

The front door is just opposite and parallel to the closet door, so it’s really convenient to switch them as desired. Works for me!
As with most Wednesdays, you can find a load of great tried-and-true tips at Shannon’s.


The front door is just opposite and parallel to the closet door, so it’s really convenient to switch them as desired. Works for me!
As with most Wednesdays, you can find a load of great tried-and-true tips at Shannon’s.
To Know Him hosts Know and Tell Friday and asks this week:
Question 1
Which is worse? Being gossipped about or being lied to?
I honestly don’t know. Both would hurt.
Question 2
I see that a lot of ladies out there in blogville are “Starbucks” gals… What is your favorite “Starbucks” drink?
That’s one craze I’ve missed out on. π I have to drink decaf for health reasons, and I don’t like flavored coffees or cold coffee drinks, so I have never even had Starbucks coffee. I figure I’ve saved a lot of money that way. π
Question 3
Name an embarrassing moment (Make it good).
Honestly, this isn’t just a cop-out, but I can’t think of one, though I know I’ve had them. Maybe my mind just quickly puts them away. π If I think of any I’ll come back to this one later.
Question 4
I figure that most of us ladies out there are bargain shoppers and that we find ways to save money, but what is one thing that you don’t mind spending your bucks on?
We buy name brands of a lot of paper products because the generics just haven’t held up as well. With other groceries it just depends — we buy a mix of generics and name brands. I struggle with this when it comes to home furnishings. I would love to buy heirloom-quality items, but they’re just so expensive.
Bonus Questions
Question 5
Is it hard for you to ask some to forgive you when you have wronged them?
It’s not easy, but it helps to clear the air and restore the relationship (usually), so it’s good to just go ahead and do it.
Question 6
Give one of your best parenting tips…something that you have learned through experience.
I have a whole list of these here. Besides the obvious and basic principles of keeping the Lord first in your own relationship and studying what the Bible has to say about training children, one of the best tips I have ever heard is to ask questions rather than making accusations or telling them what they did wrong at first. The latter tends to make children (as well as adults) defensive, but when you ask them exactly what they did and why, it leads to self-examination. One speaker (Will Galkin) put it that βQuestions stir the conscience, but accusation hardens the will.β That must be one reason God asks people questions in Scripture (“Adam, where art thou?”) when He already knows the answer. This also helps keep the parent (or teacher or whomever) from acting on assumption (which can often be wrong) and helps them get to the root of the problem.
My Life as Annieβs weekly Time Travel Tuesday looks ahead this week:
Where do you see yourself in five years? Will you be living where you live now? What’s going on in your life five years from now???
Five years from now my kids will be 28, 25, and my baby will be 19. I can hardly believe it!! The older two will likely have moved from home, probably will be married, and may even have a child or two by then. Jesse will be in college. So we’ll be well on our way to an empty nest.
It’s funny that I looked forward to an empty nest when my kids were little and I was sometimes overwhelmed, but over the last several years I have been dreading it. It’s not that I won’t have plenty of things to occupy my time and attention, but I just can’t imagine missing them as much as I know I will.Β It will be sad that part of my primary occupation will be over.
But….that’s how life is supposed to go. And I am looking forward to new phases of marriage and grandchildren. Since I have been living with all males for 28 years, it will be nice to have some females around when my guys marry. And I am so excited about having grandchildren some day that I can hardly stand it!
I have no idea where we’ll be living. We’ve learned long ago that, with corporate takeovers and buy-outs, closings and downsizings, the days of a lifelong career with one company seem to be over, so who knows what will happen with my husband’s job in the next years. I do love this area and hope we can stay in the southeast. But I do hope to be moved from this particular house. Though we’ve improved it from what it was when we first moved in, there are some problems with the layout, particularly in the kitchen/dining area, which can’t be overcome without a lot of money and time and trouble. And I’d like a home with a little more space around it.
In five years I’ll be 55. I can hardly believe that, either!! I hope to be in better shape and at a lesser weight than I am now: I’ve started taking baby steps that direction in the last few months. I will probably still be doing much of what I am now: being a homemaker, reading, blogging, helping with the ladies’ ministry at church, hopefully doing more writing.
Thanks, Annie, for this opportunity to stop and look ahead a little. The next few years are sure to be quite eventful! I am thankful that the Lord knows what is ahead and has promised to be with us every step of the way.
To Know Him hosts Know and Tell Friday and asks this week:
Question 1: Favorite season and why?
It would be hard to choose between fall and spring. Both are a relief from the extremities of the previous season with milder temperatures. I love the colors and crispness and coolness of fall, the warmth and blooming of new things in spring after a cold, barren winter.
Question 2: How many times have you moved in your life?
If I only count the moves to a different state or city rather than within a city, as our hostess did…Let’s see… four times as I was growing up, once when I got married, twice since being married. It’s a challenge every time, but I think the Lord has something for us in every place.
Question 3: What kind of chicken wings do you like? Mild, medium, hot, or singe your eyebrows off hot?Β
I am not much of a chicken wings fan, but if I eat them I prefer mild.
Question 4: Which is worse? Shopping for Jeans or a bathing suit?
I haven’t done either in a long time, but I would say bathing suit.
Question 5: What is your favorite kind of pizza?
I like pepperoni and sausage together. I think my favorite place to order it from is Papa John’s, but we like to get it from different places different times.
Bonus Questions
Question 6: What is your favorite book of the Bible and why?
That’s a hard one, but probably the Psalms. Though our circumstances are different, I can identify with a lot of David’s struggles and feelings and his wrestling through a problem to refocus his heart on the Lord. It’s nice to know someone who was “a man after God’s own heart” wrestled with some of the same things we do.
Question 7: Think Evangelism…I assume that most of my readers are Christians… I post a lot about my walk with Christ and it seems most people that comment encourage me in my journey. Saying all of that, what kind of witness (telling others about Christ, spreading the gospel) are you?
(Ouch!)Β This is the area where I fail the most. I want others to hear the gospel and be saved, but when I think I should speak to someone personally, I find all kinds of reasons why it is not a good time or why they really don’t want to hear it. I am fine with writing the gospel and have several times: it’s just personally speaking to someone where I stumble. I suppose that comes from being reserved and avoiding confrontation anyway, but also because some family members have flat out said they didn’t want anyone to talk to them about it.
I hope those reading will feel free to join in on this weekly meme. It’s a interesting way to get to know people and it’s small enough that it’s easy to visit all the other participants. If you do join in, please let me know! And if you are a participant visiting others, please do leave a comment and let me know you came by.
My Life as Annieβs weekly Time Travel Tuesday question for today is:
It’s almost Valentines Day! So to give us all some good ideas, travel back to the funnest gift you gave your valentine and/or the most special thing your honey did for you on Valentines Day!
We don’t usually do a whole lot for Valentine’s Day, though it is one of my favorite holidays. I have some heart-shaped cupcake pans that I use for treats for the day (usually just a boxed cake mix and frosting pink or red decorating sugar or sprinkles over the top) and I usually buy a card for everyone. I also have heart-shaped mini cupcake pans and have sometimes made little heart-shaped muffins to go with breakfast: one year I sent some with Jesse for his class.
One year I made up a big card out of poster board and used candy bars within the sentences for certain words (this wasn’t an original idea — I think I had seen it in a magazine). Another year I made a little scavenger hunt — I put clues on sides of a heart and hid them, with some kind of treat being the final “find.” The kids really liked that at the time and begged for it the next year, but making up the clues for where to hide things had been the hardest part, and I didn’t think I could do it again.
The kids used to make cards, and I miss that. And it’s funny, though I dreaded in some ways making up the little Valentine’s box for Jesse’s class Valentines, in a way I kind if miss that, too. Since he is a guy, of course, and doesn’t like all the hearts and lace that I would, I tried to find different ideas. One year his box looked like a space ship, another year it looked like an alligator. There was a magazine put out for Scouts that used to have good ideas for that kind of thing, and we enjoyed working on it together once we got going.
The church we attended when we first married had a “Sweetheart Banquet” in February, and that was always fun. It was the only event where the ladies didn’t have to make the meal: it was catered, and there were skits and a devotional.
Other than that we try to focus the day on the family rather than just my husband and I as a couple.
Some years ago someone gave me this list for βPlanover Recipe Ideasβ β meal ideas that can be made from leftovers. I don’t know who made up the original list. But this contains several ideas of possible dishes you could make with leftover meats or potatoes from another meal. In some cases there might be just enough leftover to use some of these for lunch ideas for a couple of people, but in some cases you might have enough for a whole meal. You could also plan to make extra meat or potatoes and use the βplanned leftoversβ for some of the following. The list is just as I received it — I don’t have measurements or proportions. I think for many of these you could just “wing it” — for others you could search for a more specific recipe.
Roast Beef:
Hot Beef Sandwiches (meat slices with gravy over French bread)
Beef Salad Sandwiches (diced beef, celery, low-fat mayonnaise)
Beef slices in Pita Bread ( tomatoes, alfalfa sprouts, or romaine)
Beef and Peas on Baked Potatoes (beef, gravy, peas, tomato sauce)
Chili Con Carne on Rice (Beef, chili hot beans, tomato, onions)
Enchiladas (diced beef, shredded cheese in corn tortillas topped with tomato sauce and enchilada sauce mixture)
Beef Stir Fry (slivers of beef, gravy, soy sauce, sliced vegetables)
Beef Chunks and Gravy Over Noodles or Rice
Beef Barbeque with Potatoes (barbeque sauce and onions)
Beef Stew (beef, potatoes, carrots, green beans, tomatoes)
Beef Stroganoff (beef chunks, sour cream, onions, mushrooms, cream of mushroom soup)
Beef Hash (diced beef, potatoes, carrots, peas, ketchup)
Chicken:
Chicken Salad (diced chicken, salad dressing, pineapple, almonds)
Hot Chicken Salad (diced chicken, celery, nuts, salad dressing)
Chicken Almond Curry on Rice (slivered chicken, almonds, pimento, white sauce, dash of curry spice)
Creamy Chicken (chicken, sour cream, onions, white sauce)
Pepper Chicken on Rice (chicken, green peppers, onions, gravy)
Chicken Stir Fry (chicken, gravy, soy sauce, sliced vegetables)
Mexican Chicken (layer chicken, cheese, corn tortillas with sauce of onions, tomato sauce, cream of chicken soup, and chili)
Chicken Paprika (chicken, onion, broth, paprika, sour cream)
Chicken Bog (chicken, broth, rice, pepper, polska kielbasa)
Chicken and Dumplins (chicken, gravy, dumplins)
Enchiladas (shredded chicken, shredded cheese in corn tortillas topped with tomato sauce and enchilada sauce mixture)
Broiled Oriental Chicken (chicken, soy sauce, garlic salt, pepper)
Teriyaki Chicken (chicken, soy sauce, sugar, onions, broth)
Chicken Pie (diced chicken, gravy, peas, carrots, pie crust)
Chicken Barbeque (chicken, barbeque sauce)
Ham:
Ham Omelet (eggs, diced ham, onions, cheese, vegetables)
Ham Salad (diced ham, celery or relish, salad dressing)
Split Pea Soup (split peas, ham chunks, water, grated carrots)
Pinto Beans (pinto beans, ham chunks, water, garlic salt)
Quiche (pie shell, evaporated milk, diced ham, eggs, Swiss cheese, cooked chopped broccoli)
Pasta Salad (diced ham, pasta, green pepper, Italian dressing)
Swedish Rolls (rolls with ham slices and Swiss cheese topped with mixture of melted butter, mustard, onion flakes and Worcestershire sauce)
Chicken Cordon Bleu (roll ham slice with Swiss cheese slice in raw chicken breast, then dip in egg mixture and coat with bread crumb mix. Drizzle with melted butter; bake)
Ham Croquettes (chopped ham, thick white sauce, onion, chilled, formed into cones while rolling in bread crumbs)
Ham Patties (chopped ham, bread crumbs, onion, milk, egg)
Hamburger:
Spaghetti (hamburger, spaghetti sauce, spaghetti noodles)
Lasagna (hamburger, spaghetti sauce, pureed tomatoes, lasagna noodles, mozzarella cheese, ricotta cheese, Parmesan, egg β cover with plastic wrap and bake in microwave for 22 minutes)
Chili (hamburger, chili hot beans, onion, chili, catsup)
Sloppy Joes (hamburger, catsup, Worcestershire, mustard)
Stuffed Peppers (hamburger rice, tomato sauce, cheese)
Tamale Pie (hamburger, sliced canned tamales, torn corn tortillas, whole corn kernels, cheese)
Hamburger Stew (hamburger, water, potatoes, tomatoes, celery, car- rots, rosemary, thyme, onions, corn, green beans)
Hamburger Macaroni and Cheese (hamburger, mac & cheese)
Hungarian Goulash (hamburger, macaroni, tomato sauce, cheese)
Baked Bean Savory (hamburger, baked beans, sage, ketchup)
Haystacks (hamburger and baked beans placed on rice and corn chips, topped with cheese, lettuce, green pepper, and onion)
Hamburger Maindish (hamburger, cream cheese, ketchup, cream of mushroom soup, topped with biscuits)
Baked Potatoes:
Country Fried Potatoes (slice and fry on sprayed skillet)
Potato Salad (potatoes, eggs, celery, salad dressing)
Broiled Potato Wedges (wedged potatoes, oil spray, herbs)
Twice Baked Potatoes (potatoes, cheese or sour cream, herbs)
Spanish Omelet (eggs with diced potato, onion, cooked bacon)
German Potato Salad (potatoes, green pepper, onion, cooked bacon, vinegar dressing)
See more workable ideas at Rocks In My Dryer.
Shannon’s “Works For Me Wednesday” today is a themed one, asking for quick, easy meal ideas for “those nights” — like when you’re not feeling well, or errands took longer than expected and you have something to attend at church or for school that night, or you get back from baseball practice late and everyone starving, etc. I am really looking forward to getting a lot of ideas today!
I try to keep a couple of quickie meals in the freezer for those times. One is Banquet chicken nuggets and chicken tenders and Ore-Ida frozen french fries (I like the Pixie Crinkles best, but we try different kinds for variety). Pop them in the oven for about 10 minutes while you rustle up a vegetable side dish, and you’re set. I also love Contessa brand chicken fried rice — add a little oil and microwave (or stir-fry) long enough to heat through. Wonderful!
But frozen stuff can be expensive and take up a lot of room in your freezer plus increase your sodium intake exponentially. So we can’t do that too often. Though I’d have chicken fried rice once a week if I could.
Other quickie staples are:
I have a friend who sometimes will brown 5 lbs. of ground beef all at one time with onion and then separate it into five portions and freeze it. Having the meat browned is half the battle: just thaw for a few minutes in the microwave (if you’re making something like a soup or casserole. you probably could just thaw it enough to break it up and let the rest of it warm through in the dish you’re cooking).
My very first works-for-me-Wednesday entry (and one of my most often searched-for posts) was about chicken tenderloins. Love those things because you can take them straight from the freezer to the oven or microwave. Several ideas for using them are here and here.
Tuna is one of those things that no one gets real excited about, but the family does enjoy it when they do eat it and it does stop hunger. π Here are my quickest tuna meals:
Quick Tuna Casserole
2 1/2 cups Minute Rice
1 can tuna, drained
1 can cream of chicken soup
Shredded cheddar cheese
Prepare rice with 2 1/2 cups water according to package directions. Mix in tuna and soup, top with cheddar cheese, and microwave for 3-4 minutes.
Tuna Tetrazzini
1 pkg. (7-8 oz.) angel-hair pasta, cooked
1/4 c. (1/2 a stick) butter or margarine
1/4 c. all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. pepper
1 c. chicken broth or 1 c. boiling water + 1 tsp. chicken bouillon
1 c. milk
1 T. snipped parsley (optional)
1- 1 1/2 tsp. minced onion
1 small can tuna, drained
Grated Parmesan cheese
Melt margarine in a glass casserole dish in microwave (about 1 minute). Add flour, salt, and pepper; blend well. Add broth and milk gradually, stirring constantly. Cook uncovered in microwave 4-5 minutes on high, or until thickened; stir after 2 minutes, then every minute (a wire whisk works great to make sauce smooth). Add onion, parsley, and tuna to sauce; mix well. Mix in cooked pasta. Heat uncovered in microwave 3 minutes on high. Stir mixture well and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese. Microwave uncovered on high 3-5 minutes. Makes 6-8 servings.
I’m one of those weird people who actually likes spam (the food, not the junk). I sometime like to cut it in slices and fry it, then make a sandwich with it. This casserole is a comfort food from my childhood:
Spam Casserole
1 can Spam or Treet
1/2 box rotini (or other) noodles
1 can cream of chicken soup
1 can cheddar cheese soup
Margarine
Cut spam into cubes and brown in melted margarine while noodles are cooking. Drain noodles, add soups and spam and stir well: Heat through.
And here’s another fairly quick favorite:
Country-Style Eggs
4 slices bacon
2 Tbs margarine
6 ounces frozen hash browns
1/4 cup chopped onion (or about a tablespoon minced onion)
6 eggs
1/4 cup milk
1/2 teaspoon salt
Dash pepper
1 cup (4 ounces) shredded cheddar cheese
Fry or microwave bacon: crumble and set aside. Put margarine, potatoes and onion into an 8-ounce round glass cake dish or pie plate. Cook uncovered in microwave on high 6 minutes or until vegetables are tender, stirring once. Mix eggs, milk, salt and pepper. Flatten potato mixture and pour egg mixture over the top. Cover with waxed paper and microwave 6-7 minutes at medium-high or until egg mixture is almost set, stirring once. Sprinkle bacon and cheese over egg mixture: microwave uncovered 1 minute at medium-high or until cheese just starts to melt. Remove from micrwave oven and ket stand 5 minutes. Cut into wedges. Makes 4-6 servings.
Optional: you can add 1/4 cup or so of chopped green pepper to cook with the potatoes and onion mixture, though why anyone would want to do that, I don’t know… π
I’m hungry already. I’m going to be drooling by the time I read the other posts…
I found this fun-looking meme at Gabi’s World and Mindless Chatter of a Busy Mom.
Here are the rules:
Type the answer to each question into Google Image Search. Then, pick an image from the 1st page of results.
1. Age at next birthday
2. Place I’d like to travel
Ireland
3. Favorite place:
4. Favorite objects
5. Favorite food
and
6. Favorite color:
and
and
7. Nickname
Growing up I was
but now I’m
8. Place you were born
Let me know if you’d like to do this, too, so I can see what you come up with.
My Life as Annieβs weekly Time Travel Tuesday question for today is:
We’ve all had them… the worst haircut or hair mistake ever! It didn’t just go away either… Travel back to that tragic day that your hair went wrong. What happened? How did you deal with the problem… did it take a long time to work it out or grow it out?
I’ve only occasionally had what I would consider a good hair today. My hair is straight, fine, limp, lifeless, and resists most efforts to do anything with it. I’ve had some success with permanents (though I have never understood why a temporary hair treatment is called a permanent…), but I also lose a lot of hair when I have one, and since my hair is thin in the first place, I don’t want to risk it becoming even thinner.
So, besides static electricity making me look like Medusa or a simple walk through the house making me look like I’ve been out in the wind, I couldn’t think of any more serious hair disasters, until I remembered one day in college…
Our school, being a liberal arts university, would have occasional Shakespearean plays or classical music concerts that students were required to attend. These were dress-up affairs and considered to be prime dating occasions. Once toward the end of my sophomore year one of my roommates and I had no dates for an upcoming play and arranged to go together. For some reason I decided to try to curl my hair with the hot curlers that were used a lot at the time. After getting all dressed and ready to go, I took the curlers out as the last thing before we left — and one got stuck in my hair. The curlers had little prongs to keep them from sliding around, and somehow those caught in one strand of hair and got hopelessly tangled. We would get demerits if we were late to the play, so we were frantically trying to get that curler out without ripping out my hair. Finally after several minutes we got it disentangled, I ran a comb through my hair, and we dashed off as fast as we could, forgetting all the dignity of the occasion, and found our seats just in time. As the house lights began to dim for the beginning of the play, my roommate turned and looked at me and said, “And it didn’t even curl!!” All that effort and frustration to no avail. All we could do was laugh.
I saw at Laurel’s that there is a new meme at To Know Him called Know and Tell Friday. I thought it looked like fun.
This week’s questions are:
1.What scares you?
Oh, my — too many things. I regularly have to wrestle with fears and “what ifs?” and entrust them to the Lord. A few would be: something drastic happening to my kids or husband; anyone on my family falling away spiritually; heights; the dark; bad guys of any variety; spiders and snakes and creepy things; health issues….
Β What time I am afraid, I will trust in thee (Psalm 56:3).
2. Coke or Pepsi (Diet counts)?
Diet decaf Pepsi. I used to drink Dr. Pepper, but had to go decaf for health reasons, and didn’t care for its decaf version. Then at a church fellowship I tried decaf Pepsi and liked it, then switched to the diet version several months ago. Since the only decaf soft drink in most restaurants is Sierra Mist and I’m not real crazy about it, I usually drink water out or root beer if they have it.
3. I would love to try…Β
Painting. Not big portraits or masterpieces, but I’d love to learn enough to paint a little flower on a note card, things like that.
4. Spiritually speaking, do you have a Quiet Time? If so, where, when, and how long have you had one? If not, what is stopping you from having a Quiet time? (Quiet time is defined as time alone with God. It can consist of praying, reading God’s word, and worship among many other things).
Yes, I do. It took a long time to get regular about it, and then the problem is staying awake and alert and truly concentrating and meeting with the Lord rather than just “doing my duty.” There will always be some kind of battle involved with it, but it’s very worth it to do whatever we can. I wrote a few posts in connection with this, listed in the “My favorite posts” section of my sidebar.