Recipe from the ’60s is reprinted for reader


Dear Heloise: I remember a delicious coleslaw recipe in your column a few months back, and I was wondering if you could please reprint it for me? Ter, Gloucester, Mass.

This recipe goes way back to the 1960s, when my mother published it in Hawaii, and I can remember her making it all the time.

HELOISE’S COLESLAW

1 head of cabbage (about 2 pounds), shredded

1/4 cup vegetable oil

2 tablespoons vinegar

1/2 teaspoon prepared mustard

1/4 teaspoon celery salt

2 tablespoons mayonnaise

Salt and pepper to taste

Dash of paprika

Mix oil with vinegar in a bowl. Add prepared mustard, celery salt, mayonnaise, salt, pepper and paprika. Mix well. Pour mixture over shredded cabbage, toss and refrigerate. For the best taste, make this a day ahead so the flavors have a chance to blend. You can find this recipe, other tasty recipes and an alphabetized list of vinegar uses for cooking and cleaning in my six-page Fantabulous Vinegar pamphlet, which you can have by sending $4 and a long, self-addressed, stamped (58 cents) envelope to: Heloise/Vinegar, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001. FYI: If you’re a cooked-cabbage fan but don’t like the smell left behind from boiling it, add some vinegar to the cooking water. That should help with the odor. Heloise

Dear Heloise: I would like to expand on the idea of the computerized grocery list I saw in your column. I sort my list in the order of the items on the store aisles. That makes it so much easier when strolling through the store.

In addition, I use this to comparison-shop. I have a column for each of the four major stores that carry those items. I show the price for each item, for each store, then shop at the lowest-priced store. Larry Laske, San Diego

Dear Readers: It’s chilly, and what better way is there to warm up than with a nice, hot bowl of soup? Here are a few hints for making the best soup in town:

U Add grated cheeses, chopped hard-boiled egg, or even lemon slices to thick soups for extra flavor.

U To jazz up cream soups, add a dollop of sour cream, yogurt or chopped herbs.

U For clear soups, add dumplings, won tons, rice or noodles left over from Chinese takeout to give the soup a little more substance.

U If you’d rather leave the meat out of a soup recipe, try adding beans, lentils or peas. You’ll cut costs, but not nutrients.

U If your soup is too hot, toss in some frozen corn or peas.

FYI: Pour leftover soup into ice-cube trays, cover and freeze. When you need a quick cup of soup, just thaw a few cubes and heat. Heloise

XSend a money-saving or timesaving hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795000, San Antonio, TX 78279-5000, or you can fax it to (210) HELOISE or e-mail it to Heloise@Heloise.com.

King Features Syndicate