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THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE November 7, 1986 Page 31
91eichels
by Norma Barach
Stuffed Cabbage
2 lb. head of cabbage, with
large outside leaves
Sauce
3 8-oz. cans tomato sauce
4 tbsp. brown sugar
4 tbsp. lemon juice
2 tbsp. water
1/4 lb. dried prunes
Filling
1-3/4 lb. ground beef
1 small onion, grated
1 egg
Remove and discard core of
cabbage. Carefully peel off whole
cabbage leaves and cut away any
tough ribs from the base of the
leaf. (You should have about 20
usable leaves for stuffing.) Shred
remainder of the cabbage and
put in the bottom of the pot.
Combine sauce ingredients in
a large dutch oven and bring to a
boil, stirring. Simmer for 10
minutes.
M ix filling ingredients together.
To stuff cabbage leaves, put about
one teaspoon of filling about one
inch from edge of the leaf nearest
the core. Fold in the sides and
roll up the leaf, enclosing all the
filling.
Add shredded cabbage to the
simmering sauce and then the
stuffed cabbage leaves, seam side
down. Cover pot. Simmer on a
low flame for about 1-1/2 hours.
Baste occasionally and add a bit
of water to the sauce if it gets too
thick.
The cabbage rolls are best pre
pared a day ahead, with fat re
moved and then reheated in the
sauce. They also can be frozen in
the sauce and then reheated in a
pot on top of the stove or in the
microwa\e oven in a covered
pan. For a smaller family, serve
half of the rolls and freeze half.
Serves eight-10 as a main dish.
Dairy Lasagna
8 oz. lasagna noodles
1 16 oz. can tomato sauce
1 tbsp. vegetable oil
2 tbsp. water
2 cups cottage cheese
1/2 lb. muenster cheese, grated
1/2 tsp. oregano
Cook noodles according to
package directions. Mix tomato
sauce with oil and water. Grease
a 9x13-inch pan. Layer noodles,
cottage cheese, tomato sauce,
grated cheese and oregano, and
repeat until all ingredients are
used up. Bake at 375 degrees for
25 minutes. Serves five to six.
Nov. 12, 1976
The National Council of Jew
ish Women will hold its Nov. 15
meeting in the Garden Room of
Sears Buckhead. A box lunch
will be provided from Cloudt’s
Restaurant for $2.85. The pro
gram is entitled “A Woman’s
Role is the Role She Chooses”
and will feature social worker
Paul Freeman and psychologist
Dr. Carol Selvey.
* * *
Advertisement: Omni Interna
tional Atlanta “offers retail shop
ping, sports, leisure, dining, ex
hibitions, art, cinemas, entertain
ment, an Olympic size ice rink, a
high rise “World of Fantasy Ex
perience,” office space and a
spectacular hotel, all under one
roof.”
Harry Popkin
Harry G. Popkin of Atlanta
has been appointed director of
District Five, B’nai B’rith Youth
Organization. Mr. Popkin has
returned to Jewish community
work after having served as co
founder and co-director of Blue
Star Camps in Hendersonville,
N.C. with his brother, Herman
Popkin.
The Southern Israelite
Nov. 10, 1961
The Adult Activities Depart
ment of the AJCC places “Amer
ican News Media on Trial” on
Nov. 20. This inquiry into the
role of the media in forming pub
lic opinion will be presented as a
mock trial. Norman Shavin, Sun
day editor, Atlanta Journal-Con-
stitution, will serve as judge.
Witnesses for the defense will
include: Elmo Ellis, program di
rector, WSB Radio; Dale Clark,
director of public affairs,
WAGA-TV; Chiles Coleman, At
lanta Bureau Chief, UPI; Harold
Davis, City Editor and former
Washington correspondent for
the Atlanta Journal; and Ray
Moore, news director, WSB-TV.
Special testimony will include a
direct report from Washington
on President Kennedy and his
use of the press.
Miss Patricia F. Pink, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry D.
Pink of Atlanta, has completed
the6!/2-week course of training at
American Airlines Stewardess
College at Fort Worth, Texas.
She has been assigned to flight
duty out of Buffalo, N.Y. Miss
J»ink is a 1959 graduate of Druid
Hills High School, and attended
Georgia State College. She has
red hair and green eyes, is 5 ft., 3
in. and weighs 100 pounds.
* * *
Beth Jacob Men’s Club will
sponsor a square dance Sunday
Nov. 12 in the new synagogue
Social Hall. There will be an
expert caller and eight trained
instructors.
Award-winning Photography Serving
Atlanta’s Jewish Community Since 1947
1230 Monroe Dr., N.E.
(corner Amsterdam)
876-3716
r
Congregation Or VeShalom
Sisterhood will hold its annual
Bazaar on Sunday, Nov. 21.1 he
Bazaar will feature such Sephar
dic foods as baklava, travados
and roska, burmellos, boyos and
burekas. Admission is 50 cents
and the public is invited.
The Atlanta delegation to the
UJA “This Year in Jerusalem”
Conference has just returned from
Israel. The delegates report on
the four-mile march made by
over 3,000 enthusiastic Ameri
cans down Ben Yehuda Street to
the Western Wall. Two separate
Missions from Atlanta partici
pated in the historic conference—a
Young Leadership group, led by
Gary Alter, Atlanta Jewish Wel
fare Federation campaign direc
tor, and the Atlanta Community
Mission, led by M.C. Gettinger,
executive director of the Atlanta
Jewish Welfare Federation.
Compiled by Carolyn Gold
Fallout Shelters will be the
program topic at the November
meeting of the Hebrew Institute
PTA. Two films, “The Dual Pur
pose Shelter” and “Facts about
Fallout” will be shown, followed
by a question and answer period.
* * *
JERUSALEM—The verdict on
Gestapo Colonel Adolf Eichmann
for crimes against the Jewish
people and crimes against hu
manity is expected to be handed
down Dec. 15. Israel’s three-man
court ended the four-month trial
of Eichmann Aug. 14, and the
judges are reported to be com
pleting their deliberations. The
Hebrew reading of the verdict is
expected to take six days.
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Call 255-9105
for names of Board Certified
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