 10 people working at it. You only needed the editor to run the newspaper. A newspaper the size of the Free Press has many assistant editors and department editors. It is more fragmented. 

JF wanted to write since high school. There was no doubt in his mind about what he was going to do. He majored in journalism at Michigan State University. He learned more on the job than he did at school. 

JF says he hits dry spells when he just cannot write. It is all a matter of being a professional. You just write your column. It just takes longer. He turns his columns in early to avoid deadline pressure. 

If JF were not a columnist, he would be in some field of writing. If writing were ruled out, he would probably be a postman. In his free time, JF and his wife go to restaurants, nightclubs, movies, and live theater. 

Note: I was one of JF’s regular column readers. He was one of Detroit’s men-about-town. I learned from him how important it is to create a town for yourself to support your life needs and lifestyle in a large city like Detroit. 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France


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Friday, June 16, 2023

Cool Indiana Cuisine by Ruth Paget

Cool Indiana Cuisine by Ruth Paget 

I thought Indiana was infinitely cool as a kid, because I spent long weekend vacations there with my mom, who was doing union organizing and attending International Typographical Union Midwest Conference meetings in places like Gary and Indianapolis. (The International Typographical Union is now part of the Communications Workers Union of America.) 

The ladies auxiliary of the Union babysat me, stuffed envelopes, and wrote letters to the editor poolside while I swam for hours under Indiana’s blazing hot sun that is good for crops and kids, who need Vitamin D. 

Après nage, I looked forward to eating Indiana’s wholesome farm food that still reflects German, Polish, and Italian immigrant heritage. My favorite main dishes were German sweet and sour pot roast seasoned with cranberry jelly and pork loin with cream sauce. Both were served with buttered egg noodles. 

These dishes were different from my mom’s English roast beef and vegetables. They made me feel that Indiana was rather exotic compared to Detroit as we zoomed past signs warning drivers to share the road with horse-drawn Amish buggies. 

These Indiana memories came back to me as I read Best of the Best from Indiana Cookbooks edited by Gwen McKee and Barbara Mosely. 

For decades Indiana was famous for Notre Dame University’s football team coached by Knute Rockne. I thought the following appetizers were just the thing for football game munchies as I read the cookbook:

-beer cheese for spreading on crackers or toast made with cheese, horseradish, hot sauce, and mayonnaise 

-Gouda Wellington – warm croissant wedges made with Gouda cheese and apricot preserves 

-Reuben snacks – baked snack balls made with breadcrumbs, Swiss cheese, shredded corned beef, drained sauerkraut, and melted butter 

-Chocolate chip cheese ball – made with cream cheese, vanilla, cinnamon, powdered sugar, mini-chocolate chips, and chopped pecans 

Two other coffee and football treats include: 

-Mrs. Rockne’s Swedish coffee cake topped with brown sugar, coconut, and melted butter 

-Little applesauce muffins 

Other dishes in Best of the Best from Indiana Cookbooks are surprisingly simple to cook such as: 

-baked and stuffed green peppers that are stuffed with ground beef, tomatoes, and bread crumbs 

-seafood fettucine with a sauce made with whipped heavy cream 

-pork tenderloin with scallion and mustard sauce 

Finally, desserts are always good and plentiful when dealing with people of German descent. Some of my favorites in this cookbook include: 

-mocha and cherry cake 

-lemon cheese bars -pecan bars 

-sesame seed tea cake 

-springerles - anise-flavored cookies 

-pfeffernusse - peppernut cookies seasoned with cloves, allspice, cinnamon, white pepper, and almonds 

-gingersnaps 

Tasty recipes abound in the pages of Best of the Best from Indiana Cookbooks edited by Gwen McKee and Barbara Moseley, making it a good purchase for chefs.

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France


Click for Ruth Paget's Books