Welcome to Marmee's Pantry

Welcome to Marmee's Pantry

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Word-Filled Wednesday ~#10~ 10/13/10


Join Nancy at A Country Mom & myself & enjoy other Word-Filled Wednesdays! Be sure to let us know, in the comments, if you are joining us!


PASSAGE:
II Cor. 4:4-6 ~~ "The god of this age has blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that they cannot see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, Who is the image of God. For we do not preach ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord, & ourselves as your servants for Jesus' sake. For God, Who said, 'Let light shine out of darkness,' made His light shine in our hearts to give us the light of the knowledge of this glory of God in the face of Christ."


LESSON LEARNED: The news has been filled w/the remarkable rescue of t
he 33 Chilean miners. What an incredible story! Because they have been trapped in nearly complete darkness for the last 69-70 days, they are all coming up w/dark sun-glasses on to shield their eyes from the brightness of sunlight.

I wonder...will any of them recognize the spiritual parallel of their story?


All of us who now have Jesus Christ as our Savior & Lord have been brought up out of an eternal pit of darkness. Only we didn't have to wear sun-glasses to shield our eyes from the SONlight...in our cases, the veil of darkness of LIFTED & NOW we SEE!!

~~II Sam. 22:29 ~ "You are my lamp O LORD; the LORD turns my darkness into light." Amen & AMEN!!!

Blessings from Ohio...Kim<><

HSLDA Responds to Ignorant Attack on Homeschoolers

One more reason to support HSLDA (Home School Legal Defense Association) when you homeschool. I LOVE this letter from an HSLDA lawyer in response to someone's ignorance of homeschooling. This is from Indiana...one of the 7 states blessed w/no regulations. I wish ALL states had their homeschool laws!

Blessings from Ohio...Kim<><

Response to Outrageous Attack on Homeschooling

Recently the Palladium-Item in Richmond, Indiana published an article online entitled “What do we do with home-schoolers?” The article was written by Mr. Tom Stein, the senior pastor of Christ Presbyterian Church in Richmond. In the article Mr. Stein complained that homeschooling in Indiana is too free and easy and that more oversight and regulation would be reasonable. Mr. Stein suggested that parents should have to submit curriculum and participate in standardized tests as well as submit to occasional visits to their home by public school officials.

While Mr. Stein’s reason for his initial concerns appears to do with his allegation that local public school officials were pushing public school dropouts into homeschool programs to lower their dropout rate, his solution for this problem was outrageous. HSLDA attorney Tj Schmidt submitted a letter in response to this article, and it is posted below:

In his letter to the Palladium-Item of October 1, 2010, Mr. Tom Stein, senior pastor of Christ Presbyterian Church in Richmond, Indiana made some ill-informed statements about homeschooling that don’t provide an accurate picture of the homeschooling environment in the great state of Indiana.

Rather than needing to be closely supervised by the public school bureaucracy, as Mr. Stein suggests, via “submission of a curriculum, occasional visits, and participation in the standardized tests,” homeschoolers are, in fact, excelling both academically and socially. In a study titled the Progress Report 2009, students from all 50 states were administered standardized achievement tests. Homeschoolers scored on average 37 percentile points higher than their public school counterparts. Furthermore, the level of government regulation had no impact on the results. Students from states with low regulation such as Texas, Illinois, and Indiana scored the same as students from states with high regulation such as New York and Pennsylvania. The findings of this study were consistent with every other study conducted on homeschooling since its re-emergence as an educational option in the 1980s.

But homeschoolers also excel socially. In the 2004 study Homeschooling Grows Up, homeschoolers were shown to be active members of society and even more involved with their communities then the average public school student. For example, 76% of homeschooled graduates aged 18–24 were found to have voted in a national/state election in the past 5 years compared with just 29% of the general population of 18–24-year-olds.

It seems that Mr. Stein is mistakenly targeting the wrong group. His central complaint is a concern that public school officials are purposefully trying to improve their graduation rates, not by improving the educational environment of the local public schools, but by classifying public school drop-outs as homeschoolers.

While we have also heard that public school officials across the state are encouraging drop-outs to be classified as homeschoolers, Mr.Stein’s solution to crack down on all homeschoolers is not the answer. The focus should be on the conduct of public school administrators and the failure of the public schools to provide an adequate education to those who are struggling with their schools rather than the tens of thousands of homeschooling families who are successfully teaching their children at home in Indiana.

Fortunately, the law is on the side of homeschoolers. As recognized by a number of U.S. Supreme Court decisions, the right of parents to direct the education and upbringing of their children is protected by the liberty clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Also, Indiana recognizes the right of parents to teach their children at home. Under Indiana law, a parent must provide instruction equivalent to that found in the public schools. In fact, the relevant section of Indiana Code states: “It is unlawful for a parent to: (1) fail; (2) neglect; or (3) refuse; to send his child to a public school for the full term as required under this chapter unless the child is being provided with instruction equivalent to that given in the public schools.”

Parents in Indiana who have chosen to teach their children at home are simply exercising their constitutional and statutory rights to do so. And based on the studies of student academic performance, the present level of state regulation of homeschooling in Indiana is more than sufficient.

[all emphasis is mine ~ KW<><]

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

The Simple Woman's Daybook ~#93~ 10/12/10



For Today...

Outside my window...
beautiful, sunny, fall day! We've just hit our height of color so I'm enjoying the beauty of my favorite season while I can.

I am thinking...
of the things I need to do before I go to work.

I am thankful for...
my hard-working, loving, Christian husband. <3

From the kitchen...baking another loaf of flaxseed bread & making laundry detergent.

I am wearing...
jeans & another favorite hoodie from my 'Lakeside' collection.

I am remembering...
how busy our house used to be when the girls were little & we were deep into our homeschool year by now...school work, field trips, ballet, gym...I think I miss it all more than they do! '-)

I am going...to go to work later today. We should be getting in our organic mineral make up line this week & I'm excited! You can take the girl out of the make-up artistry business, but you can't take the make-up artist out of the girl! I LOVE to play in all that color. :-)

I am reading...
Bible: Psalms; & when I have the time: "Jenna's Cowboy", Christian fiction.

I am hoping...
once again, for my DH to find a great job.

On my mind...I am waiting, expectantly, on answered prayer! :-)

I am creating...
a peaceful, Christ-centered home.

I am hearing...
radio, typing fingers, the rustling of leaves blowing in the wind outside my window.

Noticing that...
the wooly worms around here are almost completely black! Yikes! That means a very cold winter. :-/

Pondering these words..."If you pray & aren't waiting expectantly on the answer...then why pray?" ~Kim Wolf<>< :-)

Around the house...
general pick up, laundry...I need to take the scissors to Maggie's shagginess (the dog...not a daughter! lol).

One of my favorite things...
rich, fall color.

Scripture thought...Eph. 6:19-20 ~ "Pray also for me, that whenever I open my mouth, words may be given me so that I will fearlessly make known the mystery of the gospel, for which I am an ambassador in chains. Pray that I may declare it fearlessly, as I should."

Plans for the rest of the week...
as much family time as possible, work, trying to make time to go the cemetery to put flowers on Jessica's grave for her 25th b-day...can't believe she would be 25 on Friday! Wow.

Here is a picture thought I am sharing with you...

I designed Jessica's stone, myself. It has a little lamb on one corner & a cross w/dogwoods on the other (covered by the flowers), w/Matt. 5:8 across the top.

Enjoy other Daybooks at: http://thesimplewomansdaybook.blogspot.com/

Blessings from Ohio, Kim Wolf<><

Monday, October 11, 2010

German Pancakes a.k.a Dutch Baby Pancakes

Once again, ruffling through my recipes to find something I haven't made for a while & my family will enjoy, when I found this recipe, I KNEW you would love it, too. So, I looked & found some actual photos from Google (since I haven't taken photos of my own, yet. I may replace these w/my own later. :-P) so that you can see how yummy it is!

This goes by 2 different names, so you may know one over the other.

Enjoy!! And let me know if you try this.

FYI...I've also made this w/Rice Dream vanilla flavored rice milk & Earth Balance non-hydrogenated margarine b/c 1 of my DD's has dairy allergies. It's not quite as fluffy as using regular milk & butter, but it's still very good.

Blessings from Ohio...Kim<><
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

6 eggs, room temp.
1 c. milk, room temp.
1 c. sifted all-purpose or bread flour (I use bread flour)

1/4 ts. vanilla extract
1/4 ts. ground cinnamon

5 TB butter (or Earth Balance non-hydrogenated margarine)

Lemon Juice (**optional ~ use only if you want it to be truly authentic)

Powdered Sugar

1) Pre-heat oven to 450*. PLACE CAST IRON SKILLET IN OVEN while it's heating, get it HOT! Prepare ingredients while oven & skillet are heating.

2) In a large bowl, beat eggs until frothy; add milk, flour, vanilla & cinnamon & beat for 5 mins more until batter is thin & smooth.


3) USING AN OVEN MIT, remove skillet from oven & melt butter in it. Tilt skillet so that butter covers the entire bottom.


4) Pour all of the batter into the skillet & place back in the oven.

5) Bake 20-25 mins, until it's fluffy, puffy & golden brown! It will puff into odd shapes.

6) Remove from oven & serve immediately. The puff will go down once it's taken out of the oven.


7) Cut into wedges & place 1 on each plate! For an authentic German/Dutch pancake, top w/a couple squeezes of lemon juice & powdered sugar. We like to eat it like French toast w/syrup & powdered sugar ~OR~ w/whipped cream & fruit!

Christopher Columbus ~ Part of God's Plan


O LORD, our Lord
how majestic is Your Name in all the
earth!


You have set Your glory
above the heavens...


When I consider Your heavens,
the work of Your fingers,
the moon & the stars,
which You set in place,
what is man that You are mindful of
him...


You made him ruler over the works of
Your hands;
You put everything under his feet:
all flocks & herds,
& the beasts of he field,
the birds of the air,
& the fish of the sea,
all that swim the paths of the seas.


O LORD, our Lord,
how majestic is Your Name in all the
earth!


~~Psalm 8:1,3-4(a), 5-9


"I am a most noteworthy sinner, but I have cried out to the Lord for grace and mercy, and they have covered me completely. I have found the sweetest consolation since I made it my whole purpose to enjoy His marvellous Presence." -- Christopher Columbus

The Mission and Faith of Christopher Columbus

Phyllis Schlafly Radio Script, October 14, 2002

It was early in the morning on this day in 1492 that Columbus stepped from his command post on the Santa Maria into a tiny boat. A few yards from the shore, he plunged into the shallow water and went ashore on a tiny island of the Bahamian archipelago and wept tears of joy. He lifted his head toward Heaven and cried out in thanksgiving to God in the words of the traditional dawn-watch canticle: "Blessed be the light of day, and the Holy Cross we say; and the Lord of Verity, and the Holy Trinity. Blessed be the light of day, and He who sends the dark away."

Columbus was one of the greatest seamen in the history of the world. Any competent sailor could have reached America by sailing west long enough, but it's unlikely that any others could have found their way back to Spain or could have returned to the same island on later voyages.

Columbus had great moral and physical courage. Again and again he faced mutinous sailors, armed rebels, frightful storms, and fighting Indians.

Christopher Columbus had a mystic belief that God intended him to sail the Atlantic Ocean in order to spread Christianity. He said his prayers several times daily. Columbus wrote what he called a Book of Prophecies, which is a compilation of passages Columbus selected from the Bible which he believed were pertinent to his mission of discovery. What a person believes is what determines his interpretation of life and history and inspires his vision and purpose in life. Columbus's own writings prove that he believed that God revealed His plan for the world in the Bible, the infallible Word of God. Columbus believed that he was obeying the mission God staked out for his life when he set sail west across the Atlantic Ocean.

Columbus's voyage to America ranks among history's most important events. It led to lasting contacts between Europe and America, and it opened new windows. To few men in modern history does the world as we know it owe so great a debt as to Christopher Columbus.

And now you know the rest of the story...

Blessings from Ohio...Kim<><


Friday, October 8, 2010

Blog Award! The Versatile Blogger


I so enjoy seeing when my Bloggy Friends receive well-deserved awards. So, when I saw that Missional Mama had won one, I skipped right over to congratulate her. Much to my surprise, she had listed me as a blog that she enjoys. Thanks, SO MUCH, Amy! XOXO

Sooo...here's my responsibility as an award winner...

To accept the Versatile Blogger Award the rules are:
  • Thank and link back to who gave you the award.
  • Share 7 things about yourself.
  • Pass it along to 15 blogs you've recently discovered and enjoy
  • Leave your recipients a note, telling them about the award.
7 Things:

1) I'm 51 & I have never dyed my hair.
2) With every child I had, not only did my hair get darker, but I eyes went from hazel to entirely green!
3) I am a surviving twin.
4) In my B.C. days I used to sing in bars (before 1982)...now I sing praises!!
5) I love primitive decorating; the more scratched the item or the more the paint is chipped the more I like it.
6) My mom was the 'baby' of 14 children, I am the 'baby' of 52 grandchildren!
7) Shameless plug: I speak on homeschooling, Christian women's issues & frugal living & I LOVE to speak to groups & at retreats!!

Here are the 15 blogs I feel are deserving of this award and whom you all should know. This was really hard as I follow loads of great blogs that I enjoy!
The blogs below will, hopefully, be some that I haven't mentioned before. :-)

In no particular order….


1) Missional Mama
2) Large Family Mothering
3) Christian Woman ~ Keeper of the Home
4) A Quiet Place to Rest
5) A Country Mom
6) Cultivating Home
7) A Gracious Home
8) Frugal Granola
9) Our Wee Farm
10) Teeny Tiny Cabin
11) Vintage Cottage Camper
12) Mrs. Happy Homemaker
13) Montana Girl
14) Farmgirl Cyn
15) Hill Top Blessings

Visit & enjoy!

Blessings from Ohio...Kim<><

Wooly Worm Weather


Years ago, in the Dayton, Ohio area, we had a weather man, Gil Whitney, who not only relied upon technology to help predict the weather, but he was also a firm believer in the actions of nature to aid his predictions. One of his favorites was the wooly worm. {As a side note: Gil's timely warning to the residents of Xenia, Ohio to "take shelter immediately," saved many lives on April 3rd, 1974, as an F5 tornado tore that area apart. I can still remember running into the house to turn the T.V. on as the rumbling clouds passed over our house on their way to Xenia. You can watch part of his historic broadcast by clicking here & scrolling to the bottom of the page.}

As someone who not only grew up w/parents who grew up on farms & who watched the actions of nature to help w/their farm & garden planning, I also married a farm boy. :-) I think one of the reasons I enjoyed Gil's use of nature in his weather forecasts was b/c I heard the same stories from my grandparents & my daddy. The Old Farmer's Almanac was never far from my grandpa's favorite chair & it's reliability is still uncanny. This year, the Almanac is predicting a very cold winter for our area...not more snow than normal...just more COLD! Brrrrrrrr! And judging by the nearly all black woolies I've seen lately as they try to cross the roads around here, I'm afraid the Almanac just might be right...again. :-/

Here's a little woolie info for you to be watching out for...

Using wooly worms (Pyrrharctia isabella) to predict winter is old American folklore that traces its history back to early Americana. Supposedly, Native Americans taught the pioneers to read wooly worms to predict winter weather. Wooly worm is the common name for the larval stage of the Isabella Tiger Moth. They are also called wooly bears.

Step 1

Look for wooly worms under rocks and inside hollow logs.

Step 2

Examine the wooly worm, paying attention to its bands of colors. The wooly worm will curl into a ball when touched or threatened. When they crawl, they can crawl very quickly!

Step 3

Wooly worm forecasters say that the size of the brown band of color will tell you what kind of winter is coming. Legend says that the thinner the brownish red bands, the harsher the winter will be. If the wooly worm is mostly brownish red in the middle, winter will be mild.


Step 4

Wooly worm enthusiasts claim an 85 percent success rate over the last few decades. Scientists tend to disagree and say wooly worm weather prediction is as unscientific as using groundhogs to predict winter weather. The groundhogs likely side with the wooly worms.

Step 5

Whether or not you believe in the power of wooly worms, they can be a fun project for children and adults.

{from www.ehow.com}

Blessings from Ohio...Kim<><

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Homemade Castile Soap Bars

If you have toured around my blog for any length of time, I'm sure you've noticed that one of my favorite base soaps for many of my frugal recipes is liquid Castile Soap. It's my favorite type of soap, by far. But I also enjoy the Castile bar soap...& so does my hubby. If we don't use my homemade glycerin soap, we use this; admittedly, my husband likes a little more lather than my glycerin soaps provide.

There are a few reasons why I make glycerin soaps: 1) it's SO easy, 2) our family's skin is 'on the oily side' (Castile works well for all skin types, but especially for oily & sensitive) and 3)
I am an admitted coward when it comes to working w/lye! :-/

Well, thanks to a website
I found, Happy Living.com, I do believe that I've found a great recipe for Castile soap bars that doesn't scare me quite so badly & that I'm going to try. :-) This recipe looks so easy & manageable that I'm very excited about it! I thought you might like to see it, too.

I invite you to look around the website, until then, here's the recipe:




Using natural or homemade soap is a trend that has seen an enormous popularity in recent years; it's a great way to know exactly what you're putting on your body as well as keeping old traditions alive. One of the more popular forms of homemade soap is Castile soap, a gentle lye soap that's named a
fter a region in Spain (it's country of origin.)

Castile soap is perhaps one of the gentlest soaps to date, a fact that makes it the choice of many mothers when choosing a first soap for their babies. It's made with 100% pure olive oil (which is one way to tell whether or not it's a true Castile soap), and is naturally very mild and moisturizing.

To make your own Castile soap, you'll need the following:

2 lbs. 100% pure olive oil

2 oz. beeswax pearls

4-5 oz. lye crystals (available at most hobby and department stores)

10-12 oz. distilled water

2 oz. scented oil (herbal essential oils work best)

food coloring (a color to match the scent of the oil is recommended)

~You will also need mixing bowls (glass, if possible), wooden spoon, pots, molds, and safety glasses. Any material you use in soap making should be reserved ONLY for soap making if possible; lye can be very dangerous if ingested or gotten on the skin, and you don't want to re-use a pot that's had lye in it for cooking

.

~Once you have all of your ingredients, begin by melting your beeswax into your olive oil. Heat the oil to around 100 - 120 degrees, and set aside (maintaining the temperature of the oil). You should then put on your safety glasses and begin adding the lye SLOWLY to the distilled water; stir well. The water will begin to heat as it reacts with the lye, and will need to cool until it reaches the same temperature as the oil mixture.

~Once the lye has cooled sufficiently, begin SLOWLY adding the lye to the oil. You should always add lye to other materials, and not the other way around; pouring any liquid into lye crystals or a lye mixture could cause it to splash, and lye can cause burns if it comes in contact with the skin. All lye work should also be done in a well-ventilated area.

~After you've added all of your lye to the oil mixture, begin stirring it until it "traces", or you can see the path of the spoon for a few moments after it passes through. This is also the time to add your fragrances and any pigment to the soap mixture (though don't go overboard with either, since you don't want an overpowering scent or soap that will dye your skin.)

~Once the soap begins to trace, pour it into the molds you have or into a greased plastic pan to allow it to set. Placing freezer paper in the bottom of the pan (if that's what you're using) will allow for an easier removal once the soap is finished.

~Once the soap is in the molds or in a pan, cover it with a piece of freezer paper and then place cardboard or a lid on top. Wrap the soap molds in a blanket, and set in a place where it won't be disturbed for 18 - 20 hours. After that time has gone by, remove the blankets and let it set for another 12.

~You can now remove the soap from the molds (or remove it from the pan and cut it) and place it on a drying rack for about 2 weeks or longer. This allows the soap to cure, and the more time that it has to cure will make it both harder and milder in the long run. The beeswax in the soap will also make for a much smoother and silkier bar once the curing is done. The bars may not lather well, as Castile soap sometimes doesn't, but they are one of the best soaps that you'll find.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

26 Years Ago Today, Our Invitation Read...

We
Kimberly A. Chandler & Tyler D. Wolf
have experienced love from our Lord
through our church, our families, our friends
and now through each other
With our parents' blessing
we joyfully request your presence
to witness before God and man
a celebration of lov
e
when we exchange marriage vows
on Saturday, October sixth
nineteen hundred and eighty-four
at one-thirty in the afternoon...

...Just so you know...
I'd do it again!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

The Simple Woman's Daybook ~#92~ 10/5/10



For Today...


Outside my window...
the sun is trying to come out...that lovely golden-yellow fall sunshine, changing leaves on the trees.

I am thinking...
that I'm so happy w/how the PC is now running & SO grateful to the Lord for friends (& friends of friends) who would fix it for free!!!

I am thankful for...the above comment & the Night of Worship at our oldest DD's church. A couple times per year they have an Night of Worship open to their members & the public...2 hours of incredible, Spirit-led worship!!! So grateful to see & hear others use their talents to lift up the Name of the Lord!!!

From the kitchen...
I need to make some more laundry detergent.

I am wearing...jeans & my favorite smoky-brown hoodie...yes...the time has come! My beloved hoodie season! lol '-)

I am remembering…that, shortly, my yard will be covered in a beautiful, multi-colored carpet of leaves.

I am going…to take DD#2 to work, run some errands, go to work later this afternoon.

I am reading...Bible: Isaiah; "Jenna's Cowboy", Christian fiction book of my DD#2 that she said I HAVE to read. :-)

I am hoping...that the job fair my DH is going to tonight will reap incredible opportunities & great rewards!

On my mind…$ &, at times, willing myself into complete trust in the Lord...gathering up those Stones of Remembrance {Joshua 4:4-7} of how wonderfully He's taken care of us & provided for us in the past. Thank You, Lord!

I am creating...a peaceful, Christ-centered home.

I am hearing...typing fingers, radio, construction/remodeling going on at the home next door.

Noticing that…it has become a bit of a joke, at work, that many of the 'hard' customers seem to come to me b/c I have the patience to deal w/them. NOT of any charms of my own! IT IS ALL by the grace of God b/c they are hard customers for ME, too! :-/

Pondering these words..."My memory is nearly gone, but I remember two things; That I am a great sinner, and that Christ is a great Saviour." ~~John Newton

Around the house...a little laundry, mopping the kitchen floor (that is so old it never seems to look clean...but...I know it is), cleaning out a couple of kitchen cupboards if I have the time before work...

One of my favorite things...reading my Bible by candle or oil lamp light. It always seems extra soothing.

A Scripture thought...Jeremiah 1:12~~"The LORD said to me, 'You have seen correctly, for I am watching to see that My word is fulfilled.'"

A few plans for the rest of the week...
work, praise & worship practice, church membership class, OUR 26TH ANNIVERSARY(!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!), a movie w/my Sweetheart this weekend! Yes...a REAL night out!


Here is a picture thought I am sharing with you...

Where it all began...Oct. 6th, 1984

Enjoy other Daybooks at: http://thesimplewomansdaybook.blogspot.com/

Blessings from Ohio, Kim Wolf<><


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