




Tommy's soup
This gingerbread is a lower fat version (approximately 150 calories per square) of the traditional fall favorite. I included last fall's apple and pear butter in the batter, along with chopped candied ginger. From: GOOD THINGS (Berkley Books, February 2007)
Ingredients:
Directions:

From: SWEET LIFE (Berkley Books, September 2008)
Recipe courtesy: Debbie Davis, Kamuela Coffee N’ Cones
Yields: 2 dozen
Ingredients:
Directions:
Glaze
Ingredients:
Directions:


Benne Wafers (adapted from a recipe by Jean Anderson)
1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, at room temperature
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup lightly packed light brown sugar FIRMLY PACKED
1 1/4 teaspoons pure vanilla extract 2 TEASPOONS
1 large egg 1 EXTRA LARGE EGG
1 cup sifted all-purpose flour 5 OZ KA WHITE WHEAT FLOUR
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 cup lightly toasted sesame seeds THE BROWN ONES
Preheat the oven to 350° F. Lightly spray two baking sheets with nonstick cooking spray and set aside.
Beat the butter, sugars, and vanilla in a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment until light, about 2 minutes. With mixer on low speed, add the egg and beat until just incorporated. Add the flour and salt, mixing to
combine. Fold in the sesame seeds.
Drop the dough from rounded 1/2 teaspoons onto the prepared baking sheets, spacing about 2 inches apart. The cookies will spread when baking.
Bake on the middle oven shelf for 6 to 8 minutes or until golden brown around the edges.
Let the cookies sit on the baking sheets for 1 minute before transferring to a wire rack to cool.
Store in an airtight container at room temperature. Makes about 7 dozen cookies.
Thank you for sharing, Tim! Visit Tim's blog, Lottie + Doof for more really good cooking and fabulous photography.




I've just finished reading Gesine Bullock-Prado's book, "Confections of a Closet Master Baker." I would highly recommend the book to anyone who enjoys baking and/or a touching, life changing story. I, too, can relate to the loss of a parent and the life changing events that follow.
(bridge east across Hudson River, then north to Hyde Park and CIA)



Here's the link to his post today. He says it time to make your Christmas fruitcakes!
"Now is the time to make and bake your loaves. This way, they'll have plenty of time to mellow.."
And, here's his reply to my email:
From: joe@joepastry.com
Subject: Re: ahhhh
Date: September 8, 2009 9:09:02 PM CDT
To: studio1014@mac.com
fruitcake...I have one (Alton Brown's recipe) in the freezer from last Christmas. Maybe I should cut the cake and taste. My friends just laugh when I talk about fruitcake.
*************************************
(repost from November 16, 2008)
If you could smell the smooth, sweet aroma drifting through my entire house at this
moment, you would never make a ‘fruitcake’ joke again!!!!!!

Yes, I’m baking a Christmas Fruitcake...my first ever.
I’m using a recipe from Alton Brown, and adjusting a little here and there. Rather than the rum the recipe suggests, I have used Cruzan Vanilla Rum. I left out the candied ginger. There’s nothing in this fruitcake that I wouldn’t put in a scone or muffin...well maybe not the rum...
The pictures below will tell the story.
I had to taste while it was still warm. It was delicious. I will bake this again!



The three cakes are now wrapped in cheesecloth, and resting inside a tin. I’ll soak them over the next few weeks with more of the vanilla rum. The flavor should improve with each passing day.
(repost from December 4, 2008)
Would you rather taste a cake named Vanilla Rum Raisin Cake than one named Fruitcake? What is in a name?
I’ll call it whatever you want...it tastes good!
It passed a few food critics at work. Next week, I’ll serve slices to my brothers, who, up to this point have offered very ‘creative comments’ about my fruitcake.
(repost from April 4, 2009)I couldn’t throw away the plastic storage bags in which the vanilla beans were shipped. They smelled sooooo goood. I kept them in the utility room for a week, enjoying the lingering aroma.
I split about 15 Vanilla Beans (Planifolia) [purchased from www.saffron.com] & about 5 tahitian vanilla beans. Then I added a bottle of double strength Nielsen-Massey vanilla, and filled the quart fruit jar with Grey Goose Vodka. NOW, THAT’S A RECIPE!
The jar of vanilla is brewing in the back of my cabinet. Every day or so, I take it out, shake it a little, wonder what is happening on the inside, and return it to it’s aging place in the cabinet. This project began March 7. I’ll open it on May 7th to see what I have created.
*********************** *********************** *********************
fast-forward six months:

I need to buy more Grey Goose! The vanilla beans need alcohol to continue to produce this liquor (the liquid from which a substance has been extracted - from Apple dictionary widget)
I have about $60 invested in this quart of vanilla liquor/extract.
Nielsen-Massey is about $19 per 8 fl. oz. at Williams Sonoma. Though there is a little savings in money, it's not as much about the money as about the experience of watching this process unfold.

"Quiche freezes well for up to two months after baking or for one month before baking. Use any favorite filling like bacon and green chilies, onion and cheese or ham and artichoke hearts. To freeze quiche before baking: Tray-freeze until firm; then wrap with freezer paper, heavy-duty aluminum foil, or slide it into a freezer bag. Seal, label and freeze up to one month. Do not thaw before baking. Unwrap and bake as usual, allowing 10 to 20 minutes additional time. To freeze quiche after baking: Tray-freeze; then wrap with freezer paper, heavy-duty aluminum foil, or slide it into a freezer bag. Seal, label and freeze up to two months. Do not thaw before reheating. Unwrap and bake in a 350 degree F. oven for 20 to 25 minutes, or until heated through. from: Missouri Families: Food Safety"
Or, do you want to concentrate on the Nutella?
Either way, these two ingredients and a few other healthy additions yield a delicious granola bar.
I've been testing granola bar recipes. The first recipe I tried was a huge hit with the work crew, but the bars crumbled too easily. You can find the original Barefoot Contessa recipe here. And, you can find another version here at Smitten Kitchen. I made a few substitutions based on the ingredients in my pantry.
Listed below is my latest version of the Barefoot Contessa/Smitten Kitchen granola bar recipe. I have decided that honey works better than maple syrup. And, a Nutella type ingredient (i.e. peanut butter/ nut butters) aids in the texture creation , holding the bars together, and cutting the bars.This recipe makes about 16 granola bars. I baked the mixture in 2 - 8.5 x 5 loaf pans. Be sure to press the mixture into the pans really well (even roll over the ingredients with a small rolling pin). And don't cut the bars until completely cooled. (I pressed another loaf pan over the baked bars and allowed them to cool overnight before cutting.)
GRANOLA BARS
2 cups old-fashioned oatmeal
1 cup sliced almonds (any combination of nuts; I used 2 c. hazelnuts, skins included)
1 cup shredded coconut, loosely packed (I used 1/2 sweetened & 1/2 unsweetened)
1/2 cup toasted wheat germ (I used bran cereal)
¼ cup brown sugar
2/3 cup honey
1/4 cup Nutella
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1 1/2 cup dried fruit, or a mix of dried fruit (I used dates with the hazelnuts)
I added a few chocolate chips (about 1/4c.) to one pan of the granola bars before baking.
Toss the oatmeal, nuts, and coconut together on a sheet pan and bake for 10 to 12 minutes, stirring occasionally, until lightly browned. (Watch the sweetened coconut; it browns quickly.) Transfer the mixture to a large mixing bowl and stir in the brown sugar/honey/Nutella (I heated these slightly to melt.) Reduce the oven temperature to 300°F.
Add all other ingredients.
Pour the mixture into your prepared baking pans and press it in the pans until the mixture is packed as tightly as possible. (Parchment paper placed inside the pan [before you add the granola mixture] and extended over the sides will aid in removing the full bar from the pan prior to cutting. - Butter the parchment paper.)
Bake for 25 minutes, until light golden brown.
Cool for 2 to 3 hours before cutting into squares — your best serrated knife is great for this. ( I let mine cool overnight before cutting)
You can store these in an airtight container at room temperature for a week or two, as you would cookies, or store them in the freezer. They should remain crisp frozen, as all granola tends to soften at room temperature after a day or more.
I'm a southern girl and I don't like tomatoes. There...I've said it...
Flippen's peach orchard has been in Shawtown all my life. And Shawtown (google that - click here) is just a few miles from Hornbeak. As a child, I remember going there with my grandmother to pick peaches.

Martha said we should meet....and at the Christmas party, I was nearing the door to leave...and we met.
And through the years, Marcille would say, “we almost missed Gale.”
Thank you, Lord, that we did not miss each other.
We have spent hours and hours working on ‘projects’ since early 2000.
Scrapbooks, food, fun, laughter, tears, hopes and dreams.
In the early years, it was Marcille, Amanda, and Gale. Karen joined us later.
We were reading Hemingway’s, “The Sun Also Rises” when she left. And now she watches over us from upon high...we will miss you...
As her ashes were tossed into the breeze at the farm she loved, granddaughter, Danielle read these words she penned:
God saw you were getting tired,
And the cure was not to be,
So he put his arms around you,
And whispered, "Come to me."
With tearful eyes we watched you,
and saw you pass away.
Although we loved you dearly
We could not make you stay.
A golden heart stopped beating,
Hard working hands at rest.
God broke our hearts to prove to us,
He only takes the best.
Title
Heaven Was Needing a Hero
Artist
“I came by today to see you
I just had to let you know
If I knew the last time that I held you was the last time
I'd have held you, and never let go
Oh, it's kept me awake nights, wondering
I lie in the dark, just asking why
I've always been told
You won't be called home
Until it's your time
I guess heaven was needing a hero
Somebody just like you
Brave enough to stand up
For what you believe
And follow it through
When I try to make it make sense in my mind
The only conclusion I come to
Is heaven was needing a hero
Like you
I remember the last time I saw you
Oh, you held your head up proud
I laughed inside
When I saw how you were standing out in the crowd
Your such a part of who I am
Now that part will just be void
No matter how much I need you now
Heaven needed you more
Cause heaven was needing a hero
Somebody just like you
Brave enough to stand up
For what you believe
And follow it through
When I try to make it make sense in my mind
The only conclusion I come to
Is heaven was needing a hero
Like you
Is Heaven was needing a hero
and that's you”
I Can Only Imagine
Mercyme
“I can only imagine
What it will be like
When I walk
By your side
I can only imagine
What my eyes will see
When your face
Is before me
I can only imagine
[Chorus:]
Surrounded by Your glory, what will my heart feel
Will I dance for you Jesus or in awe of you be still
Will I stand in your presence or to my knees will I fall
Will I sing hallelujah, will I be able to speak at all
I can only imagine
I can only imagine
When that day comes
And I find myself
Standing in the Son
I can only imagine
When all I will do
Is forever
Forever worship You
I can only imagine
[Chorus]
I can only imagine[x2]
I can only imagine
When all I will do
Is forever, forever worship you”
5 Comments
Friday, September 14, 2007 - 10:35 AM
Lisa
Anyone that ever met this beautiful woman for more than 5 seconds fell totally in love with her and she with you. I used to tell her all the time that when I grew up I wanted to be just like her. Her spirit will live with me forever like so many others. Gale I'm so happy for you that you got to be with her through this, she was a blessing.
Thursday, September 20, 2007 - 08:38 PM
Cheryl Lawrence-Moore
I worked with Marcille for 10 years at BellSouth. She was always such a lady, such a classy lady. I loved her and I know her sprit will live amongst all of those who knew this wonderful creature. I hope she finds Scarlet in heaven and she can be her Mom up there until I get there. They would be great friends I am sure
I was so blessed to have known Marcille and enjoyed many great adventures over the 12 years we worked together. She shared her love and family freely. I got to spend some quality time with her while she was in the hospital and then rehab. We talked about the great friends and family we have and love. The Saturday before she left us, Danny and I told her how much she meant to us. IMy last words to her were, " I can count my very good friends on one hand, she was counted in my heart."
A friend told me not to worry, Marcille was in Heaven making plans for what we will all be doing when we get there. love Peg & Danny (South Carolina)
Monday, October 1, 2007 - 03:43 PM
Pam Hill
She was my friend, my relative, my church buddy and my co worker, she was so woven into to my everyday life that sometimes it takes my breath away to think she is gone. I miss her so much, but I know she is so much better now. I will never forget all the laughs, the tears, the crafts, the conversations they all hold such a special place in my heart. There are so many times a day when I think Marcille just saw that and cut her eyes, tilted her head and smiled. I went to a show recently and they sang a song from the play Wicked “For Good” and it said just about everything for me.
IT WELL MAY BE
THAT WE WILL NEVER MEET AGAIN
IN THIS LIFETIME
SO LET ME SAY BEFORE WE PART
SO MUCH OF ME
IS MADE OF WHAT I LEARNED FROM YOU
YOU'LL BE WITH ME
LIKE A HANDPRINT ON MY HEART
AND NOW WHATEVER WAY OUR STORIES END
I KNOW YOU HAVE RE-WRITTEN MINE
BY BEING MY FRIEND...
LIKE A SHIP BLOWN FROM ITS MOORING
BY A WIND OFF THE SEA
LIKE A SEED DROPPED BY A SKYBIRD
IN A DISTANT WOOD
WHO CAN SAY IF I'VE BEEN CHANGED FOR THE BETTER?
BUT BECAUSE I KNEW YOU...
I HAVE BEEN CHANGED FOR GOOD...
Wednesday, October 10, 2007 - 12:50 AM
CASSAUNDRA SIMMONS
God put special people in your life for a reason Marcille was that person for me. Marcille was special because of her wisdom, compassion and generosity. the first day that I met her she gave me a gift because she liked my smile ironically it was her birthday. Words cannot express the feelings that I developed for Marcille during the short time we were together. I can simply say that it has been a pleasure to have been her friend. Marcille loved her family and life itself this is why she so bravely met the challenges of coping with her situation on a daily basis. I celebrate your spirit of steadfastness and zest for life. You would have to search far and wide to find a better example of courage and compassion in anyone. Marcille was a woman that led by example i am truly blessed to have known her. I will greatly miss learning from my friend's wisdom