



while LegoManiac shows the back "barn door" to allow easy access and give a "stable look" when we use this for our Nativity next year.
Yes, this project is big -- the base board is 2-feet x 3-feet and the height is just over 30-inches but isn't it marvelous? The girls (Kotch and I and maybe StringBean too) will do the painting ... barn red for the exterior and green (darkened slightly with some black) for the roof. We'll then put felt pads on the bottom corners (to protect surfaces and to allow a 1/4" lip to help with lifting and moving from spot to spot). Will post pictures of the final!
And to top off this wonderful day, and since it is the Feast of St. Thomas a Becket, the man killed through the misuse of monarchial power, our family movie: the classic Becket with Peter O'Toole as the despotic Henry II and Richard Burton as the reformed Thomas Becket. What a great movie!
Hope you had as good a Fifth Day of Christmas!
St. Thomas a Becket, pray for us!
Dough:
Sponge: Combine the flour, water and yeast in a large mixing bowl, stirring till smooth. Let the mixture rest overnight at room temperature.
Dough: Add the flour, butter, egg, milk, sugar, salt, yeast, almond extract, and vanilla to the sponge. Stir to combine, then knead thoroughly, using your hands, an electric mixer, a food processor or a bread machine, till the dough is very smooth and supple. Transfer the dough to a lightly greased bowl (or leave it in the bread machine), cover the bowl, and allow the dough to rise for 1 to 1 1/2 hours. It probably won't double in bulk, but will become puffy.
While the dough is rising, stir together the candied fruit, raisins, flour and almonds. Transfer the dough to a clean, lightly greased work surface. Knead the fruit into the dough till it's well-distributed; a good way to do this is to pat or roll the dough into a rough 12 x 15-inch rectangle, press the fruit and nuts evenly over its surface, then roll it up like a jelly roll, starting with a long edge. Divide the roll into two pieces, shape each piece into a rough 9-inch log, cover the logs, and let them rest for 10 minutes.Pat each log into a 10 x 8-inch oval. The fruit may try to "fall out" of the dough; that's OK, just stick it back in.
Fold each oval lengthwise, bringing one side over the other but leaving a 1-inch gap, as if you were making a Parker House roll (in other words, fold the dough not quite in half). Press the edge of the top half to seal it to the bottom half, tent the dough with lightly greased plastic wrap, and allow it to rise for 2 hours, or until it's noticeably puffy.Bake the stollen in a preheated 350°F oven for 30 to 35 minutes, tenting it with aluminum foil after 20 minutes if it appears to be browning too quickly. The finished loaves should be golden brown, and their internal temperature should register 190°F on an instant-read thermometer.
Remove the stollen from the oven, and rub cold butter on them to cover.Transfer the buttered stollen to a rack to cool completely. When the stollen are cool, dust them heavily with confectioners' sugar. Yield: Two stollen, about 14 servings each
Marshmallows (http://www.marthastewart.com/)
2 envelopes (each 1 scant tablespoon) unflavored gelatin
1 1/2 cups sugar
2/3 cup light corn syrup
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon pure mint extract or vanilla extract
vegetable-oil cooking spray
red or green food coloring
1/4 cup powdered sugar and 1/4 cup cornstarch combined and used as described below
Directions:
Coat a 13x9 glass dish with cooking spray; then coat with equal parts powdered sugar and cornstarch; set aside. Pour 1/3 cup cold water into the bowl of an electric mixer. Sprinkle with gelatin; let mixture soften, about 5 minutes. Place sugar, corn syrup, salt, and 1/3 cup water in a medium saucepan. Cover; bring to a boil. Remove lid; cook, swirling pan occasionally, until syrup reaches 238 degrees (soft-ball stage) on a candy thermometer, about 5 minutes. With mixer on low speed, whisk gelatin mixture, and slowly pour the syrup in a steady stream down the side of the bowl (to avoid splattering). Gradually raise speed to high; beat until mixture is thick, white, and has almost tripled in volume, about 12 minutes. Add extract, and beat 30 seconds to combine. Pour mixture onto prepared baking sheet; smooth with an offset spatula. Drop a few drops of red or green food coloring and swirl into marshmallows. Let stand at room temperature, uncovered, until firm, at least 3 hours or overnight. Dust top of marshmallows with equal parts powdered sugar/cornstarch; cut into squares with rotary pizza cutter. Put in gallon ziploc bag or plastic covered container and shake sugar/cornstarch until all sides coated. Store in airtight container for up to one week.
ETA: Homemade Hot Cocoa -- you really need to have the homemade to mix with the mint marshmallows as the pre-packaged cocoa is so darn sweet! This is the recipe Mom made for us for YEARS and it's still as good today ... it's from the Betty Crocker cookbook:
Mix sugar, cocoa, water and coffee in medium pot and heat over low heat for about 20 minutes (stirring periodically). Add milk and stir till hot -- about 5 minutes. Add chocolate chips and stir until chips are melted and combined into cocoa. Serve hot, poured in a coffee mug over a marshmallow. YUM!
We hope that one and all have as wonderful a first day of Christmas as we had! Blessings and prayers go out to you all!
We love Advent around here ... but we love the Christmas season even more. And our home is beginning to look and feel and smell like Christmas!
Especially during these last days of Advent, we remember the 4 p's: penance, prayer, partying and preparation.
And preparation is one of our favorite parts of Advent. When I start doing the Christmas treat making -- especially when I haul out the big roasting pan for my special caramel popcorn -- the kids KNOW Christmas is close.
In this age of everyone working and no one having time for the home arts, a bag of homemade goodies is very appreciated. We love to do this for our friends and family. So, last week we put the baking into high gear so we'd have goodie bags to give on the last day of dh's school before break. We made:
Candy-Cane Crisps and Caramel Popcorn
M&M Pretzel Wreaths
English Toffee
Nanna's Swedish Nuts (Kotch's specialty)
Sweet'n'Spicy Nuts (with the "kick" coming from the cayenne pepper!)
Rocky Road Candy
and Spice Gumdrop Cookies
We makes tons of all of these things ... not just for snitching by the kiddoes and dh ... but also so we can give lots of variety to one and all.
On the 17th we also started to celebrate the O Antiphons using our "house" we made last year; Kotch has been cantoring the appropriate antiphon each night (with the rest of us singing the refrain, not even half so well as Kotch does the antiphon!). Thank God for Kotch's singing talents!
On the 4th Sunday of Advent we bring out the Christmas Tree (which we usually buy the first Sunday of Advent but leave outside in water till the 4th Sunday). We bring it in and set it up ... but don't decorate until Christmas Eve. We put out the Nativity set and begin to get out the blankets, kitchen linens and Christmas dishes reserved for this time of year. We start shifting from our Advent music to Christmas music playing in the background. In short, it begins to look alot like Christmas around here.
I probably won't post again till after Christmas ... but I want to wish one and all of you a very joyous, faith-filled Christmas. We'll be attending Midnight Mass this year (Lego Maniac wants to serve this one and we used to always go to Midnight Mass when I was little so ... we're all going!) and I will pray for each one of you and your intentions during that holiest of nights!
At a certain point in life, the profound deisres and cravings of our heart
reach a point of eruption in us. Yet, at the same time comes the awareness
that we cannot bring about what we want -- we do not have inside us what is
needed to fulfill and satisfy our longings. And so, with our infinite yearnings we turn to the Infinite and cry, "Oh, that you would rend the heavens and come down." Our experience of helplessness before the fact of our boundless human need moves us to ask for fellowship with God's Son, Jesus Christ the Lord. The nature of our desire assures us as we enter into Advent that we are not lacking in any spiritual gift as we wait for the revelation of our Lord Jesus Christ.The Lord of the house is coming ... Be watchful! Be alert!
As I come across more great gift suggestions, particularly geared to Catholic home-educators, I'll post them here! Most of these suppliers will be Catholic home-educators trying to make a living while teaching their children at home -- let's support our own!
and adopting Molly, our new 2-month old border-collie mix puppy, from the Denver Dumb Friends League.
Pull up a chair and set a spell!