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Archive for the ‘Entertaining at Home’ Category

mayday

Happy May Day!

Captain Cavedweller and I were just discussing May Day and memories we have (him not so much as me, but I think the holiday tends to capture the interest of little girls much more than little boys).

May Day is  a spring celebration that falls exactly half a year from November 1. It’s related to the Celtic festival of Beltane and the Germanic Festival of Walpurgis Night. As Europe became Christianized, the pagan holidays lost their religious foundations and morphed into the popular secular celebration.The celebration in America is best known for its tradition of dancing the maypole dance and baskets of flowers left on doorsteps as a surprise gift.
I remember one year at school we had a maypole using one of the pieces of playground equipment. Someone climbed to the top and fastened crepe paper streamers and then some of the students got to weave the streamers in and out in the traditional dance. I thought it was awesome. CC remembered doing something similar at his school using the tetherball pole.I also remember making May baskets and leaving them on a neighbor’s doorstep. My mom was also the recipient of some of my early May Day basket efforts which no doubt involved dandelions shoved into a canning jar.Wherever or however you celebrate this welcoming of spring, I hope you have a beautiful day!She Who Should Make a May Basket or Two

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cedar chest

My Mom recently gave me her old cedar chest. It sat in our storage room next to the big upright freezer all the years I was growing up. Sometimes my niece and I would lift the lid and pilfer through the contest, looking for treasures. Mom would usually catch us before we’d dug all the way to the bottom and decide we had better things to do.

My grandpa bought this cedar chest for my Mom after she spent a summer helping him on the farm in her teen years. I don’t know what treasures she filled it with at that time, but I do know it was her “hope chest” –  a place a girl could store things for the household she someday hoped to have, like embroidered pillowcases and such.

Opening the lid of the cedar chest brought back an array of memories for me. The scent of cedar still drifts out of the trunk even after all these years, reminding me of all the afternoons my niece and I spent seeking out the secrets hidden in the cedar chest.

cedar chest blanket wiley

This blanket, featuring Beep Beep and Wile E. Coyote was mine when I was a kid. As you can see, the blanket was well used. Around the time I switched bedrooms when my brother moved out, my blanket disappeared. Evidently my sister liked it too, because it ended up in her possession and she refused to give it back.

cedar chest baby blanketThis blanket, which is beyond well used, was one of my baby blankets. I forget who made it for me, but I loved it. It was just the right amount of fluffy and soft. I remember dragging it with me when Dad would let me ride in the swather while he cut hay. I’d sit on the floor on my blanket and share a roll of Necco’s or Butter Rum Lifesavers with Dad.

cedar chest baby outfit

This was one of my baby outfits. There is a photo of my dad holding me while I was wearing it. There is this little top, a pair of red pants and a white blouse that goes with the ensemble.

cedar chest toddler dress

This little dress my mom made for me when I was probably about three. She also made a matching one for my baby doll. I always liked the cheery little sprigs of flowers.

cedar chest toys

These were two stuffed toys from my childhood. The skunk my beloved Aunt Robbie gave me one night when my parents had to take my sister to the emergency room and they dropped me off at her house, half-awake and completely terrified. Aunt Robbie dug out some toys that had belonged to my cousins and the skunk was so soft and cuddly, she let me keep him. The goofy looking monkey was named Hinkle. He had the squishiest hands and the hand you don’t see in the photo is holding a big plastic banana that you could shove in his mouth. Filled with the same stuff they put in bean bags (don’t ask how I know this), he was smooshy and fun to play with.

cedar chest thumbelina

My sister got this doll when she was a little girl, back in the early 1960s. They don’t make them like this anymore. When I came along years later, I declared the doll my own, despite the fact that Thumbelina had no hair left at this point and her cloth body was stained and the filling was a bit lacking in spots. She was the best baby doll in the world to cuddle. The absolute best. Maybe the theft of my Beep Beep blanket was retribution for stealing my sister’s doll, although she had long ago abandoned her for greener pastures.

cedar chest grad dressMuch to my surprise, Mom not only saved the dress from my eighth grade graduation, but put it in the cedar chest. It was such a big deal when I got this dress. My parents were going to the big city – an almost seven hour drive – for the wedding of their best friend’s daughter. I got to tag along. One of the other daughters took Mom and I to a huge mall (it even had an indoor skating rink!) shopping and she helped me pick out the dress in some fun little boutique store geared for teens. I felt so grown up and sophisticated. She helped  me pick out three-inch high white wedge sandals to go with the dress and I was in seventh-heaven. I loved, loved the dress  and the sandals.

cedar chest catalogs

Anyone who grow up prior to the 1990s will probably remember the joy and excitement catalogs brought when they arrived in the mail three times a year. You’d get the Spring/Summer Catalog and the Fall/Winter Catalog. But the one anyone under the age of 12 anxiously awaited was the Christmas catalog. I could spend hours and hours drooling over all the wonderful things I wished and hoped to get for Christmas. The year Montgomery Ward’s announced they would not do the catalogs anymore, we saved the last two that came. And there they were, tucked into the cedar chest – from 1985. The clothes and hairstyles are quite entertaining and the toys in the Christmas catalog… Oh. My. Goodness.

cedar chest crocheted blanket

Determined to teach me knitting and crocheting, Mom finally gave up on knitting when it became blatantly clear I was going to take someone’s eye out with the needles. She settled on crocheting and didn’t give up until I had crocheted this baby blanket. I think I ripped out ten times more stitches than I made, but I finally got it finished and stuffed it in the cedar chest, hoping to never see it again. It made me smile when I pulled it out of the chest after all these years. I still can’t crochet or knit to save my life, but it wasn’t for a lack of effort on Mom’s part.

cedar chest hawaii pillow coverI think my favorite thing of all in the cedar chest was this pillow cover Dad brought back to Mom after he served in the Navy Reserves. Dad is the romantic of my two parents and the fact that he picked this out for Mom when he was just 19 makes me smile and it may even make my heart melt a little.

Thanks, Mom, for the cedar chest and for all the wonderful memories stored inside.

She Who Is Feeling Quite Sentimental

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peach cake finished

The other day I wanted something easy to make that tasted of sunshine and warm days. Peaches came to mind and since I have a thing for bundt cakes (so simple to make with very little effort and always tasty), I decided to incorporate the two.

This cake comes together in a snap, although the reduction sauce takes a little time and attention. You can skip it if you want, but it does add a nice layer of flavor to the finished dish.

Enjoy a little burst of summer flavor!

Ingredients

Ingredients

Mix up the batter. It will be really thick, so don't panic.

Mix up the batter. It will be really thick, so don’t panic.

 

Drain peach juice into a heavy-duty saucepan. Make sure you get all of it you can.

Drain peach juice into a heavy-duty saucepan. Make sure you get all of it you can.

 

Slice peaches into bite-sized pieces. You should have about a cup or so.

Slice peaches into bite-sized pieces. You should have about a cup or so.

Pour half of the batter into greased bundt pan. Sprinkle in peaches. Top with remaining batter.

Pour half of the batter into greased bundt pan. Sprinkle in peaches. Top with remaining batter.

 

Tamp pan to get out air bubbles then bake for about an hour or until edges pull away from pan.

Tamp pan to get out air bubbles then bake for about an hour or until edges pull away from pan.

 

Golden brown loveliness!

Golden brown loveliness!

 

Let cool completely then place on cake plate or platter.

Let cool completely then place on cake plate or platter.

 

Nuke frosting for about 12 seconds then pour over cake.

Nuke frosting for about 12 seconds then pour over cake.

 

Add sugar to peach juice and cook over medium heat for about 15-20 minutes, or until juice is thickened like syrup. Stir occasionally.

Add sugar to peach juice and cook over medium heat for about 15-20 minutes, or until juice is thickened like syrup. Stir occasionally.

 

 

Your reduction sauce will be a lovely amber color - like honey.

Your reduction sauce will be a lovely amber color – like honey.

Pour it into a pitcher...

Pour it into a pitcher…

And admire your handiwork before slicing the cake and serving with a drizzle of the syrup and a dollop of whipped cream.

And admire your handiwork before slicing the cake and serving with a drizzle of the syrup and a dollop of whipped cream.

 

 

Peach Bundt Cake

1 box French Vanilla Cake Mix

1 small package instant cheesecake pudding

1 (15.25 oz) can peaches

1 cup sour cream

1/2 cup water

1/2 cup oil

3 eggs

1/2 cup cream cheese frosting

Peach Reduction Sauce

whipped cream

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Blend dry ingredients. Slice peaches into bite-sized pieces. Set aside.  Lightly beat eggs then mix eggs, water, oil and sour cream with dry ingredients. Beat on medium speed until combined. The batter will be super thick, so don’t panic.

Scoop half the batter into a greased bundt pan, evening it up as best you can (I tap the pan on the counter to get out air bubbles and even up the batter). Sprinkled peaches around the batter layer then top with the remaining batter.  Bake for one hour or until it starts to pull away from the edges of the pan.

Let cool completely then invert on a cake plate. Put frosting into a microwaveable pitcher or bowl and nuke it for about 12 seconds. It doesn’t take very long at all. Drizzle over cake. Serve with peach reduction sauce and a dollop of whipped cream.

Peach Reduction Sauce

Juice drained from can of peaches (about 1 cup)

1/3 cup sugar

In a heavy saucepan, stir sugar into peach juice and cook on medium heat for about twenty minutes, stirring occasionally. The juice will reduce down and thicken into a lovely amber-colored sauce that tastes wonderfully divine.

She Who Had No Idea Captain Cavedweller Would Like This So Much

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Here are some of my favorite Easter recipes.

Enjoy!

 

 

 

 

She Who is Now Craving Jelly Beans

 

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