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Posts Tagged ‘Shopping’

A breakfast.

Breakfast for a Crowd

Weekend guests?  Here’s a great way to simplify breakfast and let everyone make their own choices.  Have your guests write their names on quart-size plastic freezer bags with permanent magic marker.

Crack two eggs into the bag (not more than two); shake to combine them.  Put out a variety of ingredients such as cheeses, ham, onion, green pepper, tomato, hash browns, salsa, etc.  Each guest adds prepared ingredients of choice to his or her bag and shakes.  Make sure to get the air out and close it.  Place the bags in rolling boiling water for exactly 13 minutes.  You usually cook six to eight bags in a large pot.

Open the bags, and the mixture will roll out easily.  Be prepared for everyone to be amazed.  Nice to serve with fresh fruit and coffee cake;  everyone gets involved in the process, and it’s a great conversation piece.

These bags can be prepared the night before and really speed up breakfast preparation.

Source: Heloise Hints

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Thursday’s Top Ten

I was driving around at the Jersey Shore and discovered a wonderful Oldies radio station, 1410 AM.  Apparently the love songs from my high school days are indelibly printed in my memory bank because although I can’t tell you what I had for dinner two nights ago, I can remember all the words to all the songs that were playing on the radio.  I just hope this isn’t the first stage of dementia where you can only recall the far past and are lost in the present!!

Anyway, as I was cruisin’ and singing to myself, I wondered whether my kids would be able to remember songs from their teenage days 4o+ years later…and did their music actually have words (that you could understand) and more importantly, did they have songs like we (that’s the royal “we”) did?  Songs that you could totally identify your love relationship (or lack thereof) with? Songs you could cry to, songs that you would play over and over and over again on your hi-fi?

So I thought a little nostalgic visit to the Golden Oldies would be a super Thursday’s Top Ten list. Hope these titles take you back to happier carefree time in your life!

oldies, the 60's, love songs, The Shirelles, Johnny Mathis, Bobby Vinton, Connie Francis, Leslie Gore, Vicky Carr

Remember the Romance

  1. It’s My Party- by Leslie Gore
  2. My Boyfriend’s Back – by The Angels
  3. Soldier Boy The Shirelles
  4. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow? by The Shirelles
  5. I Love How You Love Me – Bobby Vinton
  6. Lipstick on Your Collar – Connie Francis
  7. It Must Be Him – Vicky Carr
  8. Love Will Keep Us Together – Captain & Tenille
  9. Chances Are – Johnny Mathis
  10. Hurt So Bad – Little Anthony and the Imperials

SEND IN YOUR OWN FAVORITE LOVE/ANGST  SONGS FROM THE 60’s!!!

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Thursday’s Top Ten

Colds and Fevers: Hot water with lemon or hot lemonade will help relieve cold symptoms.  The steam from the hot liquids will help unclog congested nasal passages.  Adding honey to your tea will soothe a sore throat.

Skin Care: Slather on petroleum jelly (Vaseline) to moisturize C skin cheaply and effectively.  A 1991 University of California study showed that petroleum jelly actually repairs skin cells.

Wrinkle Remover: Beat two egg whites to meringue consistency;  apply to your face and leave on for 20 to 30 minutes.  Rinse with cool water.  The protein in the egg whites temporarily tightens pores for a more youthful look.  You’ll be wrinkle-free for an hour and half before turning back into Cinderella.

Warts: Rub castor oil on flat warts with a cotton swab twice a day until they disappear.

Guard Against Infection: Use honey to help promote healing of skin wounds.  Clean wound thoroughly, apply honey, and bandage securely.  Unprocessed honey (straight from the hive) works best at killing bacteria.

Oral Care: Chew on a sprig of fresh parsley for fresh breath.

Canker Sores: Relieve the pain of a canker sore and help it heal faster by squeezing the excess water from a teabag that’s been immersed in a glass of tepid water and applying it to the sore for a few minutes.

Headaches: Rub a mentholatum  ointment on your forehead and cover with an ice pack on a cold wet washcloth to ease a sinus headache.  It’s soothing and it helps open up the nasal passages.

Hiccups: Swallow a spoonful of sugar in one gulp with no water.

Stomach Upsets: Sip strong chamomile tea (steeped 10-15 minutes) if you have an upset stomach.  Peppermint or spearmint tea also soothe tummies, or try adding a few drops of spirit of peppermint to water or food.

petroleum jelly, vaseline

Vaseline Petroleum Jelly

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eFinley, Papa Pete, Finny

Finny and Papa Pete

The old glasses in the eye trick sent Finley into spasms of giggles.   The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree because her mother used to crack up every time Peter did this for her at the dinner table.  Generational fun.

Finley, making brownies with Gigi, licking the bowl

Scraping the bowl

One afternoon I had Finley over so we could make brownies together.  She really got into it;  she poured all of the dry ingredients, put the egg in and did some mixing too!

Finny, Finley Ray, licking the spoon, making brownies, Gigi

Licking the spoon

Looking at this photo brings back memories of my own childhood.  I remember getting to lick the spoon or beaters after my mother made cookies or a cake.  More generational fun!

Starbucks, blackberry, Finley Ray, Finny

"I have to take this call"

I took Finley to Starbucks and she took my blackberry.  We often go together to Starbucks where it’s chocolate milk for her and a grandé Americano for me.

Papa Pete,Finley ray, Finny, reading

Let's Pick Another One to Read

Finley loves her booksshe reads to herself, has her favorites and of course loves to be read to by Papa Pete.

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Last weekend, I was delighted to have Finley stay with us at the cottage.  Well the idea of having her here was exciting.  However, once the crib, the booster chair, the stroller, her suitcase,  the cats in their crates, the food, my bag, Peter’s bag, the other food bag, the blue bag (which carries so many things), the hanging clothes and the clean laundry and her car seat…WELL, really!!!!

Ok so I digress – we joined our friends, Susan & Jim and Joe & Michael for a “catch-up meet-up brunch” at Nagle’s.  We hadn’t seen each other in  a while due to who was sick, who was traveling and who hadn’t been in town.  And I wanted to see Michael before he left for California.  Peter’s birthday was at the end of February, Joe’s birthday had been in the week before AND moved into a new apartment. Michael left his job in CA and was going to be moving to NYC with Joe,and little Miss Fin was in town – so, Let’s Celebrate!

Jim got a large sheet cake with a  BIG RAINBOW on it-this is a running insider joke between them.  So I gave Joe a birthday card with a rainbow, a congratulations on your new home and new job card and Susan added Peter’s name to the birthday cake.

Happy Birthday, Joe Lugo, Peter, Nagle's, brunch
Happy Birthday Joe! and Peter too

photo by Lori

Joe Lugo, Peter Press, Nagle's, sunday brunch

Cutting the cake

photo by Lori

Joe Lugo, Finley Ray, Finny, Nagle's

Finley and Uncle Joe

photo by Lori

You can see where the first cut was made and if you look at the first picture, you can see that the rainbow is on the opposite side of the cake – Finny wanted a piece of cake with the blue rainbow. Even if we wanted to accomodate her request, it would have been hard to extricate one piece of cake out of the middle – Problem solved.  How about a piece of  cake and Gigi will cut a piece of the blue rainbow and put in it on your piece?  “OK” , she says.

Finley Ray Clark,Finny, blue rainbow, Nagle's

I Want the Blue Rainbow

photo by Lori

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Castor and Pollux

The Gemini Twins

Last week I told you I had discovered an Hors D’Oeuvre Cookbook written in the “80’s and it listed 52 reasons to hold a party or celebration.  At first I thought it was meant to be the 52 weeks of the year but I was wrong – It’s just 52 reasons to celebrate and not weeks because of course some holidays fall close together, duh!

So here is reason #11 – Starting A Diet Tomorrow We all eat and drink like it’s our last meal!  Big portions, comfort food served family style.   Count me in.

Here’s a little personal anecdote;  I used to blame it on my astrological sign, Castor and Pollux – those souls of opposing views and ultimate indecision because sit me down in front of  a menu especially a large one and I just can’t make  up my mind as to what I want.  This could go on for 15 minutes until my husband would say, “This probably isn’t your last meal”.


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It’s not that it seems like yesterday…but hard to believe it was more than a half a century ago that as a young girl growing up in the ’50’s, my friends and I played and amused ourselves with toys and pastimes from a simpler time.   I know I sound like a cliché and an echo of my own parents telling me of their childhoods in the early part of the 20th Century.  My youth was spent in the second half of that century and now I’m observing the toys, games and amusements of my granddaughter- born in this, the 21st Century.

I don’t know how big a part economics played in the toys we played with as children but  I’m sure it it did. Things are different with my granddaughter as they were when my daughter was raised.

aggies, dibs, clearies, slags, swirlies

Aggies

Let’s step back in time to the 1950’s, to a neighborhood populated by WWII veterans and their families;  My friends and I were post-war babies; future boomers in a simpler time and place.

red ball,

Paddle Ball

  1. Baseball cards A nickel a pack with a sheet of pink cardboard that passed off as bubble gum.  Yes even us girls had some baseball cards – ok well I may have had few more than my girlfriends because I was tomboy.  Anyway, each player leaned a card against a wall; then we would stand back and take turns tossing a card into the leaners, the cards that missed stayed on the floor and became part of the pot which would go to the winner.
  2. Paddle BallA really simple and extremely common toy.  Consisting of a wooden paddle with a small red ball attached to it by a long piece of elastic.  The idea – keep the ball in the air by whacking it with the paddle, the winner was whoever hit the ball the most times consecutively.
  3. Water Pistols –  The best summer toy on a hot day.  Colorful plastic guns; some in the shape of derringers and space guns.  NO large gatling guns, no blasters or rocket launchers – just a small pistol packed full of surprise and fun.
  4. Bubbles I know the kids today still play with bubbles, I’ve seen Finley (my granddaughter) get so excited over the magic of  blowing that produced iridescent globes floating in the air.   Today I was in a Dollar Store and saw quarts of bubble liquid for sale.  Maybe for the little old lady who lived in shoe. However, when I was a kid and your bubbles ran out, you tried to make your own solution from Mom’s liquid dish soap – it never really worked very well.
  5. Kites Kites were the harbingers of Spring along with jump ropes.  Our kites were the usual kite shape and made with richly-colored tissue paper usually with black lettering and I think most of us had Hi-Flyers. Once in a while I would see a box kite and as I got a little older, the kites were sporting designs such as stars and stripes and there were plastic kites too.  Now the good part (for me); my father used to make kites for me.  He had a super workshop in the basement, he would cut the wood and fashion the kite body out of road maps.   They were bigger than the store bought ones  with really long tails.  Then he would string it, balance it and make me  a wooden handle to wrap the kite string around.  Now, that was love…the time he spent making the kite and making sure I was involved in some aspect.  He could have just gone to Woolworth‘s or S.S. Kresge’s but then I would have never had this wonderful memory.
  6. Sledding – I mean on a real sled!  All of us had sleds with red runners, wooden slat seats, the best being a Flexible Flyer.  Hours and hours and then some more hours were spent hauling our sleds up Spencer Drive which had a huge hill.  I guess the town snow plows didn’t get down to blacktop because we always seemed to have enough snow to slide.  Snow days meant sledding until you were wet and cold and then having hot chocolate at one of our houses.  And then…well because we were all future baby boomers with post-war fathers, our dads were young enough to think it was fun to go sledding at night.  Young and the fact that most of them had the kind of job that didn’t require them to work late and they didn’t bring the job home with them either.  So after supper, we would often meet up again and go sliding with our dads.  Priceless memories of shrieking at breakneck speed on a mixture of ice and snow holding on tight to Dad.
  7. Flying a Wooden Airplane – Balsa wood Gliders were another Springtime and Summer treat.  Often a party favor or a reward for being good…these ubiquitous and ingenious little airplanes were everywhere.  The kit cost 10 cents! No need to read the instructions because all you had to do was rip open the packaging, slide the wing through the slot in the body and insert the tail fin and you were ready to pilot your plane through loops, nose-dives and distance races with your friends.  The Guillow company perfected a mass-production process and distribution to the chain stores like J.J. Newbury’s, Woolworth’s, Kresge’s etc.
  8. Punks – Not exactly a toy but truly a summer evening pastime.  I’m not sure where we got the Cattails, there must have been some swampy area nearby because we used to light the Cattails which we called punks and probably pretend we were smoking  keeping mosquitoes away.
  9. Shooting Marbles – Collecting them, trading them and playing with them, marbles were great fun.  I loved aggies which for me was the catchall name for any marble that wasn’t one of the new Cat’s Eyes marbles. The marbles were opaque with brilliant colors and designs;  they were swirls, clearies, slags and solids. I remember two games we used to play; one involved a circle drawn in the dirt or if you were inside, you could  make a circle out of string and the idea of the game was to use your shooter  and knock the marble out of the ring thereby winning them.  We also used to play a game which was like marble golf – you had to shoot your marble into a small hole in the ground.
  10. Parachute Blow Tube – You might get this really inexpensive and cheaply made toy at the 5 cent &10 cent or as a party favor! A little paper man was attached to a thin red plastic parachute .  The man and parachute fit into a narrow cardboard tube and you blew him out and up in the air.  You could also make your own.;  my father made me a parachute out of one of his white handkerchiefs and instead of a paper man, he strung a metal nut on it.   I could toss it high up in the air and it would come floating down beautifully.
  11. Check out a previous blog post about the Top Ten Toys from my childhood, https://pbenjay.wordpress.com/2010/10/21/thursdays-top-ten-toys-from-my-childhood/

sledding, sliding in the snow, snow days,

Flexible Flyer

balsa wood glider, glider kit

Balsa Wood Glider

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