Saturday, December 31, 2011

RS Christmas Dinner



Here is a list of the books that were given at the RS Dinner and Book Exchange:
  • Capture the Castle
  • Defined by Christ
  • Heaven is for Real
  • Fire of the Covenant
  • The Help
  • I Am a Mother - by Jane Clayton
  • Christ - by Karl Block
  • The Perfect Recipe
  • Excuse Me Your Life Is Waiting
  • The Night Before Christmas
  • The Great & The Terrible
  • The Brothers - by Chris Stewart
  • A Tip in the Right Direction
  • House Keeping - by Marilyn Robinson
  • Penny's Christmas Jar Miracle
  • Our Best Bites - Mormon Moms in the Kitchen
  • A Forever Love
  • Cats Cradle - by Chieko N Okazaki
  • To the Rescue - A Biography of Thomas S Monson
  • The Colossal Cookie Cookbook
  • G-ma's Best Loved Recipes
  • That Went Well - by Teryl Dougan
  • Christmas in Mitford
  • What's Age Got to Do With It - Living Your Happiest & Healthiest Life
Tuscan Tomatoe Soup
3 Tbsp Olive Oil
1 Onion - diced small
3 14oz cans dices tomatoes
2 cups Chicken Stock
1 1/2 cups Heavy Whipping Cream
1 cup Basil Pesto
Salt & Pepper to taste

Heat oil in medium large soup pot.  Add onion and cook over moderately low heat until completely translucent.  Add tomatoes and allow to warm to a simmer.  Add chicken stock.  Bring to a simmer and allow to simmer 15 min to allow for interchange of flavors.

Add whipping cream.  Add pesto.

Blend to desired consistency in a food processor or blender.  Can reserve a little bit of the soup un-blended so there are some chunks.  Add salt and pepper.

Opptional:  Add tomato soup can and can of tomatoes

Mom's Clam Chowder
1 c. onions, finely chopped
1 c. diced celery (3 stalks)
2 c. finely diced potatoes (2 med.)
4 cans (6 1/2 oz. each) minced clams & juice
3/4 c. butter
3/4 c. flour
1 quart half 'n half
1 1/2 tsp. salt
few grains pepper
2 tbs. red wine vinegar
Drain juice from clams and pour over vegetables in a very small saucepan; add enough water to barely cover, and simmer, covered, over medium heat until barely tender (10-15 min.)
In the meantime, melt butter, add flour and blend; cook, stirring constantly. Add cream all at once and cook and stir with wire whip until smooth and thick. Add undrained vegetables, clams and vinegar, and heat through. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

Peppermint Candy Brownies
Find the recipe on OurBestBites.com 

Monday, December 5, 2011

Marilyn's Bookshelf


November 2011
Dougan, TerrellThat Went Well: Adventures in Caring for My Sister
      I met Terrell in Junior League many years ago.  She has been active in Salt Lake in volunteer work and is a journalist.  Terrell’s sister, Irene, was born six years her junior, in a long and arduous birth which may have contributed to her mental disability.  Although she cannot read or write, she is somewhat independent if living with a care-giver or in a group home.  Terrell is absolutely honest in her frustration with not only Irene, but also the care-givers, the programs of one sort or another, with funding for help, with those who meet and react to Irene in various ways.  She tells of hysterical experiences and tragic ones, of situations that would drive her to sleepless nights and tears, and wondering how in the world she would continue to deal with Irene (parents now are long gone).  But help always seems to arrive at just the right moment, and even though Terrell is a lapsed Mormon (her own admission), she is grateful to her higher power for many blessings which come in strange ways, like an uncle who offered to buy Irene a house for Irene and her care-giver, so that Irene would be closer to Terrell and in her own house.  Quite an amazing story, written from the heart.

December 2011
Dallas, Sandra, Tallgrass,    
      Authored by an East High graduate in the class of some of my colleagiate friends, this is the story of the Stroud family who live in the small town of the imaginary town of Ellis, Colorado.  After the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941, many Japanese internment camps were created across America to house those of Japanese descent.  Tallgrass, a Japanese internment camp, situated just beyond the Stoud farm, was based on an actual internment camp in Colorado.  Dallas creates an intriguing tale of how many families in this small town become embroiled in the uncalled-for hatred of any and all Japanese.  The Strouds take a different view.  After a murder of a young girl in town, many in the town attribute the heinous crime to one of the residents of Tallgrass.  Rennie Stroud, fourteen years old, is the main character in the book, but we quickly become involved with many of the townspeople and many of the Japanese as well.  We learn that this is a complicated business.