Welcome

I would love to invite you into my home to have a cup of tea with me. We could sit in my sunny kitchen and talk about all the things that are going on in our lives. I could share with you the news I hear from my grown daughters. How my grandkids are growing. We could laugh together over the funny things that they have said. It would be fun to share the ins and outs of our family life, and talk about our latest creative projects. We could share what God has been teaching us, in our personal lives, and encourage each other on this walk of faith. We could pray together, laugh together, and even cry together. Since most of us will never be able to sit down together face to face, I would like to invite you to join me here. So come on in and have a cup of tea with me.

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Joy

Joy

About Me

Crossville, Tennessee, United States
I am a 61 year old, wife, married to my best friend for 40 years. We have been blessed with 6 children, & 13 grandchildren. I love mentoring women in their spritual walk & in the everyday. I have a diverse background, having spent over 30 years living and ministering in a small South American country. Now my family resides in a small town in the lovely state of Tennessee. We have experienced the blessing of adoption, but also the hard of dealing with a child with RAD and other mental health issues. You can live life with the cup half full or half empty the choice is yours. I choose half full.

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Tuesday, March 29, 2016

From the Kitchen...

We enjoyed a turkey dinner for Easter this year.  It's not normally what we have on Easter, but we had a turkey, we didn't use at Christmas time, so decided it would be a good.

We had lots of salads and things that made it seem a bit more "springy"... BUT, I can't imagine having turkey without "stuffing" or "dressing".  

It is often at these times, that I miss being able to go to the grocery store and just get a bag of Pepperidge Farm stuffing mix. :)  Since that isn't possible I drag out my old family cook book, and find my grandmother's recipe.  Once it's made and I taste it, I'm really thankful that I couldn't go and pick up a bag of stuffing mix!!

So in case you live where you can't grab a box or bag of stuffing mix in your grocery store, OR maybe you just want to try you hand at some "homemade", here's a recipe for you!

Ma Coleman's Thanksgiving Dressing

12 slices of white or whole wheat bread cubed and dried out
     (I use crustless bread, and toast it once I get it cut up)
1 recipe of Corn Bread for stuffing, (recipe to follow)
4 to 6 ribs of celery chopped, (about 2 cups)
1 large onion finely chopped, (about 1 cup)
1/2 Cup of fresh parsley or the equivalent of dried.
1 Tablespoon of poultry seasoning
2 teaspoons sage
1 teaspoon of thyme
1 teaspoon of salt
1/2 teaspoon of ground black pepper
2 large eggs beaten
1/2 cup of butter melted
1/2 cup of warm water (can add chicken or turkey broth instead)

Sauté celery and onion in butter, until tender.  Mix everything together, and stuff bird, or spread in a covered casserole or form into balls and place on a cookie sheet.

Bake casserole covered for 30 minutes at 325F.  Uncover and continue baking for 15 min.  If forming balls on a cookie sheet, bake for about 20 to 30 minutes.

Optional:  can add 1 pound of bulk sausage.  Brown it with the onions and celery and omit the butter.  I have also used bacon grease to sauté the veggies.

Cornbread for Stuffing

(this recipe came from a library book years ago)
1 Cup of cornmeal
1 Cup of flour
4 teaspoons of baking powder
1 teaspoon of salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1 Cup of Buttermilk, (or plain yogurt, thinned with milk if very thick)
1 large egg
1/3 Cup of oil

Pre-heat oven to 425F.  Grease an 8 or 9 inch square pan.

Combine dry ingredientes.  Stir in buttermilk, egg and oil, just until mixed.  Pour into prepared pan.  Bake about 20 min.  Cool and crumble for stuffing.

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side note:  My grandmother did not buy or make bread specifically for her dressing.  I remember her having a big "roasting pan" on top of her fridge, and she would throw any "left over" bread... biscuits, cornbread, heels from a loaf of bread, in that pan, and it would dry out and that is what she used for her dressing.


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