Sunday Living History Interview – Far East Prisoners of War – Hilary Custance Green

Reblogged from Smorgasbord

Yellow Hair by Andrew Joyce

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Yellow Hair documents the injustices done to the Sioux Nation from their first treaty with the United States in 1805 through Wounded Knee in 1890. Every death, murder, battle, and outrage written about actually took place. The historical figures that play a role in this fact-based tale of fiction were real people and the author uses their real names. Yellow Hair is an epic tale of adventure, family, love, and hate that spans most of the 19th century.
This is American history.

Yellow Hair on Amazon

Andrew Joyce Author

Be sure to look for Andrew Joyce’s new book on Amazon.  The cover design is really eye-catching.  I am well into it and loving every word.  I believe this is the best thing he’s written yet.

It’s Time to Be Real

Reblogged from Anchors and Butterflies.

Anchors and Butterflies's avatarAnchors and Butterflies

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Good Old Sausage Gravy

If your pants are getting loose and your cholesterol and blood sugar are dropping by the minute, try this great recipe for sausage.gravy.  It will fix you right up.  A word of caution, don’t confuse evaporated and sweetened condensed milk like my son did.  You will have a mess.

Good Old Sausage Gravy

1/2 pound breakfast sausage

1/3 cup flour

3 Tablespoons oil

1 can evaporated milk (not condensed) diluted with 12 ounces of water.

I always cook this in a large cast iron skillet. Scramble sausage in oil over moderate heat, scraping bottom of skillet with spatula continuously.  Sprinkle flour over sausage as it cooks, Continue to cook and stir until scrambled sausage is no longer pink.  Flour should be starting to brown as you cook.  Do not allow to singe.  Stir in milk stirring continuously, taking care not to get burned by steam as you add liquid.  You may have to add more milk to get consistency you desire.  Taste before you season, since sausage may season it perfectly.  Simmer on low about three minutes.  Serve over hot biscuits.

 

Twenty-Seven Biscuits

image imageMother made twenty-seven biscuits for breakfast every morning.  The number wasn’t intentional; that was just how it worked out.   Her recipe wasn’t measured, just experience.  She started out by hollowing out a hole in the flour in her big biscuit-making bowl into which she plopped out shortening scooped by hand straight from the eight pound can and poured in an indeterminate pool of fresh cow milk.  Bravely plunging her right hand in, she squished the glob of shortening through her fingers, working it round till it gathered just enough flour.  She worked the dough carefully, never using all the flour,  thereby letting the gooey mixture adhere to the bottom of the bowl. I thought that looked horrible and never mastered the age-old biscuit making technique that had probably come to her through many generations.

                Once she was satisfied with her mix, she tossed it a time or two to coat with flour, and started pinching off biscuits, which she gave a quick roll or two in her hands before placing smooth side up on her biscuit pan. Finally, she buttered the top of each so they’d brown nicely and popped them in the hot oven.  About twenty minutes later, biscuits!  She always ended up with twenty-seven, though she never measured.  They were wonderful.  The flour-filled biscuit-bowl was covered and went back into the cabinet till the next baking, which would be supper if she didn’t make cornbread.

                I am a biscuit-making coward.  I measure and mix my ingredients in a bowl, dust them with a handful of flour, then pinch them off and roll them out in my hands.  I spray them with cooking spray rather than dipping a spoon in melted butter to butter the tops, but they are still pretty good. 

Age-Old Biscuit Recipe 

(Can be easily doubled or tripled)

Preheat oven to 420 degrees

2 ½ cups self-rising flour (For plain, add 1 ½ teaspoon baking powder and ¼ teaspoon salt PER cup)

½ cup vegetable shortening or softened butter

¾ cup milk (I prefer undiluted fat-free evaporated canned milk.  Note:  this is not the sweetened condensed kind that goes in desserts)

Cooking spray

Mix 2 ¼ cups self-rising flour with shortening or butter.  Stir in up to ¾ cups milk to make gooey, not drippy dough.  Should be about the consistency of mashed potatoes.  Use remaining ¼ cup to dust top of dough, turn dust again.  Pinch out small handful, about ½ cup and roll a time or two in your floured palms.  Turn best side up on greased baking pan.  Spray tops with vegetable or butter spray to enhance browning.  Bake at 450 for 12-15 minutes on center rack. Done when tops are starting to brown nicely and browning can be seen around edges.  Should yield 8-10 biscuits.

These can be rolled out on lightly floured surface and cut with a biscuit cutter if you prefer.  Don’t waste leftover dough.  Roll into strips, butter and sprinkle with cinnamon sugar and bake for five minutes.  Wonderful treat.  I have made entire batch into cinnamon sugar strips for a treat.  Watch carefully to keep from burning.

If you can stand the health risk, put your bacon in on a rack on a cookie sheet to bake on at the same time as your biscuits.  It will all come out perfect at the same time.

If you have leftovers reheat in microwave or slice in half, butter, and toast under broiler.

 

Bungee Jump

This is hilarious.  Reblogged from Ann’s Place.

annj49's avatarAnn's Corner

Get ready to LAUGH!

This place is just 2 hours away from where I live…….so funny!

AJ

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Bobo and the Bloomers(Part 5)

Reblog of old post

lbeth1950's avatarNutsrok

Panties fallingDuring The Great Depression, people had to wear it out, use it up, or make do.  Inner tubes were a valuable commodity, used for everything from cutting into strips to use as elastic for clothes, making overshoes, to wrapping pipes.  They were the duct tape of the era.  One of the favorite stories about Cousin Bobo demonstrated his excellent taste and

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Footloose and Fancyfree (Part 4)

Reblog of old post

lbeth1950's avatarNutsrok

Inez was good company, but didn’t worry much about germs. It kind of bothered Mother when she wiped the baby’s nose with the dish towel and then put it back in the dish pan. After that Mother told Inez not to bother with the dishes. She knew Inez was tired and needed a nap. Mother didn’t like it much when she let the twins run around without

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Tell Me a Story Radio Program Monday

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130-2pm EDT ~ Welcome to Tell Me a Story, today, Linda Swain Bethea! Those who follow her in the blogging world, can attest to the fact that she is a gifted storyteller. Everyone is hooked on her blog Nutsrok. http://www.nutsrok.wordpress.com Linda has recently published her first book, Everything Smells Just Like Poke Salad. This is actually a collaboration with her 88year old mother, Kathleen Holdaway Swain. There’s got to be a good story here and we’re sure to hear it, today on The Magic Happens Radio Network. http://www.blogtalkradio.com/themagichappens

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/themagichappens/2016/09/26/linda-swain-bethea-on-tell-me-a-story