Saturday, February 08, 2014

Pudding from Scratch

I do use boxed and instant pudding, but this is much healthier.  I have some dry milk on hand, it’s too cold to go outside, so maybe I’ll try this today.

Ingredients

  • DRY MIX:

  • 4 cups nonfat dry milk powder

  • 2-2/3 cups sugar

  • 1-1/3 cups cornstarch

  • 1 to 1-1/3 cups baking cocoa

  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

  • PUDDING (for each batch):

  • 2 cups milk

  • 1 tablespoon butter

  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

Directions
  1. For mix, sift together all ingredients. Store in an airtight container or resealable plastic bag.
  2. For pudding, combine 1 cup mix with milk in a saucepan. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Stir in butter and vanilla. Pour into individual serving dishes. Serve warm. Yield: 9 batches (4 servings per batch).

Powdered milk and dry milk are actually the same product; dry milk is simply another name for powdered milk. Powdered milk is made from milk that has been dehydrated until it achieves solid form.
Read more: http://www.ehow.com/facts_5814997_powdered-milk-vs-dry-milk.html#ixzz2sjYEAdc2

Quitting smoking unassisted

tobacco gross out

It’s nice when medical opinion catches up with mine.  For years I have questioned the use of public funding for smoking cessation—for Medicaid and Medicare patients, for prisoners and various minority populations and those  in the bottom quintile. It seemed a sop to the pharmaceutical companies, social workers and various cessation gurus.  With no great research on my part I noticed that although I know many former smokers—perhaps a hundred or so—not one of them quit using a drug or group support or counseling method.  The two closest were my father, who quit at 39 when he began spitting up blood from his coughing and lived to 89, and my father-in-law who quit when he reached for his third pack of the day and lived to be 93. Both quit cold turkey. Two of my father’s brothers, Russell and John, and one of his sisters, Gladys, did not quit, developed cancer and died painful deaths.  My father-in-law’s wife, Rosie, died many years before her husband; she didn’t stop smoking and developed lung cancer. I couldn’t begin to count the people my age that I know who are former smokers, including brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law. I know one man who used God—he says he challenged God, if he were real, to take away his desire to smoke. Poof, it was gone, and he stopped. He became a believer—in God. I know a few who became desperately ill, heart disease, COPD, stroke or cancer, and then stopped—and you can call it fear, but it was sheer will power. Their lives, although extended, were shorted by the years of foolishness and addiction.

A 2013 Gallup Poll of former smokers showed only 8% attributed their success to nicotine replacement therapy—gum, NRT patches—or prescription drugs.  56% credited “cold turkey,” “will power,” or “mind over matter.”  In other words, they decided to kick the filthy, health killing habit.  As a non-smoker, I am thrilled I can go into a restaurant or public event, and not leave smelling like a gambling casino of the 1950s.  However, there was a dramatic drop in smoking among Americans after the 1950  report linking tobacco and cancer, from 7.7 million former smokers in 1955 to  19.2 million in 1964, to 36.2 million in 1979. This was before the anti-smoking campaigns, the laws, and the drugs. Researchers could clearly see and puzzle over the success rate of these people, but chose to go the “assisted” route to find the perfect drug or program.

In my opinion, except for those unfortunate enough to have been mainlined nicotine in the womb, the vast majority of smokers pick up the habit through choice and social influence.  And that’s the way to quit.  Just do it, and don’t hang around with smokers.

http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleID=1812969

Friday, February 07, 2014

Why are IDs political for Democrats?

image

Today I went in person to CVS to request my year end list of prescriptions for tax filing. I was asked for name, birthdate, and an ID. We know better than to send a spouse--they won't release that information even to a spouse (which is silly because they will mail it, and who knows who might open the mail?)

True the Vote is one of the organizations being targeted by the Obama administration. The Founder since applying for C-3 status has been investigated by OSHA, ATF, FBI and EPA. Never had had a peep before. http://www.truethevote.org/news/archive/2014/February

Think warm thoughts

We are SHARING because we needed the reminder too... just saying.

The chill factor today in Columbus is below –10, real temp about zero.  Side streets and even some main streets (in Columbus) are a mess. We attended an event at the Columbus Art Museum, and  was holding my breath that we wouldn’t get stuck.  The museum is going through a massive construction, parking is limited, and side streets haven’t been plowed.

Baked French Toast for 12

Or one. Me.

I've tried a recipe in my New Inglenook Cookbook (Brethren Press, 2013) and declare it tasty. It's baked French toast, but the mix is eggs and orange juice with the soaked bread baked in a glaze of butter and cinnamon. It was a camp recipe to serve 12 so I reduced it and left out the sugar, which was rather high.

10 eggs, beaten (I used one)
2 cups orange juice (I used 1/4 cup)
1 cup butter, melted (I used a Tablespoon)
1 1/2 cups of sugar (didn't use it)
1 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon (sprinkle)
24 slices thick-sliced crusty bread (I used 2 heels and one dried out bakery something)

  • Preheat oven to 325.
  • Combine eggs and orange juice.
  • Combine butter, sugar, and cinnamon and divide between two 13 x 9 baking dishes (I used one 8 x 8).
  • Spread the butter mixture around to thoroughly coat the bottom of the dishes.
  • Dip the bread into the egg mixture, turning to coat thoroughly.
  • Lay the bread in the dishes.
  • Bake for 25 minutes.
  • When ready to serve, flip the bread pieces over so the glaze is on top.

Thursday, February 06, 2014

Fancy Nancy’s spin on the coming job loss due to Obamacare

Losing your job means having the 'liberty to pursue your happiness'?  Pelosi's spin makes you so dizzy, you forget her ridiculous prediction of 4 million new jobs from Obamacare.

http://hotair.com/archives/2014/02/05/pelosi-fighting-job-lock-lets-americans-follow-their-passion-like-leaving-the-workforce/

Nancy Pelosi is worth $100 million; so it’s easy for her to tell others to quit their jobs.

Thursday Thirteen plus one

image

Stop setting goals was the best advice book I’ve  ever read—which I didn’t find until I retired.  “Setting goals” is a creativity and thought killer for about half of us and yet we’re always told to do it or have it or accomplish it.  I was a librarian and we tend to be problem solvers, not goal setters.  The author, Bobb Biehl suggests “targets.”  However, here’s a blog with a similar thought—and I see it’s based the same author, Bobb Biehl, “5 big picture questions and 9 accelerators.” I recognize the 9th accelerator from the "Stop setting goals" book. I made three New Year’s resolutions—measureable, easily accomplished and short time frame (January 31) and met them all.  New ones will be built on that for February. Setting a goal for all of 2014 would have been impossible—at least for me.

1. What three changes will most please God?
2. What can I do to make the most significant impact for God in my lifetime? [I would change this to a specific time—like “in 2014” or the next 5 years]
3  What is the single best measurable indicator that I am making progress toward my dream?
4. What three measureable priorities will I accomplish before I die? [Again, I’d use a specific time frame.  Several years ago I had lunch with a friend whom I hadn’t seen in ages.  We had such a great time we decided to do it again in 2 weeks.  Three days later she died.]
5. What three measurable priorities will I accomplish in the next 10 years? [I would shorten that to one year, or 5 years at the most. No one can know what 10 years will bring. Facebook is 10 years old. Five years ago would you have believed the NSA was collecting your phone information?]

If you’re launching a new project (many TT participants are writers or artists)

1  Name your single greatest strength.

2. Identify three decisions causing the greatest stress.
3. What is overwhelming me?
4. What is my impassable road block?
5. What should I resign from?
6. What can I postpone?
7. What things on my list can others do 80% as well?
8. What elephants are in my schedule?
9. Identify three things in the next 90 days I could do that would make a 50% difference.

I think the important words of this list are the numbers three, changes, indicator, priorities, decisions, schedule, and things. Specific and measureable. The word “impact” is a bit squishy for me, but if it works for you, go for it!

Wednesday, February 05, 2014

Happy Now?

Cleaning For A Reason - Official Page's photo.

How to spin a 2.3 million job loss

CBO says 2 million will lose jobs because of Obamacare and your government thinks that’s great news. It's all part of the insidious grand plan revealed here: http://allenbwest.com/2014/02/cbo-says-2-million-will-lose-jobs-obamacare-government-thinks-thats-great-news/

What a fluke.

The Australian Tea Party's photo.

It's counter intuitive, but more birth control = more sex = younger age = more contraception failure = more pregnancies = more abortions = higher breast cancer risk + higher suicide risk = the real war on women.  Sandra Fluke is building on her minute of fame to run for Congress as another know nothing, do nothing female using sex.

Actually, this whopper may not be that big

President Obama likes to claim he is "at war" with talk radio, or with Fox News.  He's really at war with the truth.

http://thehill.com/blogs/on-the-money/budget/262745-study-shows-33-percent-increase-in-federal-poverty-programs-

 

The trick word here is "expanded." For instance, under Bush SNAP eligibility was expanded, but Obama increased recruitment to the program. EITC, HEAP, TANF, Medicaid, SCHIP, disability, even Obama phones (phone assistance began under Reagan) etc. were all programs of other presidents. Lack of good jobs and reductions because of Obamacare has pushed more onto government benefits.  What's new is people fleeing the workforce to apply for and get SS disability because he couldn't turn around the job situation.

What has expanded is the wait for veteran’s benefits.  For welfare recipients, there is a 30 day wait to qualify for food stamps, or expedited, 7 days. Over 675,000 claims pending for veterans, 58% for over 125 days. Why are veterans required to wait? Haven't they already paid? Are the low income, unemployed a bigger voting block than disabled veterans?

Tuesday, February 04, 2014

You can look up your childhood home

http://www.vpike.com/

Use this website, type in the address, and then stroll down the street.  It’s approximate, but you can probably find it.  Caution.  Everything will look a whole lot smaller than when you lived there.

203 E. Hitt

We’re expecting bad weather tonight

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But maybe they’ll be wrong—it often happens.

How Republicans shoot themselves in the foot

               

I was a Democrat much longer than I’ve been a Republican, and I suppose it’s that “conservative” mind set of the Republicans, but really, they just don’t know how to get in there and fight like a Democrat.  They also don’t know how to plan or execute. Democrats are setting up country wide plans to accomplish what we all know—all elections are local.  I get their newsletters and e-mails—I read the plans.  Republicans, meanwhile, push away their only hope—conservatives.

Republicans will chase the Hispanic vote by caving on citizenship, border security and amnesty. But they'll flee from confirmed conservatives, Tea Party supporters and Libertarians who actually gave them the House in 2010 and many governorships. Who's a better bet for supporting Republicans in the long run? Certainly not illegal immigrants who always vote Democratic. The 1986 IRCA is a good example of bipartisanship, and look what it got us. Porous borders, more anchor babies, more low wage workers taking American jobs, and more Democrats.

In Ohio SB 193 has been called the “John Kasich Re-election Protection Act.” I found an early January article.  Like many Republicans in Washington, Kasich was elected with the help of Tea Party and Libertarians to get rid of Gov. Strickland, and is now running the other way--away from his right wing supporters and trying to keep anyone who could run against him off the ballot.

Brandon Clark and Gin House singing about his roots

http://youtu.be/jqRNzE_fG8w

 

Monday, February 03, 2014

Every day in America, 50 babies . . .

The Alan Guttmacher Institute, which is the best source
for abortion statistics in the United States, reports, “Sixtyfour
percent of [abortion] providers offer at least some
second-trimester abortion services (13 weeks or later), and
23 percent offer abortion after 20 weeks. …11 percent
of all abortion providers offer abortions at 24 weeks.”
The institute also indicates that of the approximately 1.2
million abortions in the United States each year, some
18,150 are performed at 21 weeks or more. Of the 40 states
that reported in 2005 to the Centers for Disease Control,
32 states reported abortions of babies 21 weeks or older.

This means that every day in America, 50 babies the size
of a large banana are dismembered and decapitated – and
these include healthy babies of healthy mothers…and it’s
happening legally.

Priests for Life Newsletter Jan-Feb 2014

We’re expecting a lot of snow by Wednesday

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Nice coverage for the mature woman

I’m not going to buy it, but if I were going to get a swim suit, it would be one like this.  I think I gave away my last two and had never worn them.

This is in the L.L. Bean Spring 2014 catalog, or online.

Monday Memories—Inglenook Cookbook

                      image

I received  "The New Inglenook Cookbook" (Brethren Press, 2013) for my birthday (arrived Friday for my September birthday). I have my mother's "Granddaughter's Inglenook cookbook" (Brethren Publishing House, 1942), and someone in the family may have the first one that was my grandmother's (1901). I don't do a lot of cooking that needs recipes anymore, but I love to read them. Also, I love looking at the names of the women who contributed the recipes. Still so many old Brethren names. I see "Sweet sour meatloaf" very similar to mine, which I hand out to new brides. Things have changed: Gluten free scones contributed by Elsie Holderread of McPherson, KS (2013) compared to Wieners in Creole Sauce by Mrs. Irva Kendrick Haney, Muscatine, IA (1942).

                   

Also listed for a 1942 school lunch was cottage cheese and chopped pepper sandwiches with raw turnip strips. I don't know about other people my age, but cottage cheese was in everything at our house.

I think the reason women my mother's age (b. 1912) used so much cottage cheese is that their mothers made it from the skim milk left after separating the cream. My grandmother (b. 1876) used several pounds of real butter a week--I have her butter churn--and that's a lot of skim milk left over which needed to be made into something. I watched her working with (I thought it was a smelly mess) it, but by then she must have used purchased milk since they no longer had a cow. If all the liquid is pressed out (whey, which is then fed to the pigs), it is called farmer's cheese. This is from someone who knows nothing about it, so corrections are welcome.

The 2013 edition has a symbol for gluten-free.  This one looks impossibly easy.

“The best peanut butter cookie” contributed by Sharon A. Walker (Brumbaugh) Clayton, Ohio, p. 290

  • 1 c. creamy peanut butter
  • 1 c. sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 t. baking soda
  • Preheat oven to 350 and grease 2 baking sheets with nonstick cooking spray and set aside.
  • Beat together the peanut butter and sugar until combine.  Beat in the egg. Sprinkle baking soda over the mixture and beat until combined.
  • Roll heaping teaspoon-size pieces of dough into small balls. Arrange on the prepared baking sheets and with the tines of a fork, flatten the balls.
  • Bake the cookies in batches in the middle of the oven until puffed and pale golden, about 10 minutes
  • Cook the cookies on the baking sheets for 2 minutes before transferring to cooling racks.  This is important because they are very fragile when hot from the oven.

After checking the internet, I see Ms. Brumbaugh Walker also contributed to a genealogy book (found it on WorldCat) and I'm sure if I dug a little deeper, we'd find some Brethren relatives in common from Montgomery County who came there from Pennsylvania.

http://www.cheesemaking.com/CottageCheese.html

Sunday, February 02, 2014