Keep in warm place.
BAKING POWDER BISCUIT. MRS. H. T. VAN FLEET.
To one pint of flour, add two teaspoonfuls of baking powder; sift
together; add one heaping tablespoon of butter, and a pinch of salt.
Use enough sweet milk to make a very soft mixture. Work the butter
through the milk in the center of flour. Do not roll out on board, as
the mixture is too soft, but make out by hand as you would light
rolls. Avoid kneading. Bake in quick oven.
DELICIOUS TEA ROLLS. MRS. U. F. SEFFNER.
Two tablespoonfuls butter, two tablespoonfuls sugar, two eggs. Beat
the three articles all together; add a little salt, one cup sweet
milk, two cups flour, three teaspoonfuls baking powder. Grease a
large dripping pan with butter. Drop a tablespoonful in each place.
Bake twenty minutes.
GOOD MUFFINS (CHEAP AND EASY). MRS. E. FAIRFIELD.
One egg, one cup milk, one tablespoon sugar, one tablespoon butter,
two teacups flour, three teaspoons baking powder, one teaspoon salt.
Mix yolk of egg, butter, and sugar; add then the flour, baking powder,
and salt, sifted together; then white of egg, beaten well. Bake ten
minutes in quick oven. Much of the success in baking depends upon
having the iron muffin ring well heated on the top of stove before
putting the batter in them.
MUFFINS. MRS. W. C. BUTCHER.
Three eggs beaten separately, one-half cup of sugar, two-thirds cup of
butter, one pint of sweet milk, two heaping teaspoons of baking
powder; add flour to make it as thick as cake batter.
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