See Also: Karloff, Boris(dictionary)
Karloff, Boris(encyclopedia)
Boris I(encyclopedia)
Pasternak, Boris(dictionary)
Boris Cafe(tourism)
Boris (as used in expressions)(encyclopedia)
Godunov, Boris (Fyodorovich)(encyclopedia)
Yeltsin, Boris (Nikolayevich)(encyclopedia)
Spassky, Boris (Vasilyevich)(encyclopedia)
Pasternak, Boris (Leonidovich)(encyclopedia)

Key Lime Tartlets (recipes) and Karloff, Boris (sh)


Key Lime Tartlets (recipes)


Key Lime Tartlets

Yield: Makes 18 tartlets



Ingredients:



1package (18 ounces) refrigerated sugar cookie dough

1/2cup finely chopped pecans

1can (14 ounces) sweetened condensed milk

1/4cup plus 1 tablespoon bottled key lime juice

1teaspoon freshly grated lime peel

Whipped cream, additional freshly grated lime peel and lime wedge candies









Preparation:





1.Preheat oven to 350°F. Lightly grease 18 standard (2-1/2-inch) muffin pan cups or line with paper or foil Baking cups. Let dough stand at room temperature about 15 minutes.2.Combine dough and pecans in large bowl; beat until well blended. Shape dough into 18 balls; press onto bottoms and up sides of prepared muffin cups.3.Bake 12 to 15 minutes or until set. Remove from oven; gently press down center of each cookie cup with back of teaspoon. Cool in pan 10 minutes. Remove cups from pans; cool completely on wire rack.4.Combine sweetened condensed milk, juice and peel in small bowl; stir until well blended. Divide evenly among cookie cups. Garnish with whipped cream, lime peel and lime candies.











Karloff, Boris (sh)




orig. William Henry Pratt

born Nov. 23, 1887, London, Eng.
died Feb. 2, 1969, Midhurst, West Sussex

British-U.S. actor.

He immigrated to Canada from England in 1909 and acted with touring companies before moving to Hollywood, where he played minor roles in films from 1919. His tender, sympathetic performance in Hollywood's first important monster Film, James Whale's Frankenstein (1931), received so much critical praise that he became an overnight sensation. He acted in more than 100 films, specializing in horror pictures such as The Mummy (1932), The Mask of Fu Manchu (1932), Bride of Frankenstein (1935), and Son of Frankenstein (1939), and his name became synonymous with the horror genre. He returned to the stage for highly acclaimed performances on Broadway in Arsenic and Old Lace (1941) and as Captain Hook in Peter Pan (1950). His most famous Television performance was in the animated special How the Grinch Stole Christmas (1966), for which he provided the voices of both the Grinch and the narrator.


Boris Karloff.

AP/Wide World Photos