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This salad is easy to whip together and a perfect go-to for potlucks, picnics or anytime you really don’t want to cook. Add pieces of cooked chicken and you’ve got a meal ready to eat!

Ingredients

 

Microwave vinegar, oil and orange juice. Stir in seasoning packets. Set aside.

Mix oranges with coleslaw (or cabbage). Add in crushed noodles.

 

Pour dressing over salad, stirring well to coat. Cover tightly and refrigerate overnight.

Chinese Noodle Salad

1 bag of coleslaw mix or about six cups of shredded cabbage

2 packages of Ramen Noodles (chicken flavor)

1 large can Mandarin Oranges

1/2 cup sliced almonds

1/2 cup vinegar

2/3 cup oil

Drain oranges, reserving juice in a micro-wave safe bowl. Add oil and vinegar to juice and microwave about a minute, stirring to mix well.  Stir in the seasoning packets from the noodles until well blended. Set aside.

Mix coleslaw with oranges. Crush noodles and add to bowl, uncooked. Pour dressing over the top, mixing well. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight. Before serving, give the salad a good mix then stir in almonds and serve!

She Who Likes Easy To Make Dishes

Here are some fun summer entertaining ideas I’ve gleaned from one of my favorite  addictions – Pinterest!

From The Culinary Tribune

From Taste of Home

Rootbeer Float Popsicles from Butter Me Up Brooklyn

Glow in the Dark Bubbles from blog.kriegsman.org

Garden Party Lights made from Cupcake Papers by Itsy Belle. So wickedly clever!

Glow jars From Panka With Love. I adore this idea!

Happy Summer Entertaining!

She Who Needs to Host a Party!

Toxic Waste

It is a fact of life that we will have relationships come and go that can only be called toxic.

Maybe it’s a family member or a friend – but we’ve all had at least one relationship that leaves us feeling drained, empty, frustrated, annoyed, irritated, angry, used or abused.

I will admit I’ve had more than a few of these relationships over the years. It isn’t hard to recognize the symptoms. What may have started out as a fun relationship at some point morphs into something that leaves me feeling poisoned and sick at heart. My problem is that I have hard time admitting the relationship is toxic, letting go and moving on. This is a problem that dates back to my teen years and it hasn’t gotten better with time.

My daddy once told me that there have been a lot of times when I’ve been a good friend to others long beyond the time I needed to be. When he made that observation I wasn’t exactly sure what he meant. I’ve long since figured it out.

I could blame my need to maintain these toxic relationships on a multitude of things, including the astrological data that Libras are loyal to a fault, but I think it basically boils down to the fact that I just don’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings.

It is also a challenge to admit the time, effort, and care I’ve invested in a relationship may have been better spent elsewhere.

Recently, I have come to the startling realization that a relationship I’ve been in for quite a while has got to end. It has become so toxic, just hearing the person’s name makes me annoyed beyond reason.

Healthy? Not at all.

The spiral into the abyss started more than a year ago when, in the course of a week, my “friend” (let’s call him Fred) lied to me, deliberately excluded me from an event important to both of us, and then pretended he had no idea what I was talking about when I tried to discuss it.

I was livid at the time and Captain Cavedweller, wise man that he is, suggested I find a way to ease out of the friendship at that point.

Not quite done suffering, I prolonged the inevitable and gave Fred another chance. And another. And another.

In the past year, Fred has been:

•Demeaning

• Belittling

• Patronizing

• Dishonest

• Sneaky

• Self-serving

• Arrogant

• Rude

•Unkind

I know Fred has lied to my face as well as behind my back. I’ve discovered from mutual friends that invitations he was supposed to pass along to events never quite made it to me. It’s his own special way of making me feel excluded. And it was worked.

His latest tactic has largely been to ignore me unless he wants or need something, then he tries to act like we are still good friends.

In a nutshell, Fred has made continual withdrawals from the friendship bank account and failed to put in any deposits. Now that the account is way past overdrawn – there’s not much left to do but close it down.

As I was ranting to CC the other evening about Fred’s latest shenanigans, I told him I was all done. Done with the abuse, the lies, the toxic waste this friendship had become.

CC gave me a hug and told me it was about time.

As hard as it is to let go of people you care about, sometimes it is the best thing, the only thing, you can do.

What I’m trying to learn to focus on is that even if someone is in my life for a season (however long or brief), they have undoubtedly brought something into my life that I needed to learn or experience. The trick is in finding what that is and embracing it as I move forward, out of the toxic waste.

She Who Is Working on Letting Go

Here is a fast and easy dessert that tastes so yummy yet does not require cooking.

That means your house doesn’t have to reach the internal temperature of an inferno to enjoy something delicious wonderful and sweet!

Ingredients

 

Whip cream until it forms peaks. Add a little confectioner’s sugar to sweeten. Set aside.

Whip cream cheese until smooth.

Add milk and pudding mix to cream cheese and mix well.

 

Add whipping cream to pudding mix and blend gently with a spoon.

 

Line pan with graham crackers then spoon in pudding mix.

 

Top with whipped cream and chocolate shavings.

 

Leave in fridge for an hour (or overnight) before serving. Then indulge!

Chocolate Icebox No-Bake Dessert
1 3-ounce package cream cheese, softened (or cut an 8-ounce package in half)
1 1/2 cups milk
1 large package instant chocolate pudding mix
1 cup whipping cream
chocolate shavings or mini chocolate chips
Graham Crackers

Line the bottom of a 9×13 inch pan with Graham Crackers and set aside. Whip cream, add a dash of confectioner’s sugar to lightly sweeten.
In another bowl, mix cream cheese and milk until smooth. Add pudding mix and beat one minute. Fold in half of the whipped cream. Pour over Graham Crackers and chill for one hour.
Once chilled, spread rest of whipped cream on top and garnish with shaved chocolate or mini chocolate chips.

Restrain yourself from eating the whole pan and force yourself to share.

She Who Loves Easy Desserts that Don’t Require Turning on the Oven