Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Father Christmas




One of the nicest traditions enmeshed in the Christmas story is the legend of St. Nicholas, who was a real person, a bishop of the church in medieval times. He gave food and cloaks and toys to the poor, visiting them anonymously, and secretly leaving his presents at their doors. From this personage, we have Father Christmas, aka Santa Claus. I began collecting Father Christmas figures about 25 years ago, and over the years, friends and family have gifted me with many of my favorites. I have even found some wonders at garage sales and flea markets. So in addition to the Christmas trees scattered around the house, we have Father Christmases, reminding us of the real meaning of Christmas, sharing in the spirit of giving through the celebration of the Christ Child's birthday!

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Thanksgiving--Giving thanks!





Honestly I do not know where November went. It just flew by in a big hurry, just so December could make its appearance. Been sewing and sewing most of the month, in between putting up Christmas decorations inside and out, baking, making some treats like Puppy Chow and White Trash, giving treats away, having family in for Thanksgiving turkey, taking a little Elderberry trip to Branson for Christmas lights, shows and a little shopping. For all of these things I give great thanks . And especially am I grateful for our beloved country, and the people who serve it day by day, in the front lines all over the world, and in our hospitals, on our streets and highways, on our borders, in uniforms of military or medical or police, we are grateful for their protection and help.

Our Elderberries have another blanket project going on, supplying fleece blankets to the children and youth of Rockaway Beach ministry, so this was also a good time to be grateful, being able to work on a "bunch" of blankets for Christmas. Then had to sew up some American Girl doll clothes, new branching out here, for some little girls with their new dolls, one my Grand grand-niece, the other a Grand good friend. Now I am grateful the projects are done, and being shipped out.

Now Christmas is coming, the geese are getting fat (we see them flying over our house every day so we know!), please to put a penny in the old man's hat! And by the way, please don't forget the homeless this Christmas!! God bless us every one, as Tiny Tim says.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Apple Fest



Now that we have a lot of apples around, it is time to be productive. So we got into the pie-making mode, and froze and shared our apple pies, pies with top crusts and pies with Dutch crispy tops. Then there was that cocoa apple cake my daughter's mom-in-law supplied the recipe for--I had baked one of those years ago, and lost the recipe. So she sent it to me, and voila--a really yummy cake to make! Best of all, it combines two of my favorite ingredients, chocolate and apples.

Cocoa Apple Cake

Cream together:
3 eggs
2 cups sugar
1/2 pound butter, softened
1/2 cup water

Sift together:
2 and 1/2 cups flour
2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon allspice

Add dry ingredients to creamed mixture.

Fold in:
2 cups chopped apples
1 cup chopped nuts (I use pecans)
1/2 cup chocolate chips (use the good ones)
1 tablespoon vanilla

Mix well, and put into a greased and floured bundt pan.
Bake at 325 degrees for 60-70 minutes until testing done.
Let rest on rack to cool for 10 minutes, invert onto a serving plate and you can dust it with powdered sugar.

Fall Quilt Project

Now that it's done and has been received by
darling daughter, I can post pictures to
share. Violet kitty gave her special
stamp of approval to the quilt before
we shipped it out. Have to confess,
the quilt backing was especially difficult
for me to sew, only because I am not
a spider fan, and of course the backing
has many many spiders and webs all over it.
So this quilt is wishing you a Happy Halloween!

Fall

Fall

Fall

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Apple Time!




Drove out along the Missouri River up to Waverly today, looking at the turning leaves, the hawks and buzzards drifting along on the air currents in the clear blue sky, watching the farmers harvest their beans, and enjoying the fragrance of fall. Rasa's Orchard was a busy place, and full of people like us, wanting to "pick their apples"-- already packed in bags. Found some Granny Smith, Jonathan (our favorite all-time good for everything apple), and Fuji. And a bag of sweet potatoes, all ready for me to cook for sweet potato muffins, biscuits and hopefully sweet potato pie for Thanksgiving dinner, if they last that long! Now I just need that kitchen elf to help things along as I make the pies!

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Welcome Fall!


Nights are getting shorter and cooler. Days, well, it seems like summer is trying to stick with us, or at least trick us into thinking she is. That's ok, the cooler nights make up for it, and seeing the butterflies still coming to all the flowers still in bloom, makes it all right for now.

Time to get out to the orchards and pick up our apples. Used to be, we picked them ourselves. Now we just buy them in the baskets, and enjoy them anyway. This was a great peach year, and I am sure this is an equally great apple year. Driving out to the countryside along the Missouri River for the apples gives us a change to enjoy the leaves turning on the trees.

Hummingbirds have already left us for the south. Wild turkeys are gobbling in the woods, discussing where to hide for Thanksgiving. And soon the snows will fly!

Monday, September 13, 2010

Farewell to Summer!





It's been a long hot summer! And Fall has finally arrived, with cooler nights and shorter days. Garden produce is still plentiful, and having worked up spiced peaches, peaches for the freezer, sweet and sour pickled okra, okra for the freezer, and best of all, okra for frying, I can honestly say that I am looking forward to the rotation to apples. Fresh green beans, homegrown potatoes freshly dug, butternut squash and zucchini were gifted to us this summer too, so even though we didn't plant a garden, we enjoyed the bounty.

Another sign of Autumn is the blooming of our Summer/Autumn Clematis. Every year it gets more and more abundant, this time actually taking over the deck floor. Could it be because I didn't take the time to prune it off as it expanded its horizon? Monarch butterflies are now migrating, so they pause in our backyard to sip some hummingbird food. And our recent summer visitor, Mr. Lucky Kitty, lies down on the deck to enjoy the late afternoon warmth on his tummy, after a fresh refill of kibble.

Yes, Fall has definitely arrived!

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Book pages

Curling up with a good book and a huge glass of ice water, under a ceiling fan, seems like one way to beat the heat here. Watering the flower garden in the morning before the sun hits all is certainly the only way to navigate around outside right now. And being thankful that we have air conditioning, and cold clean water is also the way to handle this heat. Being thankful, yes that is a big way to handle life's discomforts. Which brings me to the book I want to suggest to readers...

29 Gifts: how a month of giving can change your life by Cami Walker

This is a really thought-provoking book, written by a young woman with MS, who uses a suggestion from her spiritual teacher to help her to cope with her illness and the limitations it imposes upon her life. She actually becomes much stronger by practicing this idea every day, and this little book becomes much more, a gift to all readers. She has spun off a website from her blogging, which purposes to "revive the giving spirit in the world", www.29Gifts.org. Check it out for yourself and try some giving too!

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Critter beading



Maybe it's because it is such critter-filled summer, what with all the happy butterflies, bees, dragonflies, squirrels, birds, stray cats, etc. filling our back acres, but that's what happened to inspire my latest beading projects. Found a gorgeous butterfly focal that looked art-deco-ish, so added some onyx beads to it, and made--"Art Deco Wings" for a special sister-in-law. Then saw a picture in firemountaingems.com of a creation made with glass spun squirrels and birds, so adapted that to put together my own version of "They Live in Trees", and gave that to darling daughter while we vacationed in Maine. She loves squirrels. To me, they are cute, but annoying pests with our bird feeders--I think the blown glass squirrels are much easier to handle!

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Summer harvest





This summer we didn't plant a veggie garden, unless you can count the big pot of basil and rosemary, and the upside-down hanging cherry tomato plant, both on the patio and doing well. So we depend on the kindness of friends, and they really came through for us this past few weeks. BAGS of cucumbers appeared in our car, along with zucchini. Was able to obtain organic green peppers, so went to work on Monday starting the chopping chopping of green veggies. Thank heaven for food processors, otherwise I wouldn't have been able to do it. In between the relish chopping, I threw in zucchini so I would have plenty to make more of my zucchini chocolate cake later. Dug out my grandma's crock, to start the 24 hour pickling process. Then had to drain everything for a few hours in the sink, then cooked it for awhile, then loaded up the pressure canner about 4 times, and voila! Sweet pickle relish appeared magically on my kitchen counter! Now I have to distribute the jars to people, especially those who shared their wonderful harvest this summer.

If you have extra cucumbers, here is the Sweet Pickle Relish recipe for you to try out:
For a single batch you need---
10 cups chopped cucumbers
1 and 1/2 cups chopped onions
1/2 cup chopped green peppers (I usually add a bit more to ours)
Put the above ingredients into a large crock.
Pour in 6 cups water and 1/4 cup pickling salt.
Put a plate on top, get a clean brick and put it inside a 2 gallon ziploc bag (I use two bags for good measure). The brick is to weigh down the plate, and make sure the chopped veggies stay in the pickling brine.
Soak this overnight.
Drain for 2 hours, and rinse off well.

Now prepare your large cooking pot (enamel or stainless steel)--
you need 5 cups sugar, 2 cups white vinegar, 2 tablespoons celery seed, 2 teaspoons mustard seed, and 1 teaspoon turmeric. Bring this to a boil, add the cucumber mix. Bring it back to a boil, cook for about 15 minutes.
Meantime you should have your pint and/or quart jars prepared. I throw them in the dishwasher about an hour before I start the draining process of my veggies. Place your rings and seals in a pot of water and start the boiling of that while you are cooking the relish. At this point I use a pressure canner, but a cold pack canner would work too. I pack the jars with the relish, being careful to wipe the rims of the jars, seal them and load into the pressure canner. Turn it on to high on your stove, and bring to a boil, letting steam come out of the stopcock point for about a minute or two. You do not need to put the jiggly thing on the point. After it has steamed for a minute, you turn off the heat. Let it cool down, and remove when it is safe enough to open the canner. If I were cold pack canning, I would bring the whole pot up to a boil for a few minutes and then turn off the heat just as I do my pressure canner. Carefully remove your jars and let cool on a board on the counter. Check your seals to make sure they are sealed, and if any have not sealed, you need to refrigerate those when they cool down. The rest you can store in your pantry now, and don't forget to label and date the jar lids.

I had some leftover relish, from the bottom of the pot, so today I got to try it in a quickie egg salad--chop up one hard boiled egg, add a dollop of mayonnaise or Miracle Whip, and another dollop of the sweet pickle relish. Tastes great as a quick lunch bite!

Monday, July 19, 2010

Are we there yet?





Been a long time coming, back since last September in fact, but we think we are getting closer to the end of this kitchen renovation thing. Got the new vinyl installed last week, and it really makes a difference in lighting--now I can actually see Violet (our black kitty) on the new floor at night in the dark! Hubby has to reinstall the trash compactor yet, and has to remove part of a trim board underneath the granite countertop to make it fit back in its little cubbyhole. Nothing comes easily with renovations, we have noticed over the years. So this is just something else to get through. Then I have to finish the repainting, but don't dare even think about it in the kind of weather we have been having lately, with heat indexes in triple digits, and the kind of humidity that gives us that "jungle feeling". Can't paint until the windows can be open once more to the outside air. Meantime we are enjoying the kitchen now, and our new "throne" in the powder room--so yes, I guess we are almost there!

Monday, July 12, 2010

Summer Vacation to Maine















We kicked off the month of July with a visit to Maine, where we had never been before, and fell in love with the beauty of the state. Spent the week in Acadia National Park, got out on the Sound for a boat ride, explored the shore, picking up beautiful pink granite rocks, saw all kinds of beautiful flowers (and all kinds of 8 foot tall fencing to keep the moose and deer away from those flowers), yes, and saw deer. No moose though, which was fortunate. I understand they are like "tanks with fur", according to a friend of mine. Visited LL Bean in Ellsworth, and of course Bar Harbor. Went to church in Bar Harbor, and back another day for a shopping expedition. Best of all, dined on fresh caught seafood every day and loved it! Hubby isn't a big fan of fish, so our hosts made sure he had plenty of meat to live on while we enjoyed our fish. Lobster fresh caught is absolutely wonderful, and of course the cooking experience is part of the fun of it. I got great lessons from our hosts on cooking and disassembling it to eat it afterward, messy fun! So hope you enjoy a little taste of Maine here.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Almost July







Well, the lilies are STILL blooming, and more are opening up every day. Most of these came from starts we got at Powell Gardens, during their Blooms and Booms Festival. But some came from Mom, and we treasure every one. She shared some of her pink hydrangea flowers with us on our trip down south, so I wanted to include a picture of her pretty-in-pink flowers here. Out here in the country, they call daylilies "ditch lilies", those "common" orange daylilies brightening all the highways and byways during hot summer days and nights, while the hybrids glorify our gardens--good relatives to have around.

The weather has changed, we actually have a drier week this week, but I expect more rain, only because it seems to be that way this summer. Oh well, good gardening what with everything in bloom. Our roses are back into their second bloom cycle now too. And the black raspberries should be turning black now down here in our woodsy patch. And our blackberries up in the field patch should be ripening after July 4th. Looking forward to that!

The red flowers are all over a cactus plant I got from Mom years ago, from her friend who used to have a hobby greenhouse. I put it outside last year in desperation, and it bloomed a few flowers. This year, it is really celebrating the 4th with fire cracker red blooms, all over the plant!
Happy Fourth of July!

Monday, June 14, 2010

Summer lilies






We are in the middle of monsoon season here in MO. Usually our summers are dry and we pray hard for rain. Last week the ground was cracking. This week it is a sponge. But the flowers really seem to love it. All my lilies are in bloom, and going crazy. Baby grass we planted in the fall looks like an emerald carpet. So I guess all that rain is doing some good. Hope you enjoy our June blooms!