Happy New Year!

Happy New Year everyone.  Today is the first day of 2012!   I wonder what this year will hold for me and my family.  I’m trying not to have any preconceived expectations because this year will inevitably be a year of change.  But as Price Pritchett said, “Change always comes bearing gifts” and I do believe that to be true. After all, last year was full of changes and I received so many blessings I would never have expected.  I start this year with a new job and I am getting settled into a new routine which feels good.  I am excited to have the time to start blogging again and am already planning a few things I want to try.

For a while now I’ve been wanting to make a gingerbread centerpiece.  I had plans to make them and give them as gifts to a few people. So I shopped and shopped to find small candles.  I made the dough and baked the cookies.  And then life got a bit out of control and I had to work all through Christmas.  Needless to say, the centerpieces didn’t get made.   This weekend I looked at my gingerbread cookies and decided that rather than throw it all away, I would try to make them into New Year’s centerpieces.  They aren’t what I would have made if the circumstances were different, but I was happy with them all the same.

I wish you all a happy new year and hope that each of  you can find peace and happiness in your lives.

 

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St. Paul Classic

My family had such a great time this last weekend riding in the St. Paul Classic.  This is something that my kids and I decided that we wanted to do several months ago.  We really hadn’t ridden our bicycles for quite a while, so we decided it would be the perfect goal to get us a little more active and healthy.  Marshall had recently undergone his surgery so we figured he could be our support person and hopefully join us next year.  But as we got excited about cycling, Marshall did too and he joined us on our preparatory rides.  He has had such an amazing recovery and has progressed so far in just a few months.  As it became clear that Marshall would be joining us on the ride, we thought it would be fun to ride as a team and promote awareness for organ transplant too.  We had quite a few people ask us about our jerseys and it was pretty exciting to tell them that Marshall had his transplant just 101 days before.  We ended up having great weather and the ride was a lot of fun.

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Curtis Stone’s Low Cal Cupcakes

This past year has been a little stressful for me.   And when I saw a “little” stressful, I mean that sarcastically.  In reality, this past year has been MASSIVELY stressful.  Which is not good for an emotional eater.  What’s crazy is that I didn’t even realize until last month how much emotional eating I had been doing.  I mean I knew my clothes were a fitting a little tighter and alL — but when I  stepped on the scale at the doctor’s office I just about had a heart attack right there.  That was it.

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Mini Fondant Cakes

I am posting today in honor of my grandmother, Stella Buck.  I have many fond memories of visiting her while I was growing up.  Her birthday was the day after mine and it always felt special that our birthdays were so close together.

Grandma had six children and they all had large families so I remember lots of cousins at our family gatherings.  My favorite memories are of our Christmas Eve party with the entire family.   We would always read the nativity story, peel oranges by the fire and of course open gifts.  One Christmas that stands out in my mind is the year that she sewed each of the grandchildren a robe.  It felt so special that she had selected the fabric for each person and spent so much time to make them.

Grandma was an excellent seamstress which was a very useful talent to have when raising a young family during difficult times.  At that time flour came in fabric bags with different patterns on them and she would use them to sew shirts for her boys.  Her friends and family would give her old coats and men’s slacks and she would  remake them into clothing for her children. She spent many hours teaching my mother to sew and when my mother got married they sewed her wedding dress together.

Grandma also had a talent for baking.  She was well known in her church for the pies that she would make and also made great bread and rolls.  In addition, she would spend each summer canning fruit so that it could be used the rest of the year.

My grandmother was very active in her church and set a wonderful example of how a person should live.  I used to love to stay at her house and go to church with her.  She taught the young children for many years and she had a great desire to go on a mission.   As soon as she and my grandpa could retire they committed to go.  It was while she was in the mission training center that she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer.  Grandma insisted that she wanted to continue with her plans even though it meant receiving chemo therapy while being away from home and living in another state.  After about six months her health forced her to return home and she died several months later.

I feel like she was cheated out of so much of her life.  So many people look forward to the time that they retire and she never got to enjoy that time when it came.  I was newly married when she died and so we never got to have that adult relationship and she never got to see my children.  I am joining in Frosting for the Cause in the hopes that some day doctors will be able to detect ovarian cancer much earlier so that mothers and grandmothers can be with their families.

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Mini Fondant Cakes

Because I remember my grandmother being such a good seamstress I decided to decorate some cakes with a sewing theme.

Begin by baking two layers of cake in quarter sheet pans.  Since my daughter is allergic to milk, I like to use a dairy free cake recipe I got from milkallergymom.  The recipe is:

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Dairy Free Chocolate Cake

1.5 c flour
1 c sugar
1/4 cup cocoa powder
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp vinegar
1 tsp vanilla
1/3 cup oil
1 c cold water

Heat oven to 350 degrees. Combine ingredients and pour into greased 8″ or 9″ square pan. Bake in oven until done, about 20 minutes.

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While your cake is baking you can prepare your fondant so that it will be all set when you are ready. Recently I’ve been using homemade marshmallow fondant.  It has a great taste and is so much cheaper than storebought.  The recipe is readily available online but there is a great tutorial by Cookies&Cups here.

After the cake is cooled, put the two layers together with frosting between.  Cover the cake with saran wrap and refrigerate overnight.

The next morning, make your mini cakes by using a 2″ round cutter and cut out as many rounds of cake as you can.  Lightly ice the tops and sides of the mini cakes.  Now cut out fondant circles with a large round cutter (about 4-1/2″) and smooth down over each cake, and trimming nicely around the bottom.

To make the lace you can use a fondant mold or use regular lace from the store.  I would like to show you how to use store bought lace to make a fondant border.

Purchase real lace the width that you desire.  When purchasing the lace, think about what pattern would impress well and not be too difficult to cut.  For example, I stayed away from large scalloped edges because I wanted to be able to make a straight cut and still have it look good.  If you are just making one large cake then you might not mind cutting a detailed edge but since I was making numerous cakes I wanted to keep it simple.

 

Roll the fondant out to about 1/4″ thick and lay the lace down on the fondant.  I found it was best to cut about three pieces each time I rolled the fondant.  Once the lace is in place, roll the fondant roller over the lace, pressing down fairly hard as you roll.

You can pull the lace off at this point or wait until the end to pull it off which actually gives it a little more stability while you are working with it.  Make straight cuts along the impressed edge with a pizza cutter.

If you want to add some decoration and make it look even more like lace, use a decorating tip to cut out holes or designs in the lace. Again, this can be quite time consuming so it depends on how much detail you would like. Use a paintbrush to push the small dots out of the tip.

 

Top the cakes with fondant flowers and buttons. I really enjoyed making these mini cakes and I took them to the Sandra J. Schulze American Cancer Society Hope Lodge.  This is a wonderful place where cancer patients who travel to Mayo Clinic can stay while receiving treatment.

 

 

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Frosting for the Cause

I am pleased to have a guest posting today over at Frosting for the Cause.  The purpose of this site is to raise funds for cancer research and to raise awareness of how we are each touched by cancer.  In addition to making a monetary donation each participant bakes something, donates it to a local cancer hospice, and then blogs about what they made.

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Two Decades

Tell me it isn’t true! Twenty years ago my baby girl was born and now she’s a beautiful grown woman. Age certainly changes your perspective of time. When I was expecting, I receive some advice from someone who had a five year old. I remember thinking not only that this person’s advice was rather dated since it was FIVE whole years ago, but it also seemed like it would be a lifetime before my own baby turned five.

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The Gift

For the last two years we have been waiting to receive something.  We weren’t sure when or if it would actually ever arrive.  The reason for the wait was not the price of this object, because we didn’t exchange money for it; yet the value was actually priceless.  It wasn’t a collector’s item or even an antiquity.  In fact, this particular item surfaces each and every day, but literally gets thrown away.  So why did we have to wait so long to receive it?  Because a selfless stranger had to give it to us as a gift.

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Twenty Six and Counting

Today Marshall and I celebrated our 26th wedding anniversary. You know how holidays and special days go — some rate higher than others.  For example, for our 20th Anniversary we flew to England where we stayed  in a beautiful hotel and explored the city of York.  Now that was pretty awesome and quite frankly it’s pretty hard to top.  But I have to tell you that today’s celebration was pretty special even in comparison to that.  We didn’t leave the country or even the city for that matter.  

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April Showers. . .

 

I cannot believe that it is already April.  Don’t get me wrong — I am not at all sad that we are leaving the cold weather behind. But time has just been flying by these past few months.   It has been a bit blustery the last few days but then I suppose that is what spring is all about.  We’ve all heard the saying, “April Showers brings May flowers!”

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How Sweet It is

I am so lucky to have spent the last 25 years married to my best friend.  Through those years we have experienced so much in life.  We have raised a family, pursued our dreams, struggled and succeeded, enjoyed life together and had a lot of fun.   So it’s been difficult for me to adjust to living with hubby’s chronic illness and the uncertainty that our future holds.  The empty nest years have hardly been what we planned and dreamed of  — at least not yet.

These days I try to focus on the many blessings we have and the little things we enjoy each day.  Yesterday I had an especially sweet moment and I wanted to share it.  I was at the hospital visiting hubby who has been there for the past week. Late in the afternoon I started to feel a headache coming on so I took some pain reliever and waited.  Before long my headache turned into a full blown migraine.  My head felt like it was going to explode into a million pieces and I actually welcomed the idea of that happening if it would stop the pain.  Hubby knew that I really needed to lay down and so he suggested that I lay down next to him.   The pain continued to rage and before I knew it Marshall left the room and returned with an ice pack for me.  Not only that, but he walked down to the patient lounge and bought me a soda and pretzels.  Now how many women are lucky to have a husband who is that thoughtful and caring at any time but especially when he is in the hospital and needing to be cared for himself?  Yes,  I consider myself one of the luckiest girls in the world and I am so grateful for a husband who makes my life so sweet.

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