Friday, October 17, 2008

mindy's yummy squash recipes

I asked for squash recipes today and Ian (Mindy's) hubs FB me and sent these my way. I know Mindy is an amazing cook

Danish squash (also called acorn):
puncture 4 wholes in the shell. lay on tin foil and bake at 375 for one hour. turn off the oven and leave it in for another hour. cut in half and remove seeds, then remove skin and put all the "meat" in a bowl. From there you can do about anything!

Traditionally, people will add butter, brown sugar, salt and pepper to Danish squash. I like to mash it. Then add finely grated parmesan cheese, crispy fried bacon bits, carmelized onions, sundried tomatoes, and fresh chopped basil.

Spaghetti squash: Slice it into halves. bake at 375 in a shallow baking dish with a little water in the bottom of the pan and cover it with foil for an hour or sol. This will help it cook through.

After it cools, hollow out each half setting "meat" aside. You can use this really stringy squash meat in place of noodles for just about anything! Top it with your favorit spaghetti sauce. Use it in a broth based soup instead of noodles. Toss it with a light balsalmic vinagrette dressing, fresh basil, heirloom tomatoes, and onion for a yummy pasta like salad.

Butternut squash: This squash is the best for creamy soups, curry recipes, and baked in chunks on pizza! I like to cut it in half and remove all the skin and seeds fresh, before cooking.

For the pizza, I cut it into one inch cubes and toss it with pressed garlic, olive oil, dried herbs, salt and pepper. Then roast it in the oven in a single layer on a cookie sheet for about an hour at 425. Turn it once or twice during the hour. I put this roasted squash on pizza with olive oil garlic sauce (instead of red sauce), mozzarella, caramelized onions, fried bacon pieces, and goat cheese.

For the soup, I like to cut it into cubes and cook it in my wok with onions and garlic. Once this mix is browned in the wok, I add chicken stock and let it simmer until softened. After this mixture cools, you can blend it in the blender (add more stock if it's too thick). Then pour it back to a soup pot add cream, salt, pepper and fresh herbs. I like to pour it into a bowl over a piece of garlic toast and top with cheese. But you can also add more to it if you want different flavors.

Try adding other veggies to the wok with the squash: carrots, leeks, anise, celery, potatoes, it's hard to go wrong with it :)

For the curry I cut the squash in chunks and stir fry it in the wok with potatoes, carrots, red pepper, onion, garlic, curry powder, ginger powder, cumin and fennel seeds. After this mixture is browned well, I add chicken stock and cover it to soften all the veggies. Then I mash about half the mixture up, leaving lots of big chunks of carrots and potato. Turn the heat on medium low and add honey and salt. Then stir in one or two cans of coconut milk, depending on how much your making. Let it heat through and continue to sit on low til ready to serve. Serve over brown or white rice, topped with fresh cilantro and crushed red pepper flakes, or use as a soup and serve warm pita or nan bread to dip in it.

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give the gift that keeps on giving

There will be a generation of important stories lost if we - don't think of giving the gift that will only give back to us.

I gave my grandfather, August Zentgraf, a gift that keeps giving back to me. The year he lived with Michael and I, I spent time with him specifically to write his story.

August Zentraf - lived 96 years.

Morning after morning, he and I would go to my computer. He'd sit in the chair next to my desk and he would just begin to talk as I typed. Sometimes, I couldn't type fast enough because I'd be so caught up in his story with many questions about what he just said. All along the way, I'd ask him many questions because I never knew those things about him. I wanted detail. I'd say things like, "You're kidding? You did that?" or "Really? And, then what happened?"

That was a gift to him. I cared enough about him to know him - to learn from him and ask him questions. It was a gift to Grandfather and it's still a gift that keeps coming back to me.

Most older parents and grandparents appreciate when their children or grandchildren take an intereste in their past. Perhaps one reading this will cash in on this gift while they're still alive.
I'll never have that regret with Grandfather. I've shared some of his stories with my children and grandchildren. They would have been lost had I not taken that time.

So, may this be my gift to my readers - write that story! Go to that older one in your life and spend time with them and learn of them and write their story! You'll kick yourself if you don't!

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halloween cupcakes & more

We all know, I love cupcakes! Had some fabulous ones for my birthday and my grandkids -became bug-eyed last year when we had these for Jenni's birthday. Ask Zane (the six year old) about our cupcake making times. He'll smile. I think that's why he loves his nana - I make cupcakes with him.
While snooping around Hostess with Mostess, I swooped upon these yummy looking ones for Halloween. Go here for her recipe!

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i'm a guest writer over here

As you know, or probably know, I have entered the world of twitter. It's a fun and dangerous world. Fun, because I'm connecting with a lot of new wonderful folk and dangerous because it can literally suck you in and become a potential time waster. My life is very full, so I seek for the balance.

One of my twitter friends is Deb. Deb is a great gal, an incredible writer, blogger at Bird on a Wire and a all around delightful woman I'm privileged to know.

Last week, Deb asked me to be a guest writer on her blog series - A Dot Mom Prays. As a centered woman, I pray. I talk to God and He talks to me. I'd love you to visit Deb's blog and say 'hello' to her.


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Thursday, October 16, 2008

cupcakes and my 54th bd


I love cupcakes! I love my family! The two go hand in hand to celebrate a birthday! Mine!

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how to declutter 20 years of stuff in 23 minutes or less

I do love to declutter and keep "stuff" as organized as possible. Like many women, I'm always on the look out for a new tip on decluttering and organizing and how to get rid of the excess stuff. The Simple Home is all about SIMPLE and and being free of stuff.

The Stuff I Collected and Neatly Organized
As a writer and speaker I have neatly gathered saved and organized tons of little illustrations, newspaper clippings, topic ideas for messages for women's retreats and tons of other misc. notes that shamelessly filled almost two filing cabinets.

Lylah's Tip: How to Declutter 20 years of Stuff in 23 Minutes or Less
The other day, while reorganizing my sections in our garage, I took a look at the space taken up by those two filing cabinets. Upon opening both drawers and taking a very quick look . . . a very quick one mind you and then without hesitation, I started dumping it all. I didn't reminisce. I didn't take a second look. I dumped and filled each grocery bag as full as I could get it.
So, girls, if I can do it, so can you. There's something so freeing about getting rid of "stuff."

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book clubs for moms

Moms and Book Clubs just go together! One mom writes, " I love to read. It is a passion, an addiction, a way to stimulate my mother-overloaded brain . . . one of the ways that I feed this addiction is by getting involved in book groups or starting them if there aren't any to be found. I seriously could write a how-to on starting a book club." And this mom did here.

For all you moms who want to start a book club, here are The Lylah Blog's Book Club Recommendations!

Three Cups of Tea - In 1993 Greg Mortenson was the exhausted survivor of a failed attempt to ascend K2, American climbing bum wandering emaciated and lost through Pakistan’s Karakoram Himalaya. After he was taken in and nursed back to health by the people of an impoverished Pakistani village, Mortenson promised to return one day and build them a school. From that rash, earnest promise grew one of the most incredible humanitarian campaigns of our time—Greg Mortenson’s one-man mission to counteract extremism by building schools, especially for girls, throughout the breeding ground of the Taliban.

Nine Parts of Desire - Geraldine Brooks spent two years as a Middle East news correspondent, covering the death of Khomeini and the like. She also learned a lot about what it's like for Islamic women today. Brooks' book is exceedingly well-done--she knows her Islamic lore and traces the origins of today's practices back to Mohammed's time. Personable and very readable, Brooks takes us through the women's back door entrance of the Middle East for an unusual and provocative view.

The Color Water - A Black Man's Tribute to His White Mother, which doesn't begin to do justice to the utterly unique and moving story contained within. The Color of Water tells the remarkable story of Ruth McBride Jordan, the two good men she married, and the 12 good children she raised. Jordan, born Rachel Shilsky, a Polish Jew, immigrated to America soon after birth; as an adult she moved to New York City, leaving her family and faith behind in Virginia. Jordan met and married a black man, making her isolation even more profound. The book is a success story, a testament to one woman's true heart, solid values, and indomitable will. Ruth Jordan battled not only racism but also poverty to raise her children and, despite being sorely tested, never wavered. In telling her story--along with her son's--The Color of Water addresses racial identity with compassion, insight, and realism. It is, in a word, inspiring, and you will finish it with unalloyed admiration for a flawed but remarkable individual. And, perhaps, a little more faith in us all.

Safely Home - A soul-stirring story of two college friends who reconnect after 20 years. One is living life apart from God in comfortable corporate America, while the other is living for Christ under intense persecution in China. This challenging book will convict the heart of readers to live in the light of eternity.

Inkheart - Imagine it were possible to bring the characters from a book to life. Not like when someone reads a book with such enchantment that the characters seem to jump off the pages and into your bedroom...but for real. Imagine they could actually climb out of the pages and into our world. Now imagine if those characters brought their world into ours.

Falling into the Face of God - In early June of 2002, I left the United States and traveled to the locus of my own soul. If one were to look at a map, they would say that my destination was Israel (specifically the Judean Desert) and that I had traveled 6,497miles. But in actuality, I traveled much farther than that-upon a road whose traversing is not measured in miles, but by the deepening of the human experience, love and acceptance; and not by direction (for there is only one direction-inward). And whose perilous mountains, cliffs, and valleys were not composed of stone or sand, but of one's own psyche (the most dangerous of the world's creations).

I'd love to hear your book club suggestions!

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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

soup - from lylah's kitchen

On page 222 of Nourishing Traditions, is the BEST Squash and Sun Dried Tomato soup recipe ever!
photo compliments of www.channel4.com

Ingredients and Directions
1 butternut squash
2 medium onions, peeled and chopped
3 TB butter
1 cup sun dried tomatoes, packed in oil. I only had sun dried tomatoes in a bag, so, I added a bit of olive oil to the cup and let it sit for a tad.
1 quart chicken stock (I used Trader Joes Chicken Broth and actually I used more than what it called for - it seemed to need to be more brothy.)
1/4 tsp. red chili flakes
2 Tb finely chopped basil (I used fresh from my garden.)

Cut squash in half lengthwise and place, cut sides down, in a glass baking pan with about 1/2 inch of water. I chose to liberally douse my squash with olive oil instead. Bake at 350 degrees until tender, about 1 hour.

Meanwhile, sauté onions gently in butter until tender. Add tomatoes, broth and chili flakes. Bring to a boil and skim. Scoop squash out of skin and add to the soup. Simmer for about 1/2 hour. Puree soup with a handheld blender. I didn't do this - I chose to leave it as it was.

Thin with water (I added more chicken broth.) Add basil and season to taste. Simmer gently about 5 minutes, ladle into heated bowls.

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