Archives: 2013

Muffin Monday: Peaches, Strawberry and Cream

Welcome back to Muffin Monday! I picked up some Peaches and Strawberries at an obliging farm stand for today’s recipe. Enjoy!

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INGREDIENTS:

  • 1 stick of BUTTER, softened
  • 1/2 cup of  SUGAR
  • 2 EGGS
  • 1 teaspoon VANILLA EXTRACT
  • 1/2 cup Creamy GOAT CHEESE

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  • 1 cup STRAWBERRIES
  • 1 1/2 cup PEACHES
  • 1 LEMON PEEL (zested)
  • 2 1/2 cups of FLOUR
  • 2 1/2 teaspoon BAKING SODA
  • Extra SUGAR for topping

DIRECTIONS:

1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Prep the  muffin cups by spraying with cooking oil.

2. Chop the Strawberries into quarter-inch pieces. Chop the Peaches into 1/2″ pieces. Zest the Lemon.

3. In a large bowl combine the softened Butter and Sugar. Add Eggs one at a time. Add Vanilla and Goat Cheese. Add the Strawberries, Peaches and Lemon Zest.

4. In a second bowl combine the Flour and Baking Powder.

5. Add the dry the ingredients to the wet and mix completely.

6. Divide the batter evenly into the 12 muffin cups. Top with a bit of extra sugar.

7. Bake for 35-40 minute until a tooth pick inserted into the center of one of the muffin comes out clean.  Let cool for 5 minute before  enjoying.

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July Creative Challenge, Day 8: Gardening

THE JOYS OF GARDENING

Tell me … how does YOUR garden grow? Mine grows rather wildly. A lot of sweat equity brings forth some lovely blooms and a few edibles but I’d have to say that guilt (over the un-weeded bits) and a sore back (when I tend to the weeded bits) generally out weigh the pretty flowers. I should be out there pulling and hoeing right now — before it gets too hot — instead I  write this blog. My words are my garden today.

I’m waiting for the Black Eyed Susans to come into full bloom. Their spidery petals have escaped their buds in the last day or two but they haven’t filled out yet. Soon, I tell myself… soon. And the Day Lilies are just about blossom too. Orange and black and yellow will soon fill my landscape.

Here’s a little acrostic poem witnessing my yin/yang relationship with my garden…

FLOWER ACROSTIC

I know that the garden is always better tended on the other side of the fence… so tell me… what are you growing — flowers or frustration?


July Creative Challenge Day 7: Courage

Harry Potter courage

“There are all kinds of courage,” said Dumbledore, smiling. “It takes a great deal of bravery to stand up to our enemies, but just as much to stand up to our friends. I therefore award ten points to Mr. Neville Longbottom.”
–Harry Potter and the Sorer’s Stone, J.K. Rowling

It comes in all shapes and sizes. Certainly we can find it in literature and pop culture. Who didn’t think of The Cowardly Lion or Courage the Cowardly Dog or Dumbledore’s speech on Courage when they read the prompt?  But it is found just as easily on the pages of history books and newspapers. And, of course it is found in every day moments that will never make a newscast and will hardly be remembered beyond the small circle of people who experienced it.

Journalism

THE BIG STORIES:

I talked to some people before writing this blog entry and asked them what Courage meant to them…what moments of courage could they point to. I got Big Story moments:

  • Martin Luther King crossing a bridge
  • Gandhi walking to the sea to make salt
  • Soldiers battling for freedom on D-Day
  • Nelson Mandela fighting apartheid
  • Edward R. Murrow taking down Joe McCarthy
  • Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walking on the alien surface of the Moon.
  • St. Joan, The Maid of Orléans, paying the ultimate price for leading the French army in the Hundred Years War.

fountain Pen

The Little Stories that made Big News:

Then there were acts of courage by every day people who made a big impact:

  • Rosa Parks and the Freedom Riders during the Civil Rights movement in the US
  • The unknown man standing in front of a row of tanks in Tiananmen Square
  • Irena Sendler, the Polish social worker who helped save 2,500 Jewish children from the Warsaw Ghetto by smuggling them out.
  • Passengers on Flight 93 storming the terrorist in the cockpit so the plane crashed in a field in Pennsylvania and not into the Capital Building in DC.
  • Malala Yousafzai, the teenaged girl who was shot in the head by the Taliban because she spoke out in favor of educating girls in Pakistan.
  • Edie Windsor, the plaintiff  in the recent Supreme Court ruling on DOMA who sued the government when the IRS  denied her refund for the federal estate taxes she paid after her spouse, Thea Spyer, died in 2009.

Schoolhouse 2

Standing up in front of the Class Room:

Several people noted the special courage teachers have shown in protecting the children in their charge. Reader Mary L. wrote in to remind us of the following acts of courage in the classroom:

  • Sandy Hook Elementary School. Principle Dawn Hochsprung, school psychologist Mary Sherlach,  and teachers Victoria Soto and Anne Marie Murphy died confronting the gunman or shielding children that horrible day. Teachers  Maryrose Kristopik and Kaitlin Roig courageously hurried their wards into a closet or bathroom and barred the door so the gunman couldn’t get in.
  • Teachers in Moore, Oklahoma herded students into interior hall ways, closets and bathrooms and used their own bodies as shields as a recent tornado ripped Plaza Towers and  Briarwood Elementary schools apart. …

“At Briarwood Elementary, the students also went into the halls. But a third-grade teacher didn’t think it looked safe, so she herded some of the children into a closet, said David Wheeler, one of the fathers who tried to rush to the school after the tornado hit….The teacher shielded Wheeler’s 8-year-old son, Gabriel, with her arms and held him down as the tornado collapsed the school roof and starting lifting students upward with a pull so strong that it literally sucked glasses off kids’ faces, Wheeler said.” [Pennlive.com]

  • This year, on the first day of school, Robert Gladden brought a disassembled shotgun into Perry Hall High School near Baltimore and shot Daniel Borowy, a 17 year old student with Downs Syndrome.  Jesse Wasmer, a guidance councelor, and other faculty members risked getting shot themselves when they quickly restrained Gladden and sheilded Borowy and other students.

courage1

Everyday Acts of Courage:

An act of courage = value. It doesn’t necesarrily = newsworthy.   In fact the lack of a camera or reporter has no baring on whether an act is couragous or not. The “news” part is just by-product, happenstance, a memory device.

bully

Courage is:

  • Standing up for whats right even when it isn’t popular.
  • Standing up for whats right even though some one you really love and respect doesn’t agree with you about it.
  • Standing up for whats right when YOU are the only one standing.

July Creative Challenge, Day 7

Hi,

Here’s the prompt for Day 7 of the Creative Challenge…

Courage


July Creative Challenge, Day 6: Family Vacation

LIL RITA FAMILY VACATION

I’m not sure who that boy is behind me. I don’t really recognize him. But to be fair I don’t recognize too much of “me” in the me of this old picture.

Clearly we are on vacation. That’s our camel colored tent in the background.

The size of my bosom indicates that I am in the 12-14 year old range. If my mouth were open I’d be able to date the photo more accurately by amount of hardware / braces on my teeth.

The necessity of a bandana indicates that this is a Wednesday or Thursday of our holiday from running water.

My family liked to take camping trips for vacations. We hit almost every park in our state with overnight tent facilities. As my sweatshirt indicates, we had a special fondness for Elk Neck State Park on the top eastern tip of Maryland. We also liked the far western side of the state with and camped several times in the Deep Creek area.

My mom would pack our Coleman freezer (which was the same color as our tent, except the door had a snazzy faux wood panel.) with ice, solid frozen meat, blocks of home made noodle casseroles, like Beef Stroganoff and cardboard cans of frozen lemonade and punch.  As the week wore on the ice melted. By mid-week — by the time this photo was taken — the meat had thawed, the Stroganoff was gone, and drinks were reduced to lemonade made from a powder and the warm water from a communal pump.

It never failed to rain on a family camping trip. Often we’d go to sleep to the sound of the rain hitting the outside of our canvas tent and awake to find our air mattresses floating in a pond inside.

When it was hot it was REALLY hot. No air conditioning. No fans just 6 sticky, stinking,  hot,  people in a tent.

The bugs sucked. (The mosquitos literally sucked.)

On the plus side the Rangers were always great, pleasant and a little weird (in a good way). They seemed to have an endless supply of stuff-to-do-with-bored-kids up their sleeves. Like the Ranger who taught us how to find water using two sticks.  (Sure it was going to RAIN in two hours — it always did — but we had sticks just in case.) Or the wonderful Ranger who took us on a night-time walk that ended in a meadow. Just before we trail opened up to the meadow we had to turn off our flashlights and hold on to the person in front of us by the shoulder. Then we had to close our eyes as he lead us the last 100 feet or so into the meadow. SURE now it sounds like something in a horror movie, but what really happened was our eyes adjusted to the dark and as we got to the opening of the meadow and  we saw the most fantastic display of stars. We could see the Milky Way with the naked eye, and falling stars. We spent about an hour craning our necks to learn about the constellations. It was fabulous.

You also got to meet a bunch a new people every time you pitched your tent.

To be fair, most of the camping grounds now have shower houses and communal FLUSH toilets. However… I think if my husband suggested we take a weeklong “Vacation” in a tent with out running water — Um, no. That girl no longer exist.


July Creative Challenge, Day 6 prompt

Day Six Prompt for the Creative Challenge is:

FAMILY VACATION.

Send me what ya’ got! Stories in the comment section below; images in an email.

 

Cheers,

Rita

 


July Creative Challenge, Day 5: Rainbow

Rainbow Arch 2

Ohhh so many RAINBOW images to choose from, its hard to pick just one. They seem to be everywhere.

The other day I was in town looking for a car. A storm had just blown through, and when the downpour ended the sales man and I went out onto the lot. He kept looking distractedly over my shoulder. That seemed odd, considering he was laser focused on trying to sell me a car at all other points in our conversation. That was his job after all. Then after a few minutes he just stopped his sales pitch. He gave up talk of miles-per-gallon-highway, and automatic-transmission and rear-window-defrosters. His smile turned from sales-man professional to shy and wonder-filled. “Sorry” he said with a nod, “but there’s the most amazing rainbow behind you.” I turned around. And sure enough he was right.

I haven’t decided on the car, but I think the guy turned from “Sales man” to HUMAN in that instant. Rainbows can do that.

——–

 

I think my favorite Rainbow story happened when my daughter was little. A raucous thunderstorm came through the area and left us with a few downed branches and an awesome rainbow.

It was the biggest, closest, most vibrant rainbow I’ve ever seen.

Clear from the danger of the storm my daughter and I put on our rain boots. I took her hand  and we walked over to the edge of the neighbor’s cornfield.

The corn was hip high to me, but was just at above her head.

The edge of our known world.

A fence that divided us from else-where and other-ness.

It felt as if we two were all alone in our little Zone.

I picked her up and held her on my hip as we watched the rainbow and sang nonsense songs and talked.

I knew that the rainbow would fade as the angle of the sun adjusted, but this memory would remain brilliantly vivid thru the red, orange, yellow, green, blue and indigo of life.

 

Rainbow stripe

 


July Creative Challenge Day 5 Prompt

Since I do a weekly writing challenge from SidevieW I thought I’d roll that into the July Creative Challenge (and co-opt her prompt — hope you don’t mind Sidie).

 

Tomorrow’s Creative Challenge Prompt is:

RAINBOW

You know the drill. Leave a comment with your written creation or send me an email with you artistic works. (I’ve been checking my g-mail account, but I haven’t seen anything… so if you think you’ve sent something drop me a comment.)

 

Cheers,

Rita

PS if you want to follow SidevieW’s writing challenge go HERE, and tell her I sent you.


43 Presidents, 43 Quotes

Kovie Biakolo and the folks at Thought Catalog came up with a nice list of Presidential quotes for the Fourth of July. Enjoy!