best cookies on the market!
Master Bong - How to Make No Bake Pot Cookies w/ Medical Marijuana Granny Bakers Teaser
0 comments Posted by Dehaas at 4:27 PMwww.MasterBong420.com pot butter | marijuana cooking | cannabis cooking | cooking with marijuana | cooking with cannabis | recopy pot | pot recopies | medical cooking | homemade bong | bong smoking | thc strains | reefer I'm all about providing the best content possible so I had to introduce everyone to two of the sweetest Grannies I've met! These ladies are truly all about the patient and it shows in their work, everything is made with love and it shows. We start out with a little intro so you can get to know the Grannies and then we get to the cooking. This recipe is super easy and you don't even need a oven! We picked this because of the simplicity of it and they taste GREAT! This was all about figuring out what you like to eat and how you like your edibles made. I had a lot of fun talking with the Grannies and making these delicious No Bake Cookies.
Your gift will be a double blessing because it shows that you care enough to spend time creating something special just for the recipient. And if you're a careful shopper, you'll also make your gifts inexpensively. Here are some ideas to get you started; you'll probably come up with some of your own.
1) Crocheted scarves: Crocheting is an easy to learn and fun. It also has the benefit of working up quickly—you can make a scarf in one or two days. Because of the wonderful array of colors and textures in yarns these days, you can make scarves to please everyone. Look at these beginner's patterns, pick up a crochet hook and some yarn and away you go.
2) Homemade cookies and candies: Most of us enjoy baking during holiday seasons, but some families are too busy to enjoy homemade treats. In addition, you may have a wonderful recipe that will be new to the recipient of your homemade cookie tray. Look at these ideas for cookies and candies that will be sure to please.
3) Recipe booklets: One of the best gifts my husband ever received was a little booklet of hand-written recipes. They were our daughter's favorites from a time when she cooked for a restaurant. We've used them over and over again and we always think of her when we do. Gather your favorites and write them out in a gift booklet for someone you know who loves to cook.
4) Beeswax candles: Using sheets of lovely-smelling beeswax and a simple cotton wick you can create beautiful handmade candles. Decorated with a red or gold ribbon, they make perfect Christmas gifts.
5) Calligraphy gifts: If you have seen samples of 19th century handwritten letters or if you've taken a calligraphy class, then you know how lovely pen and ink can be. With a little practice you can create calligraphy poems, stories, cards or whatever you would like to create as a personal gift this Christmas.
6) Photo gift albums: Have you taken a trip with friends and have some great pictures? Or do you have pictures of your grown children that would make a good gift now that they're all grown? Gather them together into a simple photo album and you have a perfect Christmas gift. Pictures capture a certain time and place and the memories that go with them.
7) Sweet sauces: Save your empty jam, jelly and other small jars and refill them with delicious homemade dessert sauces. Hot fudge, orange, caramel, lemon, vanilla and more. Include a dessert recipe to go along with the sauce if you like. Most dessert sauces keep well when refrigerated.
8) Easy sew blankets: Sew a blanket for a new baby or adapt the pattern to suit a child or adult. This easy pattern with video to help you get started is both handsome and practical.
9) Jellies and jams: There's still time to buy fresh fruit and make either cooked or freezer jam recipes. A small jar of homemade raspberry freezer jam is worth its weight in gold. You can put up dozens of these this fall and have them ready to give as the holiday gatherings begin to fill your calendar.
10) Potted plants: Plants bring the color of the garden into your home. African violets, simple ivy varieties, philodendrons and many more make easy-to-care-for gifts. If you have a green thumb, you may want to try rooting new plants from old by pinching off leaves and waiting for them to put out roots in water. Otherwise, visit a local nursery and choose healthy plants to repot into pretty containers. They make great gifts for your elderly friends as well as all plant lovers.
Whether you try one of the ideas above, or think up your own homemade gifts, your time and effort will shine through to those on your Christmas gift list. And you'll have the satisfaction of giving personalized, thoughtful gifts to those you love.
Labels: EasytoMake, Handcrafted
THIS IS A REBEL GRANNY AND HER GRAND KIDS TRYING TO FIGHT, SELL COOKIES, AND THEY ALSO MIGHT HAVE A CEASURE OR 2 IN THE VIDEO JUST WATCH THEN SUBSCRIBE
Getcha Fruit On (Veggies Aint S***) Here Comes Treble RVRHS Fruit Rap Yo, fruit, don't know where to start Third on the pyramid First in my heart First got a glimpse when I was 5 years old 10 cents at the market that s*** was sold Took a big bite that stuff was dope I asked the name- he said "cantaloupe" I've been hustlin fruit since the dawn of time How you think Eve got dat apple vine? My own produce mart That's what I need The flyest fruit-man since Appleseed (bridge) yo apples, oranges, bananas, watermelon Now my cravin for an apple's bout to get vicious Keep ya granny smith I want my red delicious My love for fruit is about to let loose All natur-AL like Juicy Juice Eatin so healthy makes me confident So when kids call me fruity it's a compliment Don't give me a milkshake Give me a fruit-shake Fruit is the truth Won't give you a toothache Makin fruit deals With the fruit in a suitcase On my first birthday I ate up a fuitcake, peaches oranges grapes and apples I want that real fruit Not that fake ass Snapple I got you in the grapple sayin Give me the fruit If you give me a peach Then I'll let you loose When it's Christmas time And I'm waitin for Santa I don't give him cookies I just give him bananas
It's also harvest time and that evokes memories of simpler times when everyone was about the business of bringing in the harvest. Fall fruits and vegetables were being stored away and preserved for winter months to come. All around our country farmers still bring their goods to markets and there are fall festivals in towns from Maine to California. Take a look at this one: http://www.grapeharvestfestival.com/id4.html, in upstate New York
Woody Woodpecker Show - Red Riding Hoodlum. "Red Riding Hoodlum" is the 74th animated cartoon short subject in the Woody Woodpecker series. Released theatrically on February 11, 1957, the film was produced by Walter Lantz Productions and distributed by Universal International. Woody Woodpecker sends Knothead and Splinter on an errand to deliver a basket of goodies to their Grandmother's house. They encounter a Wolf and soon realize that the events are occurring just like the Little Red Riding Hood story they were reading at the start of the film. However, things start to differ once Granny gets a good look at the Wolf. She falls head over heels in love with him and goes to redo her make-up. She puts on a red curly wig, curls her eyelashes, puts on a red shade of lipstick and powders her face. She embraces the Wolf and plants a giant kiss on his lips while red hearts appear in the air. She winds up marrying the Wolf even though he doesn't seem too thrilled about it. Though this short is a part of the Woody Woodpecker series, its main stars are Woody's nephew and niece Knothead and Splinter, making their second appearance since the previous year's Get Lost. The ending is similar to another Woody Woodpecker cartoon, A Fine Feathered Frenzy. In that cartoon the elderly yet rich and well manicured widow Gorgeous Gal falls in love with Woody the second she lays eyes on him. Gorgeous Gal makes not one costume change but several while constantly winking and flirting with her ...
Labels: Hoodlum, Riding, Woodpecker
PAIN replay
If you are someone who loves cookies and any other type of baked goods, Christmas is the time of year where many are being made and enjoyed. If you have never heard of a Christmas cookie exchange, it may be something you would be interested in attending or even hosting for your friends and family. If you are a baker or love baked goods this will be right up your alley when it comes to a Christmas cookie exchange.
A Christmas cookie exchange is one great way to taste many different cookies you might not have ever known existed. You are able to swap recipes of different cookies and desserts you make with your friends and family who attend. The holiday season is one time of year where it seems alright to indulge in sweets without feeling bad about it. For a Christmas cookie exchange or swap you usually will have at least ten individuals which you can swap cookies with. So how exactly does the Christmas cookie exchange work?
First you want to send out invites to those who you feel would enjoy this type of Christmas exchange. You will of course need them to RSVP so you are aware of how many will be attending. Also include the instructions on how a Christmas cookie exchange works for those who might not have ever been to one before. This will give them a bit of insight before they arrive so they do not feel lost when the exchanging begins. But again, you will need to explain the exchange and how it works once all of your guests arrive.
When you host a Christmas cookie exchange you will ask every participant to bring at least a half a dozen to a dozen of different cookies. Usually a good three or four different kinds is great. You will swap a dozen or half a dozen of your cookies for someone else's which interest you and place them on your tray. You go around the room to all the different individuals' cookies until all of yours are dispersed. Many hosts will also ask you to bring an additional dozen of your cookies for them to be shared throughout the party as a snack. It is also another great way to figure out which cookies you are looking to swap with yours.
In the end make sure you ask each participant to bring a copy of their cookie recipes so you can hand them out to those who are extremely interested in a specific cookie which you made. This is one great way you can taste different traditional cookies that many have made in their family for centuries. You may taste something you would have never thought you would enjoy but came out loving them.
Christmas cookie exchanges are becoming more and more popular including at work locations. This is a great twist on a Christmas party to keep everyone going. It may also be a new tradition you bring every year to those friends and family members of yours which love to bake around the holidays.
Recipes for Delicious Desserts Featuring Favorite Fall Fruits
0 comments Posted by Dehaas at 7:57 AMIs there anything better on a cool Fall day than coming into the house and smelling the aroma of the season's best fruits? Well, feeling the warmth of the oven might be a close second. Here are some recipes to enjoy this Fall and Winter (or anytime of the year), using some of our Fall favorites - pears, apples, and blackberries. Grab a cup of coffee, hot tea, or hot chocolate and enjoy a real treat.
SNAPPING CRANBERRY-PEAR CRISP
FRUIT MIXTURE:
1 can whole berry cranberry sauce
2 tbsp flour
5 med pears, peeled and sliced*
TOPPING:
1 cup coarsely crushed gingersnap cookies
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
2 tbsp brown sugar
1/4 cup butter, melted
Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
For the fruit mixture, combine cranberry sauce and flour in a medium mixing bowl; mix well. Add the pear slices, toss to coat evenly. Place fruit mixture in a baking dish and set aside.
For the topping, in a small mixing bowl, combine cookie crumbs, flour, brown sugar, and butter; mix well. Sprinkle the crumb mixture over the fruit mixture. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes or until the pears are tender and the topping is golden brown.
Note: This is just as good when you substitute apples for the pears.
Oregon's Blackberry-Apple Crunch
Filling:
4 cups sliced Granny Smith apples
2 cups fresh blackberries (may use frozen but do not thaw)
3/4 cup sugar
Topping:
3/4 cup brown sugar, firmly packed
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
3/4 cup rolled oats
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
1/2 cup butter
1/2 tsp cinnamon
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
In a large bowl, combine the apples, berries, and sugar. When well combined, pour mixture into a 9 x 13 x 2-inch baking pan or dish.
In another large bowl, combine the brown sugar, flour, oats, walnuts, butter and cinnamon; blend together using your fingers. Sprinkle over the top of the fruit. Bake at 350 degrees for approximately an hour or until the top is brown and fruit is bubbly.
Enjoy!