NRHEG Star Eagle

137 Years Serving the New Richland-Hartland-Ellendale-Geneva Area
Newspaper of Record for NRHEG School District
Newspaper of Record for Waseca County, MN
PO Box 248 • New Richland, MN 56072

507-463-8112
email: steagle@hickorytech.net
Published every Thursday
Yearly Subscription: Waseca, Steele, and Freeborn counties: $52
Minnesota $57 • Out of state $64
Jim Lutgens

Jim Lutgens

Thursday, 28 February 2013 19:27

Medallion found!

The Waseca County Sleigh & Cutter Medallion has finally been found! It was discovered at around 5:30 p.m. Wednesday by brothers Dale and Devin Hoy and Devin's daughter Maddie.

Wednesday, 27 February 2013 20:03

Sleigh & Cutter Medallion remains elusive

The Waseca County Sleigh and Cutter medallion has still not yet been found. Therefore, an additional set of clues is being published. We are reminding readers that the medallion is hidden within the city limits of Waseca on public property. Good luck to all of the loyal medallion searchers!!!

The (hopefully) final clue:


It looks like you still need a clue
Just walk southeast of the pool
You’ll find it at last
In the second clump of grass
Resting in the first dry slough

If unsure just where to go
The mailbox two four oh oh
Makes an angle that’s right
When you line up your sight
With the pool stop north down the row

Monday, 25 February 2013 00:32

To state they go!

Three NRHEG wrestlers advance

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NRHEG High School wrestlers, from left, Wyatt Fitterer, Cordell Peterson and Dillon Kubiatowicz qualified for the state tournament Saturday at Blue Earth Area High School, where final-year head coach Paul Cyr was honored as Section 2A Coach of the Year. The state tournament is Feb. 28-March 2 at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul. (Star Eagle photo by Chris Schlaak)

Friday, 22 February 2013 17:55

News briefs/Notices

Cancer support group to meet February 25

Jackie Pederson, LSW will speak at Mayo Clinic Health System’s Cancer Support Group meeting at 6 p.m. Monday, February 25, in Room 20 on the lower level of the medical center in Albert Lea. The group strives to provide support, hope and friendship to the cancer family: patient, caregivers, family members and all those touched by cancer. For more information, call the Cancer Center at 507-379-2050.


Have Breakfast with a Farmer February 27

You are invited to Breakfast with a Farmer (formerly Food Check Out Day Breakfast). It will be held on Wednesday, February 27 at the Waseca HyVee. It will begin at 6:30 a.m. and last until 9 a.m. The menu will be scrambled eggs, ham, toast, fresh fruit and milk. February is Food Awareness Month. Hope you can attend!

Friday, 22 February 2013 17:49

For Carol, time to call it quits

Longtime owner of Lady Bug Thrift Store retires

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TIME TO RETIRE — After 38 years owning the Lady Bug Thrift Store in New Richland, Carol Shultz has decided it’s time to let someone else take over. (Star Eagle photo by Jessica Lutgens)


By JESSICA LUTGENS

Editorial Assistant

If you live in or around New Richland, you’re most likely familiar with the Lady Bug. Our own local thrift store tucked between Wagner’s and New Richland Drug, this shop has been going strong for 38 years, thanks to the ownership of Carol Shultz, who recently decided it was time to hang up the towel and pass on the store to another owner.

When it all started, Carol and her sister shared ownership of the store.

“We wanted to be able to be home when our kids got home from school,” Carol said when remembering her reason for starting the shop, “and regulate our own hours.”

For the first 18 years, the Lady Bug resided on Highway 13. After Carol’s sister retired, she decided to move to Broadway in New Richland, where she has owned the shop herself for 20 years. Looking back on her years, Carol shared some of her fonder memories.

Friday, 22 February 2013 17:47

Ellendale Days set for June 27-30

Ellendale City Council

By SCOTT GROTH

Contributing Writer

The Ellendale City Council met Thursday February 14, 2013 with all council members present for the meeting. Also in attendance for the meeting were Steve Louks, Clerk, Alice Larson, Millie Paulson, Don Anderson, Joan Lester, Pete Paulson and Al Swain.

Paulson, Municipal Liquor Store Manager, asked the council during his report if a decision has been made about when to hold Ellendale Days. Paulson reiterated to the council that in order to lock in some entertainment for the weekend, a date should be set soon.

Friday, 22 February 2013 17:45

NRHEG girls knock off WEM, BP

Panthers improve to 24-1, winning 22nd in a row

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BUSINESS AS USUAL — NRHEG’s Carlie Wagner (3) continued another outstanding season last week with 28 and 36 points, respectively, in a pair of victories. The junior recently verbally committed to play basketball at the University of Minnesota. (Star Eagle photo by Chris Schlaak)


By DALE KUGATH

Sportswriter

The New Richland-Hartland-Ellendale-Geneva girls’ basketball team knocked off two more Gopher Conference foes last week.

The Panthers, who have won 22 straight games and are ranked second in Class AA, whipped Waterville-Elysian and Blooming Prairie to wrap up their fifth consecutive conference championship.

NRHEG is 14-0 in Gopher play and 24-1 overall. The Panthers are 9-0 on their home floor.

WEM

NEW RICHLAND – NRHEG got in front early and cruised to a 73-44 victory over WEM in New Richland Tuesday. 

Friday, 22 February 2013 17:40

Wrestlers fall in section semifinals

By DALE KUGATH

Sportswriter

Everyone but Jackson County Central seems to be wrestling for second place when it comes to Section 2A wrestling.

The three-time defending state champion Huskies cruised to their fourth straight section title by steamrolling three opponents. 

Jackson, 21-2, blitzed Blooming Prairie, NRHEG and United South Central to capture another section crown. 

NRHEG, the fourth seed in the tournament, beat fifth-seeded Maple River in Thursday’s opening round before falling to top-seeded JCC in Saturday’s semifinal. 

USC, which edged second-seeded Blue Earth in the other semifinal, fell to Jackson 49-19 in the championship match. 

Friday, 22 February 2013 17:39

Upper-division foes top NRHEG boys

By DALE KUGATH

Sportswriter

The New Richland-Hartland-Ellendale-Geneva boys’ basketball team lost to two of the upper division teams in the Gopher Conference last week, making it nine losses in their last 10 games. 

Waterville-Elysian-Morristown and Blooming Prairie both defeated the Panthers for the second time this season.

The Bucs, who are tied with United South Central for the top spot in the conference, rolled to a 23-point victory in Waterville Feb. 12.

Blooming Prairie, currently third in the Gopher, posted a 17-point win in Blooming Prairie Friday. 

NRHEG dropped to 3-10 (7th) in the conference and 5-17 for the year. The Panthers are 2-12 on the road this season. 

WEM

WATERVILLE – Conference co-leader WEM outscored NRHEG 35-23 in the second half to capture a 76-53 victory in Waterville Tuesday. The Bucs won the earlier meeting 59-46.

Friday, 22 February 2013 17:37

Are you noticing the back-to-basics trend?

Am I wrong to think that there seems to be a trend of going back to other times and basics? I hope not.

Have you noticed a change in your grocery bill as of late? It sometimes seems like the price is higher with less food put on the table. Maybe it is time to not only look at what we put on our plate, (as often diagramed) but also what goes in our grocery cart. Maybe it is time to go back to basic cooking.

We should always ask ourselves what we can learn by proper eating to reaffirm what we've learned before. What, when and why we eat is that important. We need to take the time to eat well — no "open the can and throw it on the table".  

In preparing your food yourself, you are forced to make plans ahead of time, so when you go grocery shopping, you carefully consider what you will be cooking: choosing ingredients rather than accepting what the manufacturer prepares for you. Cooking yourself does takes a little longer, but often it is just a matter of minutes. 

Take the time to plan your meals, cook wisely, and enjoy your family and guests. The current emphasis on home cooking goes back to basics. 

While winter always brings out thoughts of body and soul-warming stews, we realize it doesn't have to come from a can. Homemade items  enhance your taste as well as provides good health. 

Fast food may scramble to bring out new things for the "drive through market," but it is just not the same as what you cook at home. It just doesn't satisfy one’s hunger.

The newly expanded local meat market in Geneva is so exceptional because we know where that meat comes from and that it is what it says it is. The cost of meat also makes us give second thought to how much red meat we should really be eating. 

Being over generous is no longer a positive but a motivation to return to "by gone days" when enough was enough. Thin frosting on the cake was not an indication of a stingy cook, but a smart one. 

Taking the time to look into the value and taste of herbs and spices is well worth it, as there is less need of salt, which is more or less a threat to the human body. 

As you all know, I always enjoy my cousin Jim’s enthusiasm for life and his enjoyment of experiencing so many different things. It seems that somewhere over the holidays he acquired a pressure cooker and has been exploring the good things he can accomplish with it and all the great foods he has been able to make.

Cousin Jim has been having the "time of his life" rediscovering the pressure cooker. Whoa, before you think about the old time pressure cooker that "blew up" or left pea soup on the ceiling in Mother’s day, (and they do still make the stovetop models, though they are much improved) remember that most cookers now are electric. 

Jim checked consumer reports, and the Nesco brand was recommended so be bought one at Wal-Mart for $89. The new cookers are fool proof. They can’t build pressure unless the lid is on correctly. They are versatile; they do a good job of browning meats, then cook in the same pan.  

When done cooking, they automatically revert to “warm” setting. They can also be used as a crock pot slow cooker, and they can be set for certain cooking times or pre-programmed to start when you want.

But I am getting ahead of myself. What caused him to look into this new adventure? Using his words, "I discovered (or rediscovered) the pressure cooker while Bud Grant and I were hunting turkeys along the Missouri River. 

When we came back from hunting, it was dark, and we were cold and hungry. Our guide had been a chef in Wisconsin. We asked him what we were having for dinner, and he said, ‘I’ll make some chicken soup along with some fried chicken.’” 

Jim said he was shocked when he brought out a semi-frozen chicken. Jim also said that he thought it would be hours before they would eat, or that he would put it in the microwave and make a rubbery mess. 

Instead, the guide put it in an electric pressure cooker, and turned it to steam to thaw and partially cooked the chicken using chicken broth from doing the same thing a couple of nights earlier. After cooking the chicken for 15 minutes, he took the partially cooked chicken out and quartered it, using the dark meat for soup. 

He added the shredded meat back into the pot, threw in some garlic and some frozen pre-chopped vegetables and some frozen corn and put it back on steam. In the meantime, he fried the white meat. Dinner was served in only half an hour — from semi-frozen! 

Jim said that he has since done chuck roasts that came out fork-tender and shreds the leftovers and uses some of the broth to make Italian Beef. He also said that they have done pork ribs; half an hour of cooking (plus 15 minutes on the grill) instead of hours. Same with a pork shoulder steak, a cheap cut of meat. 

The leftovers were shredded to make southern-style pulled pork sandwiches, and he added pre-cut vegetables and potatoes to make a delicious pork stew in only 12 minutes.

Count up the advantages: time, heat, energy, and total use of ordinary foods with a delicious outcome. The great thing about pressure cookers, other than speed, is that the flavor stays in the pot. Nothing gets cooked out. 

The vegetables are bright and flavorfully fresh and not out of a can. Note that even the steaming liquid becomes delicious broth for the next meal; absolutely nothing is wasted.

In a future column, I would like to explore other food options from the past that are making a comeback in a slightly changed form. I would be interested in what you remember about foods and economizing during an economic recession. Please write me!

Side note: Do they still teach "Home Economics" any more? If they did, people would be aware of the economics of preparing food at home. Home Ec. — boys should be taking it, too!

Some of our Star Eagle readers have commented they like to read about events such as family and school reunions, birthdays and anniversaries, and birth and wedding announcements. In order to read about these important things, we need our faithful readers to pass along the information to us. If you have news, please contact me via e-mail, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.; by postal mail, P. O. Box 192, Geneva, MN 56035 or telephone, 507-256-4405.

Birthdays and Anniversaries:

• Thursday, February 21st: Jeannie Worrell, Andy Butler, Phillip Ingvaldson, Bryan Dirkson, Leanna Peterson, Chris & Kim Jensen, Darrell & Cynthia Farr, Max & Marlene Jensen.

• Friday, February 22nd: Shelia Nelson White, Carlie Thompson, Dalys Waltz, Joan & Marian Mast.

• Saturday, February 23rd: Sharon Gasner Ramaker, Bernie Warnke, Josh Krueger, Markus Allen Misgen, Daniel Suelter, Dale Waltz, Tiffany Mischke, Daniel Walterman, Laura & Jamie Baudoin.

• Sunday, February 24th: Jerry Hemingway, Rick Draper, Nathan Wayne, Roxy Menefee Ray, Sarah Zamora, Nancy Larson, Kathy & Daryl Reed.

• Monday, February 25th: Berniece Farr Mattson, Colton Hagen, Brad Hagen, LuAnn Miller, Sherri Larson Fritz, Steve & Vicky Dobberstein.

• Tuesday, February 26th: Sharon Menefee, Shawn Jensen, Becky Lassahn, Ray Coxworth, Ginger Cornelius, Mary Lou Spurr, Chris Sauke, Mike Glynn, Jeff & Robin Christensen, Joel & Peg Radjenovich.

• Wednesday, February 27th: Steve Pence, Jean Anderson, Garry Nordhorn, Doris Rasmussen, Journey Churchill-Malcolm, Erik Cooper, John Olson, Jayden Dakota Tonkins, Nancy Ingvaldson, Daryl Van Ravenhorst.


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