December 20, 2012
This is Christmas
Thank you God, for loving the world so much that You sent Your only Son to restore us!
December 13, 2012
Christmas party for one
Nope
It was a party for one – me! You see, I’ve been baking biscotti (6 different flavors!) and cookies all week. I even made some white (gasp) bread dough this morning so my sons could make focaccia bread tonight that they’ve been begging for almost a year. But, no tasty goodie tastes for me.
When I bake gluten free, it’s usually for breakfast & I don’t have time to bake something for the guys with wheat. Sooooo, what takes forever to prepare is soon devoured (& sometimes complained about because it’s “nasty”) with none left over.
This morning, after the guys left the house (oh, except for the university one who lives in his room hunched over his laptop…) I baked a batch of donuts.
I’d baked two previous batches since I got my pan (which I ordered online & on sale through Hobby Lobby!) I had pinned this recipe for Almond Flour baked donuts, and through various links & searches concluded I could use fine-shred coconut in the same fashion.
For today’s batch I had to combine finely grated coconut & almond flour. (“somebody” knocked my jar of grated coconut out of the pantry & sent shards of glass & coconut dust all over the kitchen…)
I mixed dry ingredients:
I added the remaining ingredients:
I put some dried cherry-cranberries in the donut pan:I put the batter in the pan (it’s recommended you fill only 2/3 full, but I likes ‘em plump!)Baked in a 350° oven for 12 minutes.And then I had myself a little piping-hot donut pre-Christmas party:
December 12, 2012
Christmas "peekies"
How 'bout a couple little glimpses at what's wrapped & going to land under a tree or two...
And then there's this:
and this:
with this:
Maybe a little of this:
One of these:
But definitely, so very much of this:
December 10, 2012
Aunt Ruth’s Kielbasa Stew
I was sooooooooo excited when Kelly from View Along the Way announced a holiday heirloom recipe party! I fixed a warming & filling soup for my boys that I first encountered almost 30 years ago.I was a sophomore in college and I was living at home. However, my folks had moved away to Oregon for a few years. During that lonely phase of life, my aunt made sure I didn’t starve & that I spent family time with her, my cousins & uncle. The evening we decorated her tree, some extra guests popped by for dinner. This is the meal she frugally stretched to feed us all.Aunt Ruth got the recipe from her mother-in-law. (Evidently it was a Danish family recipe that Gramma J wouldn’t even entrust to her own daughter…)
My guys & I found that it is a great soup for a cold evening. We sat outside by the firepit (finally cool enough for a fire…) and enjoyed our lit tree.Here’s the ingredient list for the soup:…and here’s how to make it:Here is what it looked like in the pot:…and this is how it looks just prior to being devoured: