Lists: October 2005 Archives
Monday
- Electrician came to do electrical work for the pool
- Drop donations at Good Will
- Leave Steven's boots (2 pair) at the cobbler to have them resoled.
- To Lowe's to arrange for the mulch delivery
- Grocery shopping
- Cook supper (chicken, shoepeg corn, sweet potato fries, mixed green veggies)
Tuesday
- Try to arrange appt for dog and cat with vet closest to home. People acted like royal bitches. I walked out after giving them a piece of my mind.
- Made appointment with another vet for both cat and dog, to include grooming, teeth cleaning, shots, frontline, etc.
- Ordered 2 loads of firewood. The first to be delivered this weekend.
- Electrician is working on pool again today.
- cook supper (meatloaf, whipped potatoes, turnips, spaghetti squash, and biscuits).
Wednesday
- Steve working from home
- Picture day at school for Gracie
- Last piece for Gracie's room to be delivered
- Appointment for sonogram
- pick up J. @ 5pm
- Cook supper (no idea what)
Thursday
- J. to school
- Cat to vet at 10:30am
- Mulch to be delivered
- Cook supper (thinking about chicken and dumplings)
Friday
- Pick up Steve's boot
- Exchange a pair of shoes (wrong size)
- Drop off dry cleaning
- Pick up J. @ 5pm
- Cook supper (no idea what)
Saturday
- Take kids to pumpkin patch - its supposed to rain!
- Start spreading mulch - its supposed to rain!
- 1/2 ton of firewood to be delivered and will need to be stacked (1 of 2 loads coming) - its supposed to rain!
- I have no idea what else the day or week will bring
In the middle of all this is laundry, kids to school, breakfasts, lunches to pack, entries to write, my full time job of gestating, planning for Thanksgiving and working on my Christmas stuff.
By the time I have this baby I will need a vacation.
Oh, did I mention the sonogram is today?
Mowing:
- the yard
- the orchard
- 2 fields around the chicken barn
- clearings around the livestock barn
- trim around the house, the boxwoods, the fences, the roadside ditches
Clear everything from the side porch and store it properly in the barn.
Continue filling the sink hole where the pool heater gas tank is buried and the rain settled the earth.
Take everything I have been throwing out of the house and attic to the landfill.
Fill the back of the Excursion with all the things I need to take to the Good Will.
Lay with me in the dark and dream about our baby.
*******
The last time I posted a photo of my house several people commented they had never seen my house before then. Here are a couple photos. The front of the house and the back. The back view was taken before they destroyed my yard constructing the pool -which is still no where near being finished because of 8 straight days of rain. It is now 2 feet deep in rain water.
Front of house

Back of House The huge bush at the back of the house, nearly reaching the second story roof, is a boxwood. The boxwoods here are the same age as the house. We have at least 25 that size or bigger. They look like trees not shrubs.

Koi Pond

Path to the Koi Pond

Water Garden

Damson Orchard
I am off to order a truck load of mulch in preparation for the coming winter. We need about 200 cubic feet. Anyone care to volunteer to come help spread it? We do have a front end loader and cart but it will still require lots of shoveling and raking.





Channah asked about my mentioning red velvet cake in my post on biscuits. I have alot to say about red velvet cake so you should go refill your coffee cup and settle the babies in front of the TV for a few minutes.
Back yet?
Ok let's get started.
Any google search will pull up a million red velvet cake recipes which to my belief are NOT red velvet cake recipes! Many foodie scholars tribute the cake creation to the red cake served at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in the 1920's. Some even dispute the date as the 1950's.
It is my belief that somewhere along the way someone confused a traditional southern red cake served only at the Christmas holidays with a red devil's food cake that later circulated through American kitchens.
A southern red velvet cake does NOT have cocoa in it. No one I know raised in the part of the country I come from that have a deep traditional southern heritage makes this cake with cocoa. The red devil's food cake has cocoa -not the red velvet cake! Chocolate cake icing is made with cocoa. Hot chocolate is made with cocoa!Chocolate run balls are made with cocoa. Red velvet cake is NOT made with cocoa! Can we all say that together because it needs to be shouted and repeated many times until it sinks into the depth of some peoples consciousness.
If you make a 'red velvet cake' with cocoa I am sorry but that is not a traditional southern red velvet cake. It is a faux southern red velvet cake but a real red devil's food cake. I am sure your cake is very tastey but it is not the cake I and many generations before me grew up eating only at Christmas and at no other time of the year. I still to this day do not cook this cake for any other occassion but Christmas. It is one of a few cakes my children get to eat for breakfast on Christmas eve and morning. It is a cake they dream of having during the holidays.
I only serve red velvet cake, orange cake, ambrosia and rum balls at Christmas. My coconut cake is served at Christmas and Easter, sometimes Thanksgiving. It all depends on my mood when it is time to bake. I am thinking this year I will make the coconut cake for Thanksgiving. Colby, Gracie and I will be the only one who eats it but that's cool my mom is supposed to come up for the holiday and she loves coconut cake.
Steven and J. do not eat coconut cake. Want to know why? His mother does not like coconut. She never cooked with it in any way in his childhood and he grew up thinking he did not like it. But you know, so many foods he and J. have done this way only to be surprised (and pleasantly so) to find I have been cooking them and they have been eating them without knowing it and liking them! He claims to hate sweet potatoes. After eating what he had been served as a child I see why. It made me gag. :-/ However the carrot casserole was the best ever.
My grandmother was not one who shared her recipes outside of the family. Some things she learned to cook on her own. Some things she remembered being taught to her by her mother. Some things she remembered being taught to her by her grandmother -who died after my grandmother had bore three children in the late 1940's. It is a cake her grandmother baked only at Christmas time. It was a special treat and very expensive to make pre-1920.
Grandmother's Red Velvet Cake Recipe -do not substitute ingredients or take short cuts because you will get a yucky cake.
2 2/3 c. self-rising flour
1 1/2 c. sugar
1/2 c. vegetable oil
1 stick butter (real butter)
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp distilled white vinegar
1 tsp vanilla extract
3 eggs
1 c. buttermilk (no substitutees -only real buttermilk)
4 bottles red food coloring
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Grease and flour three 9 inch round pans or line them with waxed or parchment paper. (I often will divide the batter and make 5 - 8 very thin layers. It makes the cake more decadent to me.)
Cream butter and sugar. Add oil and eggs one at a time mixing well after each egg.
Mix together vinegar, buttermilk and then all 4 bottles of the food coloring. Yes, you do need all 4. You want this to be a rich deep Christmas red cake not pinkish or weak red.
Sift together the flour and baking soda.
Alternately add the three mixtures a little at the time until all three are combined.
Stir in the vanilla and mix well.
Pour into the cake pans. Bake until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean - 20 - 25 minutes maybe more depending on your oven.
Let the layers completely cool before you try to frost them.
Cream Cheese Icing
1 package of cream cheese (philiadelphia brand is best) softened at room temp.
1 stick of butter softened at room temp.
1 box confectioners sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 - 1 c. finely chopped pecans
Mix the cream cheese and butter together until it is well combined. Add the confectioners sugar a little at a time to combine it well. Add the vanilla and mix well. Add the chopped nuts and mix until it is creamy as if whipped.
Frost each layer. If you make the several thinner layers you will most likely need to make 2 batches of icing -which I do anyway because I like thick coats of icing.
This cake is fine on the countertop for a day or two. After that time refrigerate. It never lasts long enough around our house to need refrigerating.
Let me remind you to not substitute ingredients. When you see red food coloring in your grocery store go ahead and start collecting it. It will begin to disappear fast at the holidays and the day you decide to make the cake is the day you won't find the first bottle left on the store shelf.
What do you only cook at Christmas?
