Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Christmas baking contest

Yesterday was the annual Christmas baking contest at our local library. We try to enter every year. The competition is pretty tough but a lot of fun. This year, I did not enter, but both girls did. We always have so much fun looking for recipes and finding fun ways to present our dishes.

Tricia won first place in the youth division with her Poinsettia Milky Way cake. It was very pretty and yummy!






This is the best picture we could get. My camera decided to act up just when we needed it.

Harriett won second place in the youth division for a cookie tree. She made homemade fondant for the tree skirt.


The recipe for the Milky way cake is:

Milky Way Poinsettia Cake

Cake:
8 Milky Way bars 2 ½ C flour
2 sticks margarine ¼ tsp baking soda
2 C sugar ¼ tsp salt with 1 C buttermilk
½ tsp butter flavoring 4 eggs

Melt candy bars and 1 stick of margarine in double boiler. Cream together 2 C sugar, 1 stick of margarine, and flavoring. Add eggs one at a time mixing well after each egg. Mix dry ingredients in small bowl. Add to creamed mixture alternately with buttermilk. Slowly add Milky Way mixture. Bake in a greased and floured pan at 275º for 1 ½ to 2 hours.

Filling:

½ C softened butter 4 cups of powdered sugar
½ C baking cocoa 7 to 8 T milk
1 ½ tsp vanilla extract.
Cream butter until fluffy. Beat in 2 c powdered sugar, cocoa, 3 T milk, and vanilla. Add the remaining sugar and enough milk to desired consistency. Spread evenly over first layer of cake.

Ganache
1 ¼ C semisweet chocolate chips 1 C heavy whipping cream
In heavy saucepan, bring cream to boil over low heat. Pour over chips; whisk until smooth. Chill for 35 to 40 minutes until ganache begins to thicken. Pour over the cake until covered. Garnish with poinsettia
.
Poinsettia

2 T plus 2 tsp light corn syrup
1 c red candy coating disks, melted
1 c green candy coating disks, melted
2 T vanilla or white chips

Divide corn syrup into two bowls. Stir red candies in one bowl and green candies in another bowl. Stir and spread onto wax paper to ½ inch thickness. Let stand uncovered for 2-3 hours or until dry to the touch. Removed from paper and make a ball and wrap in plastic wrap. Let stand overnight. Knead the dough until pliable and form into petals and leaves. Arrange petals and leaves to make a flower. Melt white chips and place in a closed zip lock back. Cut a small hole in a corner of the bag and pipe onto center of flowers.


The recipe for the cookie tree is:

Sugar Cookies

1 ½ c powdered sugar 1 c butter or margarine, softened
1 tsp vanilla ½ tsp almond extract
1 egg 2 ½ c all-purpose flour
1 tsp baking soda 1 tsp cream of tartar

Beat powdered sugar, butter, vanilla, almond extract, and egg in bowl on medium speed. Stir in flour, baking soda, and cream of tartar that have been mixed together in a small bowl. Cover and refrigerate at least two hours. Heat oven to 375º. Roll dough to ¼ inch thickness on lightly floured surface. Cut into star shapes. Place 2 inches apart on cookie sheet. Bake 8 minutes, remove and place on cooling rack. Decorate cookies with decorator’s frosting.

Make fondant tree skirt and allow to dry. Make cupcakes and frosting. Make cookies. Frost cookies and stack to form a tree. Pipe frosting on tree to decorate. Add candies for ornaments. Cover stem with chocolate frosting to resemble a tree trunk. Add a star from a cookie or homemade candy. Frost cupcakes and add fondant bows. Place cupcakes under tree to resemble presents.

Chocolate cupcakes

½ cup butter softened 2 ¼ C packed brown sugar
3 eggs 3 squares unsweetened chocolate melted
1 ½ tsp vanilla 2 ¼ C flour
2 tsp baking soda ½ tsp salt
1 cup sour cream 1 cup boiling water

In mixing bowl, cream the butter and brown sugar. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Beat in chocolate and vanilla. Combine flour, baking soda and salt; add to creamed mixture alternately with sour cream. Whisk in water until smooth. Pour into cupcake papers. Bake for 20 minutes until a toothpick comes out clean.

Frosting

½ cup cold water 3T meringue powder
2 ½ cups sugar ¼ cup corn syrup
½ cup water

Mix cold water and meringue powder to form stiff peaks. Microwave sugar, syrup and water for 5 minutes. Slowly add warm syrup to meringue and beat for 4 minutes until smooth and shiny.


Tricia also made a delicious peanut butter cheesecake


Peanut Butter Cheesecake

1-1/4 cups graham cracker crumbs ¼ cup sugar
¼ cup crushed chocolate sandwich cookies. ¼ cup sugar
6 T butter, melted ¾ cup creamy peanut butter

Filling:

3 pkgs cream cheese, softened 1 cup sugar
1 cup sour cream 3 eggs lightly beaten
1-1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 cup hot fudge ice cream topping.
6 peanut butter cups cut into small wedges.

Mix Cracker crumbs, cookie crumbs, sugar, and butter in a bowl. Press onto the bottom and sides of a greased springform pan. Place on a baking sheet. Bake 350º for 7-9 minutes or until set. Cool. In microwave safe bowl, heat peanut butter on high for 30 seconds. Spread over crust. In large mixing bowl, beat cream cheese, sugar, and sour cream until smooth. Add eggs; beat on low speed just until combined. Stir in vanilla. Pour 1 cup into a bowl; set aside. Pour remaining filling over peanut butter layer.
In microwave safe bowl, heat ¼ cup hot fudge topping on high for 30 seconds or until thin. Fold into reserved cream cheese mixture. Spoon over filling and swirl. Bake at 350º for 55-65 minutes or until center is almost set. Cool for 1 hour. Microwave remaining fudge topping for 30 minutes or until warm. Spread over cheesecake. Garnish with peanut butter cups. Refrigerate over night and remove sides of pan.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Today I am thankful for...

10 years of being cancer free!!

The wonderful time we spent last night with Stephanie, Derek, and the kids.

My two fabulous teens that delight my heart.

Rain last night that is much needed.

A message I heard this week that spoke to my heart.

Time alone this morning, a very rare occurrence.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Thanksgiving

In thinking about Christmas, I almost forgot about Thanksgiving. This year, we are not going to have a large Thanksgiving meal. We are having homemade macaroni and cheese and chicken strips. I may make a pie for my special hubby though. We decided that we can be just as thankful with a small meal as a large. None of us need the extra calories and we can spare the added expense of a large meal. Stephanie, Derek, and the children are coming up so it will be a very special day.

Instead of eating, I want to spend some time thanking the Lord for all of his blessings to our family.

Thank you Lord for:

My salvation so mercifully offered. Romans 5:8

My wonderful husband of 29 years. Denny is such a blessing to me. I thank God for putting us together and then keeping us together in such a divorce ridden world. I can not imagine life without him.

My 4 healthy, special daughters of whom I am very proud!

My 7 healthy grandchildren!

My spacious home.

My warm and comfortable bed.

Homeschooling and all that I have learned on this journey.

My church and my godly pastor! It is so wonderful to have a family to worship with.

My country. I love the USA.

My freedom to be a Christian and to speak and worship freely.

There are so many more. I will add more this week.

Happy Thanksgiving and thank you God for your mercy in sending your Son to die for me.

Thankfulness

Well, our Advent Conspiracy is going very well so far. We are busily making pre-school activity kits for our grandchildren in lieu of toys, making handmade presents for others as we can, and toning down the entire process. I bought a game for Christmas and plan to set up a puzzle to work on as well. I am thinking of ways for our family to make memories together rather than spend hours opening presents. We enjoy our Christmas in January, so have a lot of time to get ready.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Christmas is coming quickly.

I came across a video today on a favorite blog that shook me up. My husband and I have been struggling with the idea of yet another Christmas where we spend a lot of money on things that no one needs. And yet, we love Christmas!

http://www.adventconspiracy.org/

Click on the cream colored box to the right that says " Lack of." Let me know if your family decides to do this. What are we giving our Lord this year? Much to think about.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Grandchildren are great rewards
















Gotta love grandchildren! What a blessing these grandchildren are to me.

New school year craziness

Well, we started our new school year with a bang with Gustov bringing wind, rain, coastal flooding, but basically doing very little damage. We spent the day getting oriented and watching the sky. We were very grateful that we missed the worst. Nightmares of Katrina made us a little edgy.


Every new school year, we are hit with numerous challenges. This year, is no exception. This next week, we are expecting daughter number one to give birth to her fourth child for which we have to travel to AL, daughter number two to fly to Ohio leaving the twins with us, hurricane Ike might hit us, school, my job etc... But we are enjoying school even with the extra challenges. I love homeschooling my girls and love learning along side them. What a blessing!


On a sadder note, today we found out that our puppy died last night. She was fine night before last, but was sick yesterday. Hubby took her to the vet who kept her and told us this morning that she died. They do not know what was wrong with her. The pup that died is the one on my daughter's shoulder in the picture above. The girls are so sad. So far, the other pup and our older dog are fine and show no sign of illness. 24 hours from fine to dead is really hard to take.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

In memory of Christa Baker Alexander


In loving memory of Christa Baker Alexander

1983-2008

and baby Alexander

both in the loving arms of their Saviour


Monday, April 28, 2008

Happy birthday to me!

Today is my 49th birthday!! While others might be sighing and feeling down about being almost 50, I'm jumping for joy! 10 years ago, I was diagnosed with a rare, but aggressive cancer. The prognosis was not good and we all faced the possibility that I would not be here to raise our children. Well, fast forward 10 years... Here I sit with two teens in the house, two of my daughters married and our 7th grandchild on the way.

So, 49 sounds wonderful to me!!!!!!! Bring on 59 I say. LOL

God gets all the glory today from me. He was merciful to someone who deserved no mercy.

Thank you dear Father for dying for me. Thank you dear Father for loving me and allowing me to live to raise my children. Thank you for a wonderful life!

When your education pays you back!

We all hear it from our children all the time, " When am I ever going to use this?" or, "Why do we have to learn grammar?"

Well, these past few months, I have started medical transcription at my home. Suddenly, all of those years of learning spelling, grammar and punctuation has started paying off in spades! I think it's hard enough at my age to learn so much of the medical terminology and drug information, but if I had to learn spelling, grammar and punctuation, I would not be able to do my job. I would have had to quit before I started.

I am so grateful for homeschooling which has taught me far more than my children learned!! It certainly is making my transition time easier.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Gratitude comes through the oddest things

Today I was in driving in Florida when I came upon an awful accident. I'm sure one person was dead....why are those tarps always blue?? They were trying to extract another person also. I whispered up prayers for the accident victim and the rescue workers who go through so much as they assist in these situations. I burst into tears as I drove on to my destination.

Tears of grief mixed with gratitude fell as I thanked God for sparing my two oldest daughters six years ago from a very similar accident. Grief welled up again as I remembered the blue tarp and my daughter's best friend being taken to the morgue rather than to surgery or to the ER.

I sometimes wonder why God spared my daughters. I wonder why He chose to take Dannon who was an only child while leaving me with all four of my daughters. I wonder why I sit here, the grandmother of seven children, none of whom would be here (two are still forming ) had God chosen to take their Mama's home. It boggles my mind yet fills me with the most amazing gratitude for the mercy that I certainly did not deserve and the precious lives that God has trusted me with.

I think about my son-in-law who pastors a small church in AL. I remember him sitting in the ICU waiting room praying for a miracle, yet accepting God's will. They told us she wouldn't live yet we prayed on. They told us she wouldn't walk or talk and yet we prayed on.

I remember looking at that young man with new eyes as I watched his faith in action. When other people were irritating me with their ceaseless questioning of God's perfect will, he was solid and unwavering in his faith.

I remember another young man who is also now my son-in-law standing by us day and night. I remember him leaning over to our daughter, looking past the blood, stitches and bruises...and telling her that she was beautiful. Now, he's the father of three of our grandchildren and loves our daughter so much!

I remember standing just inside the door at the funeral home. My oldest daughter was in a coma, with severe, life-threatening injuries. My second born was being held up in order to walk, and looked as if someone had beaten her with a base ball bat. I stood there, unable to move, barely able to breathe.......thinking that I was going to collapse. Our pastor and his wife walked up to me, each on one side of me and literally held me up as they gently led me into the room and up to the casket. They were grieving too as they loved my girl so much. (she is now their daughter-in-law and the mother of four of their grandchildren!) But they looked past their pain and helped me through a very difficult moment. I was feeling so guilty and I didn't want to see Dannon lying there dead when she had been so alive, happy and vibrant just three short days before. How could I face her mother who was now childless when there I stood still the mother of four.

God is good to remind me from time to time of His mercy and tender care. When I got home, I knew I needed to write down the memory and give God the glory for the lessons he has taught me and the way that he reminds me to thank Him and to not take life for granted.

Friday, January 25, 2008

homeschooling while sick

We started Tapestry of Grace before the holidays and are enjoying it very much. We're studying the 20th Century and are working through World War II right now. I like the way that once we start an area, the girls can just go with the subject on their own. They do their maps, timelines, lapbooks and notebook pages with a small amount of imput from me. This was a good thing since I spent the holidays very ill. In early Jan, I finally got a diagnosis and am getting better every day. I don't enjoy homeschooling while sick, but I'm amazed at what I learn when I am low and weak.

Now that I'm stronger, we've been organizing, cleaning and trying to get more done each day. What a blessing to see things become neater and cleaner each day. Sometimes I forget how much I like cleanliness!

I'm reading Created to be His Helpmeet again...whew...hard reading! I'm also reading some organization books and biographies from World War II.