Monday, November 28, 2011

We Have Some Catchin Up


Getting caught back up...

Goodness knows it is going to take me till Christmas to get back on track just from Thanksgiving.



This was my sons jack o lantern...
he only makes them so he can roast the seeds...
He loves the seeds. And I love it because he is now old enough to do this project himself and clean up the mess..

The woods is where I have been spending alot of my time...
 Many of you know we have a little second home in southwest Mississippi.
 As you can guess...no internet, but after two months of me driving back and forth waiting and waiting
...we have a land line phone!
AT&T is not worth a crap!!! 
 I will not ruin my pretty pictures of leaves with that story...



While sitting there...I wondered what ya'll were up to...
traveling, maybe cooking?
Did ya get the Christmas tree up yet?


Oh and I did a little dreaming...how I would love a new car...
But...
then I would have a car note...
I certainly don't want one of those!

Oh well....I can dream right?  
 If any of you have one of these Range Rover's can ya take me for a ride?   or better yet tell me that they really are not that great and I am not missing a thing !  LOL

BAM
BACK HOME and to reality, life and rot carry on!
YUCK..
Remember when I said my son is old enough to  pick up his mess?  Guess 18 is not old enough!
 He certainly did not clean up this part...
I am sure he walked passed it every morning on his way to his truck...
No, he is not in biology this semester,
can't use for the sake of science as an excuse!

Can I tell you rotten pumpkin smells almost as bad
 as rotten potatoes... poo wee!



He did put up the Christmas tree...
After closer inspection...the tree is not looking to well,
the tree has seen better years.
We all loaded in the car and went order a fresh flocked tree.... I can not remember the last time we had a real tree...



This tree will be retired back to the box...
Been missing ya'll
leave me a comment,
 let me know what you have been up to...

Friday, November 18, 2011

Fabulous Friday Four


Welcome to Fabulous Friday Four. 
 Allow me to introduce you to Four Fabulous blogs
 that I love to follow.







Ferris at Eating Baton Rouge

Eating Baton Rouge is a new blog that was
started by a dear friends son, Ferris.
 Ferris attends LSU but in his spare time is on a mission to seek out the best food Baton Rouge has to offer.
This connoisseur of great southern dishes reviews his food with plate full of  honesty and a little shake of humor.  
He lives by his families motto...
"We don't eat to live, we live to eat."  
Please take a moment to welcome and follow Ferris as he takes us dining around Baton Rouge.






Laura at White Spray Paint

Join Laura as she shares her beautiful home and garden with us. I had to laugh, on her most recent post she descibes her sofa as sinking to China. I can not wait to see how
 her living room make over is going to turn out. 
I am sure she would love some company as she takes on the search for a new rug...tell her hello for me when you stop in.





Vanessa & Heather At The Picket Fence

Vanessa and Heather, two sisters who love to blog. 
They cook, decorate and love to party! 
Ok, linky party that is...
they are hosting a huge party for the Christmas holidays.
The party is joined by a host of fabulous bloggers...and you can be a part of it too!
Drop in and see the details...its gonna be fun and there is no better way to meet new bloggers than a party.







Nikki at Chef - N - Training

Chef n Traning is a fabulous blog that Nikki started as a way for her to save her recipes. Right now on her blog she is sharing a wonderful heathy recipe for Peanut Butter dip. YUM
On Tuesdays she has a linky party for everyone to share a recipe or something they have been working on.
Go by and say hi and make sure you get that dip recipe.




 
Hope you take a moment to visit these blogs.
See you next week with a new project and who knows I might even whip up something in the kitchen to share.

 

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Hoarding In the Make~Up Drawer

Hoarding In The Make~Up Drawer 
 Don't Laugh, It Can Happen!

Have you ever just lived with something day in and day out, never noticing what it has turned into...
(No this is not about my husband)

Sometimes the things that are supposed to make you pretty are in such a mess, its just not that pretty.


Ok...are you ready for the excuse? 
 Well every weekend, I travel to our second home, so on Sunday night I just stuff the makeup bag back into the drawer..on top of the other makeup that I do not use often...



Lord...these are all those "Free" lipsticks.
You know they give you the colors
 NO ONE would ever wear...
Flaming Red, Outrageous Orange,
 Poop Brown 
 yeah yeah, you get the picture.
Can't throw them out...I may meet someone that can use that Outrageous Orange or the Poop Brown.


My daughter gave me this awesome
 pink face goo...about three years ago.
It now has white dots in it...I don't think they are moving, but maybe I should throw it out.



Crazy huh? 
 I really only wear make~up about twice a week, so how did my drawer get this way?
Well time for a clean out!


I just love these little baskets...they make my make~up routine sooo much easier now.
AHHH  CALM...How I love CALM

Maybe that is the true preventive for
wrinkles...CALM



Sunday, November 6, 2011

Sweet Onion Hot Dip


Sweet Onion Hot Dip

I found this recipe in a small local magazine ...it looked so easy and inexpensive, I had to give it a try.


Sweet Onion Hot Dip

1   8oz Cream Cheese
1   cup mayonnaise   (In the south everyone uses Blue Plate)
1  cup grated Parmesan cheese
1 large sweet onion
Slap Ya Mamma


Preheat the oven to 350*.
Grate the onion.
Mix softened cream cheese, mayonnaise, Parmesan cheese together.
Fold in onion and a few dashes of Slap Ya Mamma.
Spread into a small baking dish 
( I used  an 8X9  Le Creuset baking dish)

Bake for 30-40 minutes, the top will get a
beautiful golden brown.
Serve with crackers or spread on small pieces of crusty bread.




If you do not have Slap Ya Mamma you could just add a few dashes of Tabasco. 
This oh so simple dish will make you the "Hit of the Party " this holiday season...





there are tons of great links with great ideas.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

All Saints Day




St.Fancisville, Louisiana
This post is not supporting any one specific Christian religion, but to share my view of the day.

All Saints Day 
 It is a fact we are all going to face death, whether you are christian, atheist, or somewhere in between. 
 For me All Saints day means going to the graveyard and placing flowers on the graves of family and friends  that have left this earth. 
I do not worship the dead, I simply recognize what my loved ones brought into my life. I totally understand that going to the graveyard is so very hard for many people.
Don't get me wrong, I do not place those that have passed in the back of my mind and only think of them on All Saints Day.
Not one day goes by that I do not think of my baby brother, Wesley.  ( I replace his flowers often, as I feel that it is my gift  to him on his birthday, Easter, Christmas, etc.)

On this day as my husband and I go together.  I stand at my brothers grave, my husband brushes the leaves off, places his flowers, he asks me a question. I am so absorbed in looking at Wesley's picture on his headstone, deep in my own thoughts. I did not really hear what he was saying, nor could I answer.  It was one of those moments that if I spoke my voice would crack and I would not be able to control the tears,(my brother would not want that).  My husband looks over at me waiting on his answer and then silently understands with just a nod. 
We actually walk around three different graveyards.  We pass graves of  friends and extended family taking  a brief moment to stop and remember what that person brought to our lives.

  At some we stop in amazement, as we notice the date on the headstone. It is then that we  realize how much time has passed.
 One date we noticed that my mawmaw was 27 before she married, that was "old" in her day (their  anniversary date  is etched in the vase between mawmaw and pawpaw.)  We  shared a laugh, because  now marrying older is the norm. I must note, she lived to be 100, so she enjoyed many years with my pawpaw.

As I pass graves, I think of my husbands aunt, a friends mom, friends, some are even my children's friends that have been tragically killed  ... I think of their loved ones, and the sorrow that must certainly still burden them.
We remember  those that are buried in other places or chose cremation. My grandparents and nephew in Santa Fe, the great aunt and uncle who donated their bodies to science. 
 Why do this you ask?  Why should my husband and I take a moment out of our busy life, to open our hearts and go back to those sorrowfull emotions that we try to hide away deep in our soul.
It is on this day that we may laugh and cry  without  an explanation.   
 All Saints Day helps us to remember that we are only here for a short time.  
 As we reminisce about the  memories our loved ones have left us, we realize all too well, that   memories  will be all that we leave behind. 





All Saints' Day (in the Roman Catholic Church officially the Solemnity of All Saints and also called All Hallows or Hallowmas[3]), often shortened to All Saints, is a solemnity celebrated on 1 November by parts of Western Christianity, and on the first Sunday after Pentecost in Eastern Christianity, in honour of all the saints, known and unknown.

Other Christian traditions define, remember and respond to the saints in different ways; for example, in the Methodist Church, "saints who have helped extend and enliven God's kingdom" are remembered—that is—the entire Church universal and those significant to a particular local congregation.[2]

In Argentina, Austria, Belgium, France, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, Malta, Portugal, Spain, and American cities such as New Orleans, people take flowers to the graves of dead relatives.
In Austria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Finland, Catholic parts of Germany, Hungary, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia and Sweden, the tradition is to light candles and visit the graves of deceased relatives.
(Information source is Wikipedia)