COOKING N•1••• ■■ THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS OPEN 24 HOURS 4395 Orchard Lake Rd. Crosswinds Mall 626-0022 From Mon. 7 a.m. to Sat. at 12 Mid. Sunday 7 a.m:9 p.m. Prices Good Only At Our Orchard Lk. Rd. Store WE STILL HONOR DOUBLE COUPONS UP TO 50° I DAIRY DEPT I MEAT DEPT SINAI KOSHER LOW SALT FRANKS or KNOCKWURST 12 Oz. $ Pkg. I MANISCHEWITZ BORSCHT COTTAGE CHEESE ■ 2 .5 9 I GROCERY DEPT. I BREAKSTON E LOW FAT 16 oz. 1 Carton [ 39 Regular or Low Cal As You Sow, So Shall You Eat Hearty! .19 32 oz. Jar I GROCERY DEPT. I I DAIRY DEPT. RUTH SAMUELS I Special to The Jewish News SEASON MA COHEN TUNA FISH HERRING Cream or Wine Oil or Water 6% oz. $1 II Can 29 25 oz. $ Jar 3 . 99 ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. We Accept I SEE STORE FOR DETAILS. p VISA' 1 And , Prices & Items In This Ad Effective Fri., May 4 Thru May 10, 1990 }Hulk Food We Carry Motor City Muffins 'Warehouse ORCHARD 12 PLAZA 27885 ORCHARD LAKE RD. AT 12 MILE Mon.-Sat. 9-9 Sun. 12-5 We honor all other competitor coupons 553-2165 EDA C7 GO LIGHTLY Dock by Popular Demand CANDIES DIET CANFIELD ALL NATURAL POP Sugarless or Low Sugar 10 Calories No Salt in Edo Candy Reg. 4 Flavors — 1 Calorie Reg. $2.99 NOW 1 99 2.991b SPCCI ALS NOW $ 2.59 Plus deposit 6 Pack ( \ GET READY FOR SUMMER ANN RASKAS Foncy DIETCOOKIES 28 Calories an Ounce b I 3 . 9 59 NOW $ 2.99 lb. 50v" L i n9 NOW $1.00 OFF On Cadillac Coffee ',\ of the Month ______, i 96 FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1990 High Fiber Diet Meal Reg. $1.39 per cookie 12 Calories ELLIE'S WEIGH MUFFINS Per Pound PHOENIX COOKIE CANDY $2.79 lb. 10 % OFF Znr c a a s s e e Large Selection of Large Selection of • Sugarfree Candies Weight Watcher and • Peanuts • Raisins Estee Products • Bridge Mix • Malt Balls luny; D. P T Expires 5/11/90 ALL FRUIT rk , tS` 4 '. ■ D BASE BUY 2 GET I FREE! • Non Dairy • No Cholesterol • Kosher • No Fat • Low Sodium • 9 Calories per ounce! ardon our paraphrase of Samuel Butler's 17th century quote, but the old adage is still ac- curate. Gardening success starts long before you reap the harvest. It begins with books, charts, and seed cata- logs. Knowing what and when to plant and how to care for it can lead not only to greater harvests but to tastier and healthier herbs and vegetables. Gardening and culinary skills go together like children and dirt. A smudge of dirt under the fingernails or on your nose resembles a brownie baking day in the kitchen. Children working side by side with adults find the process of seed germina- tion to edible plants a magical phenomenon. If a child's going to love his garden, give him his own sep- arate area. A garden offers a child a multitude of learning experiences and teaches far more than basic biology; sat- isfaction and disappointment, patience and ecology and, most importantly, the discovery that vegetables don't grow in the super- market. In Detroit, May 15-30 is the average date of last frost; Sept. 20-Oct. 5 the average date of first frost — approx- imately 120 days in the grow- ing season. (Dates depend on whether residence is in the central suburban core or outlying areas.) Vegetables that give quick results: leaf lettuce and radishes (30 to 40 Ruth Samuels is a cooking instructor and food columnist. She is the resident adutit cooking instructor and creator of a cooking program for pre- school children at the Willow Grove Mall in Pennsylvania. Her book, Little Hands, Big Hands In The Kitchen, will be published soon. days), peas and carrots (50 to 80 days), and corn (55 to 90 days). Avoid cauliflower which is difficult to grow. "Keep it manageable," said Greg Patchan, horticultural agent, Michigan State University extension service, Oakland County office. Those interested in gardening guides can call the office at 858-0880 and request the order blank. Start your indoor planting date six to eight weeks ahead of your outdoor planting date. Use anything from an egg carton to peat pots filled with a seed-starter medium. Soak with water, then plant seeds to the depth instructed on package. Cover with plastic wrap lightly. This will keep them moist and allow light — the two important require- ments. Label each pot, water regularly and before you know it, little seedlings will appear. Plant seedlings out- side, giving them 8 to 12 hours of sun, good soil and water. Let's look ahead to summer when your garden is bursting with vegetables. Wash and, when necessary peel, slice or dice the freshly picked vege- tables. They taste wonderful unadorned. Or try a coating of ginger and lime on the corn, zestful vinaigrette on tomatoes, fresh mint on bar- becued lamb, curry and green chiles on zucchini slices. GINGERY CORN-ON-THE-COB When cooked the same day it's picked, then drizzled with this flavored butter sauce, corn is grand enough to serve as a main course with soup and salad. Or slice corn into two-inch circles and serve with a bamboo stick making a unique hors d'oeuvre. 8 ears fresh corn, husked 6 tablespoons unsalted butter 1 /4 teaspoon white pepper 1 /2 teaspoon freshly Continued on Page 98