Monday, April 30, 2012

Bram's Chocolate Cake & Frosting from Paula Burns

I met Paula Burns via email.  She had purchased a copy of Annie's Sweet Tooth (and other savory delights!) from RJ Julia Booksellers in Madison CT.  She noticed the little sign by the book which stated all proceeds were going to the MDS Foundation, which is what drew her to the book.  Paula lost her Dad to complications from MDS, as I lost my sister, Ann.

After Paula emailed me about the cookbook and shared her story about her Dad and I responded, we met for coffee; she also became involved with the Development Committee for the MDS Foundation, and now, we are friends!  Paula is a manager for Send Out Cards and offers a home based business opportunity as well as a most convenient and fun way to buy and send greeting cards!  For more information and a peek at the opportunities, please email Paula at moodybeachgirl@comcast.net.

In Paula's words:

I've had an "AHA" moment this past year... which has steered me in the direction of a journey of personal development. One of my best journeys, is the Sendout Cards opportunity.

I encourage all my friends to spend time getting to know who you really are and what you really want your life to be....Live the life you've imaged....

And now, I present:   Bram's Chocolate Cake and Frosting by Paula Burns, Guest Blogger

"Chocolate Cake Recipe

1/2 cup of shortening
1 1/4 cup sugar
2 large eggs
1/2 cup dark cocoa
1 cup of hot coffee
1 1/2 cups of sifted flour
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp of baking powder
 

Cream shortening, add eggs one at a time.  Sift flour, salt, soda and baking powder together.   Add to the cream mixture.  Combine the cocoa and hot coffee.  Stir until smooth.  Add dry ingredients to the cream mixture, alternating with the cocoa mixture.

Bake in a greased 9" round pan, or a small tube pan, at 350 degrees for 45mins till cake tested, inserted, comes out clean.  Frost with cream cheese frosting.

Cream Cheese Frosting

1 3oz package of cream cheese, softened
2 Tbl soft butter
2-3 cups of powdered sugar
tsp of vanilla
just enough milk to blend

Cream all above and spread over cooled cake


This is the "family" cake which has been made and served for every family birthday and special event.  I"ve had this cake for every one of my birthdays and now my children have as well.  My paternal grandmother began making this cake as a young girl  (one of her first baking adventures).  I say baking adventures, because she was baking with a wood fired stove.   Many a story has been told about the perils of baking with a wood kitchen stove.

Enjoy!"

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Guest Post from Victoria Moran

From MAIN STREET VEGAN: Everything You Need to Know to Eat Healthfully and Live Compassionately in the Real World, by Victoria Moran, with Adair Moran.
Web site: http://mainstreetvegan.net
Amazon:  http://tinyurl.com/7hfv4ox             
BN.com: http://tinyurl.com/6lvjq8t



Decide That You Can Do This

           Sometimes, the thought of going vegan just plain scares people. It can seem complicated. Impractical. Exotic, but not in a good way. In reality, however, you’ve eaten vegan food every day of your life (unless you were ever on Atkins and consumed only roast beef and hard-boiled eggs until your best friend told you, in confidence, that you were starting to smell funny).
Think about it. Let’s say you get up and have for breakfast a glass of OJ, whole-wheat toast with peanut butter and strawberry jam, and Earl Grey tea with lemon. At lunchtime, you go to a salad bar and serve yourself a mixture of romaine and spinach, grated carrot, tomatoes, scallions, garbanzo beans, and black olives, and top it with a drizzle of French dressing; you grab some rye crackers and sesame breadsticks and a bottle of lime-infused sparkling water.
In the late afternoon, you eat an apple and what’s left in that little bag of roasted almonds you bought yesterday at Starbucks. For dinner, you open a bottle of red wine and let it breathe while you pour out baby greens from a bag and toss them with balsamic vinaigrette. Then you boil angel hair pasta, heat up a jar of marinara sauce, and steam a bunch of broccoli. There’s peach sorbet for dessert.
Guess what? You just spent a day eating as a vegan – without shopping at a health food store, or consuming anything unusual or derived from a soybean. Almost certainly you will, as a vegan, want to take advantage of what a natural food store has to offer and, unless you have a personal reason for avoiding soy, you’ll have a great time experimenting with the various “meats,” “milks,” “ice creams,” and “cheeses” made from this remarkable legume. But for the most part, vegan dining is built around foods with which you’re already familiar.
Even so, it’s not always easy to take this plunge. Most of us are used to eating animal foods and mass-produced foods that have a lot of their nutrition stripped away, but they come in packages we recognize and that make us feel safe. As a vegan, you’ll be eating a lot of fruits and vegetables – no packaging at all – and many of the prepared foods you’ll try come from small companies you may not have heard of before. This can be disconcerting because it’s unfamiliar. But those corporate giants that want to addict you to their greasy, salty, sugary, chemical-laced products aren’t old friends: they’re just old! These are the guys who want you to think that Twinkies are normal and artichokes are weird.
We vegans comprise only a tiny segment of the population, but our numbers are growing rapidly, and legions of other folks are trying to eat healthier and cut back on animal products, without eliminating them entirely. This means there’s more food for us to eat in more places than ever before, even though the world at large isn’t quite set up for us yet. Although eating a whole-foods, plant-based diet can keep you thin, safeguard your health, and give you a new lease on life, it can also make you something of an oddity at the family reunion. That’s the price of being a trailblazer, but when you think about all it’s doing for you – not to mention the animals and the environment – that price is pretty darned low.
Decide, then, that you can do this, because you can. You learned how to drive a car, program the DVR, and use your iGadgets; compared to those accomplishments, going vegan is a piece of Wacky Cake (see the recipe at the end of this chapter). The biggest obstacle most would-be vegans face is feeling different from other people, but you can change how you see that by replacing different with pioneering.
People who worked for the abolition of slavery in the 1700s and 1800s were considered different, extreme, and out of touch with economic realities. Suffragists in the US and the UK were seen as hysterical and out of control because they believed that women should have the right to vote. Both blacks and whites who were part of the American civil rights movement in the mid-20th century were called radical, even criminal. 
You’ll be in good company, then, when some benighted soul tells you to stop being a “health nut” (I’d rather be a healthy “nut” than a sick something else), or a “bleeding heart” (vegan ChloĆ« Jo Davis of the fashion site, GirlieGirlArmy.com, recently tweeted: “Better a bleeding heart than no heart at all” – cheers to that!). Let’s face it, being ahead of one’s time is always inconvenientbut if nobody forged ahead despite inconvenience, nothing would ever change for the better….
Somebody way smarter than me said that we reap what we sow, and in living as a vegan, you sow the seeds of an amazing life. People who live on unadulterated, plant-based foods, and who make some effort to take care of themselves in other ways, tend to be trim, attractive, energetic, and effective. If this is what you want – and you must, since you’re reading this book – hurray for you! Decide that you can do this. And prepare yourself for a grand adventure.