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Another recipe: Rich Buttercream Icing

Current giveaway: Grandpa Jake's Campfire Cooker

Thanks to my sweet sister in Christ, Stephanie, I didn’t have to look at raw meat tonight. This mother of 2 little ones made an appropriately huge amount of hearty delicious beef stew for our plus-size family (ummm…I’m just talking head count…we don’t eat that much…).

Since I didn’t have to look at and handle raw meat, my morning sickness was subdued enough for me to prepare a bit of dessert: a chocolate sour cream cake.

Maybe I’m sabotaging my run for Blog With the Best Frugal Tips, but I made our favorite icing to go on the cake: it’s rich, buttery, not too sweet, and utterly decadent. It’s not terribly frugal, but oh boy is it worth it!

Butter Cream Frosting
makes enough to frost top, sides and between 2 layers.
for a single layer, make 1/3 recipe.

3 Tbs. flour
1/2 tsp. salt
1 cup milk

Cook and stir til thickened. Cool.

Cream together:
1 cup butter
1 cup sugar (updated: granulated, not powdered sugar)
2 tsp. vanilla

Combine with milk mixture and beat until it looks like whipped cream. Spread on cake. Lick bowl and beaters thoroughly.

Crystal’s 30 Minute Rolls

Current giveaway: Grandpa Jake's Campfire Cooker

Crystal shared this recipe in the Old Paths Newsletter last month. We tried these fast easy rolls over the weekend and received rave reviews! I used 3 1/2 cups of fresh ground wheat flour and left out the dough enhancer, but they were soft, light and delicious.

I got lazy near the end, and shaped the last 1/4 of the dough into a loaf. It rose amply in just 15 minutes, and continued to rise in the oven. I baked it for 25 minutes at 350 and turned out a beautiful, moist loaf with a nice soft crust.

30 Minute Rolls
Makes 50 rolls

Mix in a large bowl:

  • 3 1/2 cups warm water
  • 1 cup oil
  • 1/2-3/4 cup honey
  • 4 Tbsp. dry yeast

Then add:

  • 3 eggs
  • 1 Tbsp. salt
  • 10-10 1/2 cups flour (any combination of white and/or whole-wheat)
  • 3 Tbsp. dough enhancer (optional)Knead about 5 minutes. Shape into rolls. Place on ungreased cookie sheets. Let rise for 10-20 minutes. Bake for 9-10 minutes at 425?.

The Walking Pool Part 2

Current giveaway: Grandpa Jake's Campfire Cooker

The curious discovery was a kiddy pool. That looks like fun we all thought so we started playing with it my aunt Carlie did not care though. The little kids were playing that it was there “club” the under pool walk club when they told me I said “Ooooh” then walked away and told Mom she laughed we had a nice vistit and after we were done playing out side we tryed to take a picture but everyone was tyered and gruby.

The End

Socialization

Current giveaway: Grandpa Jake's Campfire Cooker

In view of some of the comments generated by my quote on public schools, my husband and I have discussed socialization of children and want to open a discussion on the topic.

Let me introduce this topic by saying that there are many very different reasons for homeschooling. In this post, I am referring to those of us who, as Christians, cannot in good conscience send our children into public education.
We do not homeschool primarily for academic excellence, or for safety, or because we just really like our children and want to spend more time with them – though all of these are worthy motives.
Our prime motivation is to honor God and train our children – His children - in accordance with His Word, and this is what we believe Deuteronomy 6:6-7 requires of us.
You may disagree heartily; that is a discussion for another day. Please, if you must disagree, keep it civil and on-topic.

The topic at hand:

What is socialization, and why do people seem to assume that it’s something homeschooled children don’t get?

so?cial?i?za?tion n.
1: the action of establishing on a socialist basis; “the socialization of
medical services” [syn: socialisation]
2: the act of meeting for social purposes; “there was too much
socialization with the enlisted men” [syn: socialisation, socializing, socialising]
3: the adoption of the behavior patterns of the surrounding culture; “the
socialization of children to the norms of their culture” [syn: socialisation, acculturation, enculturation]

When I hear the ever-popular question, “But what about socialization?” I assume the inquirer is talking about definition 3 above, wherein children…er…learn to act like other children.

But most people are appalled at the way children behave today, and anyway we are not raising them to be children. The goal is for them to grow up. We are raising them to become adults (I Corinthians 13:11).

How will that goal be better achieved: by immersing them with other children in the classroom (where, incidentally, they are not supposed to talk or play for a large part of the day), or putting them in real, everyday life with regular full contact with adults and children of various ages in various real-life settings?

Guilt-Free Homeschooling: The Socialization Myth, Part 2
…Scene 1:
Thirty children all approximately the same age, herded together
in a crowded room, all doing exactly the same assignment at exactly the same time to exactly the same instructions, day after day, year after year.
Scene 2:
A handful of children of assorted ages, spread out all over the house and yard, doing independent assignments as they are capable, each lesson tailored to each student’s interests and abilities, with the routine broken frequently for running errands with Mom or attending to family celebrations and/or emergencies.
If Scene 1 appears to you to be more of a sterile “bubble” environment and Scene 2 appears to be different every day, every month, every year, then we agree. Homeschooled kids are the ones who truly live in the real world; public schoolers hear about the real world, but do not really experience it until they leave the institution…

Honestly, I wonder how many people who ask this question have ever met and interacted with an adult (or even a teen or child) who was homeschooled. They are rarely accused of being backward or socially dysfunctional. In fact, they generally interact well with a much wider variety of people than those who went to an age-segregated school.

The argument could be made that homeschooled adults don’t typically share the cultural values of this society. True! We are striving to avoid that very sort of socialization.

Chrisitians are called to look different, act different, be different. We are called to be a light to the world around us. We should not blend into the rest of the world, assimilating the values of society around us. When that happens, Christ says, we are like salt that has lost its savor. We have become useless as Christians.

This is where our worldview affects how we live and how we raise our children, and perhaps this is where we will find no common ground with those who think that public schools are an acceptable and God-honoring way to educate a Christian child.

Back to the well-meaning questioners: Some inquirers are really asking about the 2nd definition of socialization: the act of meeting for social purposes. How often do our children do that? How often should they do that?

Guilt-Free Homeschooling: Socialization and Why You Don’t Need It:

…Once, when asked, “What do you do about socialization?” [my husband] began by simply asking the person if they were referring to “good” socialization or “bad” socialization. That was all he needed to say. The co-worker took that ball and ran with it, saying, “Oh, I know what you mean! My own kid came home the other day, and he told me about what was going on at his school…” The question had been answered, and the distinction had been clearly made in his own mind: there are two types of socialization, and we have control over which type we subject ourselves to.

Once again, I don’t believe that children in public schools have an advantage here. Their interactions with other children are very limited. For most of the day, they sit at a desk and are not allowed to converse or interact with other children. When they do interact, it is almost exclusively with children of their very age – no variety! How does this prepare them for The Real World?

Furthermore, most of their interactions with other children come in situations with very little supervision: recess, restrooms, before school, after school. The Bible tells us that foolishness is wrapped up in the heart of a child (Prov. 22:15) – we don’t necessarily want them leading each other. Remember what happens when the blind lead the blind?

Proverbs speaks often on the subject of companions, how much influence they have upon us, and how carefully they ought to be chosen (try Prov. 13:20, 18:24, and 28:7 for starters) . We need to help our children choose suitable companions and protect them from the foolish ones, until they are old enough and mature enough to recognize and avoid them on their own.

We do not need to send our young and impressionable children out as missionaries: we, the parents, need to be evangelizing other parents. I suspect somebody will want to suggest that we are shortchanging the rest of the children by keeping our Christian children out of the schools. That, too, may be a subject for another day, but suffice it to say our duty is toward our own children. God has charged us to raise them in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, and we feel this is best accomplished by keeping them out of the public schools.

Our children meet often with other people – usually in a family setting. Our homeschooling friends come over to visit. We go visit them. We visit our large extended family. Our church has frequent fellowships, where children and adults of all ages interact freely.

Our children also have frequent interactions with society at large. They go everywhere with me: grocery shopping, where they chat with the clerk or the lady in the canned goods aisle. They also learn some valuable Real Life skills as they help me shop.

They go to the bank; the License Bureau; to work with Dad; to the zoo; to baby showers and birthday parties; to the post office; to the library; to homeschool group meetings; to Home Depot to help select paint – which they then help apply to our home. As they grow in maturity and social skills, they are able and expected to function more and more like adults in such settings.

In each situation, they are interacting with new people in new situations. They are learning about society and culture and appropriate behavior. They are not necessarily learning to conform – that is not necessarily our goal. But they are being socialized – in a good way. During these early, impressionable years, they are being socialized on our terms, to produce the sort of adults that we feel God wants them (and us) to be.

Easy Toffee Candy

Current giveaway: Grandpa Jake's Campfire Cooker

I flipped through my recipe box this morning while breakfast was cooking, and found this old favorite:

Easy Toffee Candy
makes 50 pieces – great for gifts

1 1/4 cups butter, divided
35-40 saltine-style crackers
1 cup dark brown sugar
1 can sweetened condensed milk
1 1/2 cup chocolate chips
3/4 cups finely chopped walnuts

  1. Melt 1/4 cup butter; pour into foil-lined jelly roll pan.
  2. Arrange crackers over butter, evenly spaced.
  3. Melt remaining butter; add sugar and boil 2 minutes, stirring occasionally.
  4. Remove from heat and add condensed milk. Spread over crackers.
  5. Bake at 375 for 10-12 minutes, until bubbly and slightly darkened.
  6. Remove from oven, cool 1 minute, and sprinkle with chocolate chips. Let stand 5 minutes (until chocolate is soft and melty) and spread.
  7. Sprinkle with nuts; press lightly into chocolate.
  8. Cool; refrigerate until chocolate is set.
  9. Remove foil and cut candy.

Yum! Rich, delicious and very impressive, and much faster and easier than it sounds. No one can ever guess the saltine cracker base – it tastes a lot like Almond Roca.

Need to sit down for a minute?

Current giveaway: Grandpa Jake's Campfire Cooker

While you’re waiting for the coffee to finish brewing, plump yourself down in front of the computer and click here for a quick bit of trivia: how common is your surname in the US?
I learned that my maiden name was #6. I had a pretty good idea that it was going to rate pretty high on the popularity scale. When you’re #6, you just know it.
My married name is #17,253. Quite a dive, no? No wonder my family couldn’t spell it for the first 7 years of my marriage. My friends still can’t.
The most common misspelling of our last name is #2167, which makes it quite an understandable mistake and gives me far more sympathy toward those who continue to spell it that way after knowing us for 10 or 12 years. And to those who have known us for a scant 2 years? Don’t worry – you’re still comfortably inside the statue of limitations for learning to spell a really weird surname.
And tip your hat to the Headmistress for sharing this bit of fun with us.

If you must shop hungry…

Current giveaway: Grandpa Jake's Campfire Cooker

Every frugal shopper knows that you should never, ever, never never never shop hungry.
But if you find yourself in that situation, make sure your first stop is the health food store – the one with loads of lovely produce at better-than-WallyWorld prices. There, you’ll be tempted by oranges at 10/$1, shiny red tomatoes, firm fresh cucumbers, 3 different varieties of lettuce, and soft plump avocados at very modest prices. Have a free sample of an orange, and a bite of wholesome bread to take the edge off your hunger. Not a freezer pizza or french fry box in sight.
You might also come home with the makings for several nice batches of homemade granola at prices that rival generic quick oats.
Then, go to Costco, where you will find abundant free samples for you and the kiddos to round out the meal. Chicken breast, 3 Cheese and Spinach Ravioli, adorable little quiches, and more. Wrap it up with a single bite of New York cheesecake or some dark chocolate covered dried cranberries, and a tiny styrofoam cup of coffee with hazlenut cream.
Now you can shop sensibly. Now you’re ready for WallyWorld.

My Hardworkin’ Man is workin’ ‘em hard!

Current giveaway: Grandpa Jake's Campfire Cooker

ants My Hardworkin’ Man is workin’ ‘em hard!
Take a peek at My Hardworkin’ Man (in the burgundy shirt) and 3 of my darling daughters over at Doug Phillip’s blog. Hubby has the Vision Forum warehouse running like a well-oiled machine, and it is amazing to see the teamwork in action!
I stopped in today just after lunch and saw them at their best. It was a sight to behold! Non-stop motion everywhere I looked, and the steady satisfying hiss of cardboard boxes sliding on and off and up and down the conveyor. If you imagine that a house with 7 young children is a busy place, stop in at Vision Forum sometime in December. You’ll realize what an idyllic life I lead – all I need is a bag of bon-bons, and I’ll feel properly guilty for all my free time.
My two big girls had a little thrill of their own today as they helped pack wholesale orders. They each got to enclose a personal note to Crystal (a semi-celebrity in their world – someone I suspect they would love to meet for a mocha…or maybe a cocoa) before sending her order out the door.