Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Back to Blogging with Black Cat Cookies!

It's been a long, long time since I posted anything new here.  The year 2012 has been filled with challenges, but life seems to be settling back to a comfortable routine and I found myself missing blogging.  Last week I put some pictures of our Halloween Black Cat Cookies on Facebook. They generated some interest and, I hope, a lot of smiles. Some friends asked for the recipe, so here it is complete with a few pictures.


Black Cat Cookies
1 c. butter, softened 
2 c. sugar
2 eggs
3 t. vanilla extract
3 c. all-purpose flour
1 c. baking cocoa
1/2 t. baking powder
1/2 t. baking soda
1/2 t. salt
48 candy corn candies
24 red-hot candies

Preheat oven to 350 F.  In a mixing bowl, cream butter and sugar.  Beat in eggs and vanilla.  Combine the flour, cocoa, baking powder, baking soda and salt; gradually add to the creamed mixture.  

Roll dough into 1-1/2 inch balls. Place 3 inches apart on lightly greased baking sheets.
Pinch tops of cookies to form ears.
Flatten with a glass dipped in sugar.

To make whiskers, press a fork twice into each cookie. 

Bake at 350  F. for 10 -12 minutes or until cookies are set.  Remove from oven; immediately press on candy corn for eyes and red-hots for noses.  Remove to wire racks to cool.  Makes 2 dozen.

Tips:
I have made these with 1/2 butter and 1/2 Crisco.  They are good, but better tasting and more moist with all butter. 

I have also made them with 1/2 the sugar called for in the recipe. They were good, but a bit dry and "dark chocolate" tasting. They also didn't seem to bake up into as large a cookie. I have also made them with 1/2 the sugar and added Agave Nectar with good success. 

I use a Pampered Chef cookie dough scoop to form the dough into balls.  Use a generous scoop!  Make the dough balls big enough or the cat faces will be too small and you won't have enough room to push the candies into the freshly baked cookie.  If you don't have a cookie dough scoop, think "golf ball" sized handful of dough.

It's important to not overbake. Recipe says 10-12 minutes, but know your oven! I bake mine 9 minutes.  If they are in too long, you'll not be able to press the candies in without cracking the surface of the cookie.  I let them sit on the hot cookie sheet for 2-3 minutes after I quickly get the candies in place.  This allows them to finish "baking" and firm up. If you remove them to the cooling rack too soon, they will not make the trip well. 

It's important to work quickly when pushing the candies into the hot cookies. I only bake 6 at a time so I can get them all done before the cookies cool too much to accept and melt the candies.  If the candy doesn't go into a hot cookie, it may not stick.  I have had to use merigue powder to make a kind of "glue" to get the candy to adhere when I didn't get them pushed into the cookies fast enough.  Work quickly, but be careful not to burn yourself on the hot cookie sheet (spoken from experience....)

There you have it!  It's not rocket science, just cookie baking, but I have figured a few things out from making them so many times.  The only thing I haven't figured out is how to make them last longer once they are in the house.  


Whisker-less kitty!  I forgot a step! 
This recipe was originally published in the Muskegon Chronicle and was passed on to me by my dear friend Marilyn Kingsley.   

  

Monday, December 19, 2011

Then and Now


Six years ago on December 19th we were driving through the Texas panhandle in a horrible ice storm.  We were on our way to Phoenix for Laura and Kourosh's wedding.  If you've been following the weather you know that this week on December 19th there was a terrible snowstorm in that same area.  It made me remember the events from 6 years ago, and then think about how much has changed since then!


When we finally arrived in Phoenix on December 21, 2005 we marveled at the 80 degree weather. We enjoyed a beautiful day for Laura and Kourosh's wedding, which was two days before Christmas. I thought a holiday without snow and cold would seem "wrong," but I was wrong!  It was lovely!  We enjoyed walking to and from Christmas Eve service that year in short-sleeved shirts - no jackets!  We laughed at how funny inflatable decorations looked in yards with crushed granite as opposed to snow (or even grass).  But then, those blow up things are funny-looking anywhere, aren't they?  We exchanged gifts Christmas morning with the front door opened.  It was different, special, and wonderful to experience the holiday in a new, fresh, sunny way.
  




















In the past 6 years, we've been privileged to enjoy the beauty of the desert! We gained our second son-in-law. We adopted Calder after 20 years without a dog! Tom retired from the State of Michigan and got a new job in Phoenix. After 56 years of living in Michigan (32 of them in Muskegon), we moved 2,200 miles from everything and everyone that was familiar.  We traded our "dream house" for a desert cottage. We gained a grandson...and then another...and another...and another!  We adopted Abby (are we nuts??). And to top it all off, our four grandsons were joined by a granddaughter just a month before Christmas.  Blessings upon blessings.... well, maybe except the dogs... just kidding... maybe...?
      
I wish we could see each and everyone of you during the holiday season.  We will have a great Christmas celebration with that nice family who live around the corner from us, but you'll all be in our thoughts.  And no, we won't miss the snow. Seriously. Not one little bit.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

A Tasty Thanksgiving

Where has the time gone? I meant to share Thanksgiving pictures!  We got distracted after Adele made her arrival. Now, I realize it's way past Thanksgiving because our sweet baby (born two days before T'day) has just turned three weeks old. We had some tasty food that day and everything turned out so pretty -- I had to take pictures of our dinner.

My kids think I'm funny because I photograph holiday and special occasion meals. Surely I'm not the only person who does this? I've seen more than one photo from my childhood of a holiday turkey being carved by my father.  Or pix of the family gathered around my Grandma's Easter buffet - complete with butter lamb!  So, that makes me a third generation food photographer (as opposed to someone who is so obsessed with food that they have to save pictures of it). 

But enough chatter.....Here's a sampling of our feast!  Grab a plate and help yourself.

Golden Roasted Turkey
Sweet Potato Checkerboard Casserole

Chili Cheese Corn for a Southwestern Flavor

Dinner's Ready! 
Cranberry Sauce and Pecan Pie
Green Bean Casserole is a traditional favorite.

Laura set a pretty table. 
Ryan likes turkey!

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Thanksgiving Bundle of Joy

We are so thankful to announce the arrival of our fifth grandchild and very first granddaughter! She was born to our son and his wife on November 22, just in time for Thanksgiving Day. 

Her name is Adele Elizabeth and she is a sweet and tiny baby at 7 lbs 3 oz and 19 inches long.  

I have spent nearly as much time on Expedia.com (searching for affordable holiday airfare) as I have gazing at pictures of her beautiful face. We are so eager to meet her in person and hold her in our arms!  But, for the present, I will have to content myself with working on her nursery window curtains and then a little pink quilt to go with them.

Babies are such a blessing.  We treasured the birth of each of our three children and find these grandchildren to be equally, if not even more, precious.  Here are a few verses from one of my favorite Psalms:

 Children are a heritage from the LORD,
offspring a reward from him.
Like arrows in the hands of a warrior
are children born in one's youth.
Blessed is the man
whose quiver is fully of them.
Psalm 127:3-5


I'd paraphrase those verses and say, "Blessed are the grandparents..." because that's just how we feel - 
blessed.


Happy Thanksgiving!

Friday, November 18, 2011

Vacation Memories - Autumn 2011

We enjoyed a trip to the Midwest last month!  The weather was beautiful nearly every day and, though it was late October, autumn colors were still lovely.  Each stop was 
filled with family, friends, fun & food.  


We started our vacation at a favorite B&B.
The donuts were so tasty!

We played cars.....

.....and trucks with Peter.

We read Grammy's Nook.

We did a bit of gardening.

We read Grammy's Nook some more.

We went to a special party.

We visited friends.

We did some cooking with Caleb.


We cooked some more.

And then we even cooked a bit more!

We shopped at a favorite tourist attraction.

We enjoyed the beauty of Michigan autumn.

We walked on the shores of Lake Charlevoix.

We spent a lot of time here, drinking coffee & chatting with Mom. 

We are already looking forward to our next visit home. 

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Happy 10th Anniversary to the Borgers!

Tami & Jeremy have their wedding quilt!  The happy couple were married in June 2001 and I just finished their gift. It may be the first and last wedding quilt I ever make. Oh, the pressure! Every anniversary that passed made me feel more guilty.  No pressure from these dear friends, mind you, but I knew they were looking forward to receiving it.  Little did I dream when I started this project that it would take me so long and they would have 4 children by the time I gave it to them.

When we arrived at their front door and knocked, we heard excited little voices shouting, "They're here!"  Wow, what a welcome we got!  The children were SO excited.  And I think the grown-ups (us included) were, too. We last saw each other at our grandson Caleb's first birthday party, which was over a year and a half ago.  It was time for a good visit!

Of course, as little kids will do, they had to bring out all manner of their most prized possessions to show us.  I always think that is the way children express they are glad to see someone.  They may not have the words to say, "I've missed you" or "It's so nice to see you again" so they put their favorite toys in your lap instead.  It's so sweet.  We visited for awhile and then it was time for the big presentation!
I think they like it!  

Those children were so excited you'd have thought that quilt was a magic carpet or something equally wondrous.  They hugged it, rolled around on it, poured over every square all the while giggling their hearts out.. "What does this one say?" "Look at the kitties!"  "There's dogs over here."  "Whose name is that?" So many questions and so much fun.  We spent a considerable amount of time examining the names on the signature blocks, words and shapes I had hidden in the quilting and scripture verses I had written on unsigned blocks.  It made me feel better about being so late with this gift, for had I completed it in a more timely fashion, there would not have been these delightful children to enrich the process of giving it.  

Burying stray threads with the kiddos

It's a simple quilt of nine-patch blocks comprised of rail fence blocks and solid squares.  Tami and I sat together by the fireplace in my family room (way back when we still lived in Michigan and they weren't yet married!) and sorted through my fabric stash, choosing colors and prints she liked.  That afternoon is still a pleasant memory for me, as is the memory of their beautiful wedding day on the shores of Lake Michigan.  

Tami wanted the quilt to be colorful and cheerful and that's just how it turned out. The fabrics were chosen in friendship and the blocks were signed with good wishes, blessings and love. Then all was stitched together (...slowly...) with more of the same in my sunny Arizona sewing room.  I like to think there's a lot of sunshine sewn right into that quilt.  I know there's a lot of love. 

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

T-Shirt Ringlet Scarf (or Grammy Is Feeling Crafty)

Strips cut from old T-shirts


I found this clever project on a couple of blogs recently.  It's a scarf made from old 
T-shirts!  It looked easy, fun, and seemed like a good way to use something that was headed for the the rag bag anyway. 
Candy Corn T-Shirt Scarf 






Here's the finished product on the left.  My results were not quite as nice as the two blog scarves.  It looks rather like a Halloween-style Hawaiian lei, don't you think??  But, I like it and will wear it when we go to a Pumpkin Patch with another grandson next week!







Makes me hungry for candy corn!
If you have old T-shirts you'd like to cut up and a little free time, complete instructions are available here:

http://www.kevinandamanda.com/whatsnew/crafts-projects/make-this-quick-n-easy-ringlet-t-shirt-scarf.html

http://www.cutoutandkeep.net/projects/recycled_tee_circle_scarf

See you in the Pumpkin Patch!