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Peppermint Biscotti

Posted by GrandmaRosie
4:42 PM, Wed 3 Dec 2008 .. Posted in FROM THE KITCHEN .. 0 comments .. Link

  Peppermint Biscotti


From Taste of Home's Holiday & Celebrations Cookbook
Dipped in melted chocolate and rolled in crushed peppermint candy, this flavorful biscotti is a favorite. It's one of the many sweets I make for Christmas.


SERVINGS 42 
METHOD Baked 
PREP 60 min.
COOK 15 min. 
TOTAL 75 min. 


INGREDIENTS
3/4 cup butter, softened
3/4 cup sugar
3 eggs
2 teaspoons peppermint extract
3-1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup crushed peppermint candies
FROSTING:
2 cups (12 ounces) semisweet chocolate chips
2 tablespoons shortening
1/2 cup crushed peppermint candies


DIRECTIONS
In a large mixing bowl, cream butter and sugar. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Beat in extract. Combine the flour, baking powder and salt; stir in peppermint candy. Gradually add to creamed mixture, beating until blended (dough will be stiff).
    Divide dough in half. On an ungreased baking sheet, shape each portion into a 12-in. x 2-1/2-in. rectangle. Bake at 350° for 25-30 minutes or until golden brown. Carefully remove to wire racks; cool for 15 minutes. Transfer to a cutting board; cut diagonally with a sharp knife into 1/2-in. slices. Place cut side down on ungreased baking sheets. Bake for 12-15 minutes or until firm. Remove to wire racks to cool.
    In a microwave-safe bowl, melt chocolate chips and shortening; stir until smooth. Drizzle over biscotti; sprinkle with candy. Place on waxed paper until set. Store in an airtight container. Yield: about 3-1/2 dozen.


Printed from tasteofhome.com Dec 3, 2008



Home Made Energy Resources

Posted by amanda
01:08, Wednesday, December 3, 2008 .. Posted in On the Homestead .. 0 comments .. Link

This web site looks very interesting.

http://www.homemadeenergy.org/?hop=maxflower-

What do you think?

Amanda <><
II Corinthians 5:7



Dinner tonight - Chicken stroganoff

Posted by Morning Sunshine
12:36 PM, Wednesday, December 3, 2008 .. 0 comments .. Link
Chicken Stroganoff

3 T butter
3 T Italian dressing mix (see recipe)
4-6 chicken breasts

8 oz cream cheese
1 can cream of chicken soup (see recipe)


place chicken, butter, italian dressing in crockpot on low.  Cook 6 hours.  45 min before serving, mix cream cheese and soup, then pour over chicken.

Serve over egg noodles (start when adding cream cheese and soup).




Italian Dressing Mix

2 teaspoons oregano
1 teaspoon onion powder
2 teaspoons basil
2 teaspoons paprika
1 1/2 teaspoons pepper
2 Tablespoons garlic powder
6 Tablespoons granulated sugar


Mix and store in an airtight container.

To make dressing: Use 3 Tablespoon mix with 1 1/2 cups vegetable oil and 1/2 cup wine vinegar

makes 9+ T of mix


Canned “Cream of *** Soup”
INGREDIENTS:

2 cups dry milk
3/4 cup cornstarch
1/4 cup chicken bouillon granules
2 tablespoons dried onion flakes, optional
1 teaspoon dried leaf thyme
1/2 teaspoon dried leaf basil, optional
1/2 teaspoon dried leaf oregano, optional
1/2 teaspoon ground marjoram, optional
1/2 teaspoon pepper

2 to 3 teaspoons butter


PREPARATION:

Combine all ingredients except butter together and store in airtight container. To use, mix 1/2 cup dry soup mix with 1 1/4 cups water and cook until thick; add butter. This is equal to one can cream soup. The mix makes enough to equal 6 cans. For cream of mushroom or celery soup, add chopped sauteé mushrooms or celery along with the butter while cooking.

The Trap of Virtual/Charter Schools

Posted by Kim Wolf<><
12:40, 2008-Dec-3 .. Posted in Homeschooling .. 1 comments .. Link

OH MY WORD!!  I just read one of the best blog posts on the trap of Virtual/Charter schools that I've read in a long time (and didn't write myself!  HAHA!!).  This came from http://ladyofvirtue.blogspot.com.  She is the mother of 14 w/#15 on the way and has homeschooled them all.  I HIGHLY recommend her blog - full of wisdom and grace.  I'm posting her entry about Virtual/Charter schools below and request that not only YOU read it, but link it to your own blog, or copy/paste it onto your own blog (and give her the credit, of course) and tell everyone you can to read this.  It's excellent!

Blessings from Ohio, Kim Wolf<><

Virtual Schooling

tuesday, dec. 2, 2008

I live in a largely blue-collar town. There are no mansions or super affluent people that make up our community. The families that choose to be "traditional", with the daddy as the breadwinner, struggle. Lots of homeschooling families that I know here have had trouble even affording a computer.

In a community like ours, virtual schooling where the government sends a family a computer, pays for internet use, and supplies all sorts of glossy, colorful curricula and even science and craft supplies, is just too much of a temptation.

When our state first began to offer such programs, I can remember the glowing reports of all of the "goodies" that were sent--it was like Christmas! Everything needed was provided, including scissors and craft paper, and seeds for growing things. Mothers who before had been wringing their hands wondering how they were going to afford the Saxon Math series were now almost care-free.

But there was a catch.

Someone has said that nothing in life is truly "free". With all of the goodies and the ease of knowing someone else was in charge came a large price. Instead of worries over buying supplies and curricula, now the mothers had a heavy burden placed on them every day. They had to coerce and nag and bite their fingernails over getting the work done that was required--a whole boat-load of extra fact-cramming and busy-work that made it almost impossible for anyone to have a good life, especially for the mother who had even 3-4 children on different levels. Instead of having their lives simplified, they were complicated beyond comprehension, and their children were being harmed in the process and turned into drones who hated anything to do with "learning".

The most unfortunate thing of all was that most mothers were convinced that this sort of government-sponsored slavery was what homeschooling was all about! Many who were already feeling overwhelmed about teaching their own children became convinced, after allowing the state to muck with things, that homeschooling was impossible and horrid. So, they gave up.

But learning is not a super-complicated thing that only professionals know how to do!

Our children were born to us completely helpless--they could not even hold their own heads up! Somehow, with our encouragement, they learned to walk and talk and feed themselves. Children, even in some of the most impoverished conditions, learn to do these things, unless they are ill or haven't any food to eat.

Why do children learn these things? Is it because they are constantly nagged, or they have been through the right "programs"? No. Children learn these things because they want to and they need to. The parents are there to facilitate and encourage.

Now here is the secret that those who run teaching colleges and publish curricula and make their living on the supposition of universal idiocy do not want you to know:

TEACHING CHILDREN IS NOT DFFICULT--THEY ALREADY WANT TO LEARN!

I once checked out a magazine published for teachers from the library, thinking I could glean something of value for my own family. An article was written therein about teaching composition to middle-school students. I could not believe the amount of verbage it took--paragraph upon paragraph of evidence and studies and then the methodology that took pages to explain. What a waste!

Writing is just an extension of language, another form of communication. When it is taught in this context, it no longer seems mystical or complex. Good writing is learned by reading the good writing of others--with reading aloud, discussion, and application.

The same goes for the other subjects. Math is a sort of communication, it is the communication of the Creator to His creation--that there is order and care. Science is best described as the "thinking of God's thoughts after Him". The wonder of this planet and the universe is the only catalyst needed. Once the appetite has been whetted, a parent need only to watch a child take off like a rocket-ship (and be willing to enjoy the adventure).

Of course, you can't enjoy the wonderful adventure of discovery with your child if every day is prescribed and written down. The time and energy you would normally have to explore and discover is all taken up by the reading of droll, dumbed-down texts, numerous questions to be answered by rote understanding, canned experiments and the like.

Yes, there are times when a little rote learning can be valuable, but not as an all-encompassing program. The teaching of facts should be likened to handing out tools that a skilled craftsman, the child, can use to create and discover further. Rote learning should never become the end, but the means. We should not be so much concerned with turning out children who can win at Trivial Pursuit as much as we should be concerned with raising children who can take the information in any situation, analyze it, and come up with wise conclusions and solutions.

I do not write theory here; I myself have seen the proven examples, and not just among my own children.

But the public schooling industry, and it is a great part of our economy, does not want you and I to know just how simple teaching and learning really is. Just think of how many meetings and conferences would have to be canceled. Whole political commmitees would have to be disbanded. We would see a lot of educational phd's flipping burgers, and whole educational supply industries woud go belly-up.

Besides all of this, those who desire power over our population would be the saddest of all, because people of America would once again, as in the crazy times of our inception, realize just how many choices they have, and would develop the intestinal fortitude to pursue those choices. I personally believe that it would allow Chrisitanity to return once again as the underlying foundation of our Republic, as parents would be allowed to pass on their Judeo-Christain values in a personal way to the next generation.

But you won't read this in the leaflets sent out to entice you. They will act as your friend, and say how they understand that you feel unsure and intimidated. But they are not friendly. They only wish to use your own fears to convince you that you can not do it on your own.

But, with God's grace and help,

YOU CAN!!!!!!


Got Some Good News From Hubby

Posted by Tiredmamaof5
09:51, Wednesday, December 3, 2008 .. Posted in Everyday Living .. 1 comments .. Link

   Yesterday, DH calls me very anxiously, telling me that he was e-mailed from his company that there are a couple of job openings coming to Michigan and he could go very soon.

    There are only a few problems that I have with this. One is that he will have to go through another training course which will be 6 weeks. The course is really 12 weeks long but since DH has already gone through it a few years ago they will push him through it fast and just let him do 6 weeks. That is the silver lining I see there, that he won't be gone for 12 weeks but only 6. The second thing is that these courses may take place before Christmas and he may not be here for Christmas. I'm sure he would do what he could to get to us, but it is just a long drive from PA to MI.

    This is good news, don't get me wrong. I am far from complaining. Infact, I'm very excited over this because it gets us to Michigan faster. Plus, another silver lining to him having to go there for courses is that after his work day and on weekends, he can go look for houses and get it all done awhile. And if the closing doesn't take too long then we will go sooner to be with DH and won't be away from each other for 6 weeks.

    This is all so great! We were talking and both said how hard it would be to be away from each other for 6 weeks but we can absolutley sacrific for the good of what the Lord is providing us with.

    It is so good to see God's plan for us come together!



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