Aug 30, 2012

Steam Hot Dog Buns on the Stove Using Splatter Screen

Guest Writer:  Ruth Morse
I lead a simple life. Whenever I find some new, off the wall use for a kitchen gadget, I get all excited. To me, that is like saving money. You don't buy a new gadget, you just use the one you already have!
Exciting, huh?

Well, OK, maybe not that exciting. But these two ideas are ones I came up with in my very own senior citizen brain and THAT is the probably exciting part.
I bought myself a splatter screen a couple of years ago. I am a messy cook! And since we have a glass top stove, the slop is out there for all the world to see. I've been using the screen for----TADA---keeping the splatters in the pan. Does a great job and goes in the dishwasher, so clean up is easy.

BUT WAIT, THERE'S MORE!!

Do you have some hot dog buns that are a bit stale? You can use.....

Aug 29, 2012

Once in a Blue Moon .....

{{Gulp}}


So... yeah.... have you ever promised something "once in a blue moon?"  Well, it's time to pay the piper.  We will have our Blue Moon this Friday, August 31, 2012.

The moon most likely won't actually be blue, although I'm keeping my fingers crossed.  (Remember my red moon?!)  I've never seen a blue Blue Moon, but I did one time see everything blue but the moon. (photo above, flying out of Alaska)

A Blue Moon is most commonly referred to as the second full moon in one month.  The first one, in this instance, being August 1st, my birthday.......

Aug 27, 2012



love  compassion  gentleness  dignity  creativity  nurturing  fun  pride  confidence  knowledge  promise  sweetness  hope  beauty  purity  imagination  play  tenderness  dreams  peace  innocence  inspiration  kindness  simplicity  calmness  loyalty  assurance  pleasure  trust  engaged

Aug 23, 2012

The American Bible Challenge Airs Tonight


The American Bible Challenge, a brand new series hosted by Jeff Foxworthy, will air tonight, August 23, at 8 pm ET on GSN (formerly Game Show Network).   

Foxworthy describes the game show as "Faith, Fun and Facts."  After previewing the premiere early, One Million Moms reported that Foxworthy jokes around with contestants and gives a short explanation of the scripture after questions are answered.  Teams are made up of family members and friends who are real life heroes and share their testimonies on air.  Teams will play to win money for their favorite charity.

The tournament starts with......

Aug 22, 2012

Homemade Fudge

It's not Tasty Tuesday.  I know.  I'm a day late.

This is Grandma Sliker's Homemade Fudge that Tom grew up with.  I never made it, we always had Aunt Shirley-dear make it.  Everybody goes nuts over it.

  • 3 c sugar
  • 2 squares Bakers chocolate
  • 1 Tbsp butter
  • 1 tsp. vanilla
  • 1 c milk


Combine sugar, chocolate and milk in 3 quart saucepan.  Bring to boil.  Continue cooking about 15 minutes. Temp. should be 232 degrees and form a soft ball in cold water.

Place pan in cold water to cool the fudge.  Add butter and vanilla.  Beat until mixture starts to thicken.

Pour into buttered 9-inch pan.

Aug 18, 2012

I'm Too Young to Act This Old

There are some times more than others that I despise the aging process.


Like at the gym. I was given a 3-digit number with which to check in and to check out. On the first visit, I had no problem with my 3-digit number, it was written on a card. But the second and third times proved far more difficult. On my second visit (with my daughter and granddaughter watching) I entered the wrong number and a man's face appeared on the screen. I didn't have my glasses on so I didn't notice it. My daughter had to inform me I signed in as Billy Ficas.

I decided I could work with that.......

Aug 16, 2012

El Roi ~ The God Who Sees Me

I visited Jacksonville Beach early one morning on a recent trip to the Mayo Clinic, dug out my journal and wrote my heart out.

"... The doctor says I have inflammation and pain deep inside my chest wall.  Which is precisely where I store all my secrets.  Who didn't see that coming?..."
I began to lament, weep and carry-on as is appropriate for a solitary early morning where waves crash at one's feet.  I explored every little nook and cranny of my pain-stricken core and tried to flush it all out like a minor eye irritation. 

Just as tears and sweat were hard to differentiate, a man came up beside me and set up his chair.  I bristled.  Seriously?  This entire beach is wide open and he sets up right beside me in an obvious moment of much needed privacy?  I even took a picture - mine is the green chair on the left, wet with tears; his, the right.


Intensely aware of a human presence invading my stream-of-consciousness,.....

Aug 14, 2012

Chocolate Candy


This is so simple and delicious, a great addition to any party or shower.
  • 1 c sweetened condensed milk
  • 2 c semi-sweet chocolate chips
 Melt these together without burning, microwave is good with occasional stirring.  Might want to dry microwaving the chips a few minutes, add some milk, stir, microwave again, add milk, stir.  etc.
 
Drop by teaspoon onto wax paper.
 
That's it.
 
Leave them to harden for an hour or two and they're ready.  If you want to get fancy, you can add something to the top - mini peanut butter cup, mini mints, walnut, pecan, etc.

Aug 13, 2012

Erin Thomas and the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention



I stopped in Columbia on my way home from my 30th high school reunion Sunday night to hear my friend's daughter sing a little ditty along the rushing waters where the Saluda and Broad rivers come together to form the Congaree.

Nashville recording artist Erin Thomas performed at the West Columbia Riverwalk Amphitheater as part of an event promoted by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, kicking off a walk that will honor victims of suicide and help raise awareness.   Thomas has over ten years experience playing the French horn with the Nashville and Chattanooga Symphonies, has been in recording sessions with Keith Urban, Garth Brooks and more, has toured with Vince Gill and recently cut an album “You Don’t Know Me” that features a duet with Vince Gill.  And?  She's the daughter of a very good friend of mine, did I mention that? Very cool friend of mine.

Thomas performed a few songs off her new album....

Aug 11, 2012

OK GO Treadmill Video

I want to do this at the gym even more than I want to do a flash mob.
I think.

Check it out:  OK GO Treadmill Video

Aug 10, 2012

Jacksonville Beach, FL

Travel Info and Links are Below

Despite its proximity to St. Augustine, the nation's oldest city, Jacksonville Beach is not very old. This stretch of oceanfront was difficult to access as recently as the early 20th century. The train tracks came down here to work the sulfur pits, there was a turnstile here at the beach for the train to turn around and head back up to Jacksonville. In the late 19th century, there was a bit of beach activity as the train was used for beach travelers, a couple resorts were built, then burned in fires.

Around 1910 – 1912 Atlantic Blvd. was established (oyster shell road), followed by Beach Blvd. and beaches started opening up along the oceanfront.  A boardwalk was built soon after and filled with gambling, restaurants, shooting galleries, the usual boardwalk stuff.  By the 30's and 40's you could walk the beach and the boardwalk began attracting families for vacations.  Car racing was a big thing on the hard packed sand.  I've always wondered why we're allowed to drive cars on parts of FL beaches - it must have its roots in the car racing days.  You can't drive on Jacksonville Beach today, but you can drive on Amelia Beach just a short ways north and of course Daytona, to the south.

For a beachcomber with a metal detector like Max McCormick, a young beach means you won't find anything very old buried here. “The best place to hunt,” Max told me, “is when they redo a street. They dig up the concrete and I can take in my Garrett and find some pretty old stuff under the streets.”


Max told me about mementos the boardwalk used to offer to vacationers -- metallic coins with the buyer's name, date and where they were from printed on them. Max finds a lot of these old coins, “I must have three dozen of these from all over the United States.” He told me.

Mostly Max just finds old coins when he digs on the beach, but one time......

Aug 8, 2012

In Which I Meet a Metal Detector at Jacksonville Beach


If you visit Jacksonville Beach, keep an eye out for Max McCormick walking the beach with his metal detector, giving random kids a handful of coins or helping someone find their lost keys. McCormick is a friendly, helpful guy who is passionate about his hobby.


When I met Max he was operating a White's Pulse metal detector, maybe a $300 piece of equipment, with his headphones on, a little sweaty, a little sluggish. He was finishing up for the morning and very happy to have a seat and talk with me a little. 'Cause I had me some questions, you know.

Like: What the world? Really. Why would someone nearing 70 wander the hot beach with a metal detector picking up nickels and dimes?

“For the exercise mostly.” Max admitted. He rubbed his belly. “All this walking and bending is great exercise while doing something I enjoy....”

As we talked, though, I found out it wasn't just exercise. Max is a history buff and a people person. The beach combing is mostly for exercise and, I suspect, meeting people. “Just last Sunday there was a guy out here lost his keys. I found them for him.” But what Max is really passionate about is combing the freshly turned ground when a house or old building has been torn down. That's where he finds some old stuff, some good history, not on the beach.

“In 2005, I found a 1963 Florida Gator graduate's ring in the foundation of an old store that was razed in a lot downtown. It had the owner's initials and the engineering school on it.” Max checked with the University's archives and they matched a '63 graduate in the engineering school with those initials. They contacted him and brought the two men together. The man was thrilled to get his ring back. “He couldn't even remember why he had been in Jacksonville, but he was very happy with the ring.”

For the landlocked jobs, Max uses his Garrett GTI 1500*, a high-end detector with a discriminating meter and scale and whole computerized readout about your find before you dig for it. This baby tells him whether he is about to dig up a dime or a quarter or a tin can. The Garrett indicates what he has found and he can program it to reject that item so the next one he finds won't alert him, it'll just ignore it. The Garrett can't be used on the beach, the housing isn't waterproof. Max's White's Pulse is completely sealed, waterproof up to 20' of water, but this Garett is just for land use.


“You'll like this story,” Max leaned in. “One time I found a gun. They tore down an old house near the beach and I was able to get over there to search. I hit on the gun and dug it up. It had been buried deliberately, in a plastic bag, and was in great condition. I gave it to a friend who's a cop. One year later that gun was matched to a 5 year old crime, the cops had the matching bullet.”

Max has been doing this since the early 80's. “It's like a computer,” he told me, “the technology is always getting better and better.” There's two styles basically. A Pulse has to be moving over an object to detect it. It will detect anything that is metal, but there's no meter so you end up digging everything up, good and bad, bottle caps and gold rings. The Garrett can be held still and feeds tons of information, saving you a lot of digging time.

Through the years, Max has learned more about the hobby through clubs and magazines, and more recently, on the web. Western and Eastern Treasures magazine offers equipment tests, stories of great finds, information on what you dig up, etc. Max has boxes and boxes of things at home, well organized, and he will occasionally pull one out and look it up on the internet to learn it's history.

In Friday's post I'll write more about Max's beach finds, including the greatest thing he ever found. I think Max and I share both a cusiosity and a love for story telling. We could have stayed there all day if the sun wasn't so hot.

*Max acquired his Garrett in Orlando at Kellyco, the best place around for metal detectors. The Garett 1500 runs close to $1500. The White Pulse runs around $300 and is waterproof.

Aug 7, 2012

Marble Cheesecake

I wish I had a picture to go with this recipe.  This is an easy to make cheesecake that is absolutely excellent.  It's always a favorite around here.
1 c graham cracker crumbs
3 Tbsp. sugar
3 Tbsp. butter, melted
3 8-oz. pkg. cream cheese
3/4 c sugar
1 tsp vanilla
3 eggs
1 1-oz. square unsweetened chocolate, melted

Combine crumbs, sugar and butter.  Press onto bottom of 9" cheesecake pan.  Bake at 350 for 10 minutes.  Set aside.

Combine cream cheese, sugar and vanilla, mixing at medium speed.  Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well.  Blend chocolate into one cup of the batter.  Spoon plain and chocolate batter over the crust, alternately.  Swirl batter in pan with a knife several times for marble effect. 

Bake at 450 for 10 minutes.
Reduce over temperature to 250 and bake for 30 more minutes.  Loosen cake from rim of pan.  Chill.

Aug 5, 2012

Kids are the Best, Jerry, The BEST!

Can  I just say one thing I think is awesome? (besides Seinfeld isms)  And it's not listed on 1,000AwesomeThings.com either.  Although.... some pretty awesome things are listed there.   What I think is awesome is road-tripping with my daughter.

So.... we're driving down I-95 and the radio is playing the best songs from the '70's.  I know, right!?!  Best songs ever!   Of course I like them, I was in high school then, but my daughter likes them, too?  And she knows the words better than I do.

And the really, really best part?  Read this.  This is what she tweeted:
"When a song comes on & u laugh at the memories it brings to mind & u look over & ur mom is laughing at her own memories  "
She reached out and cranked it up a little.  "Is that too loud?" She says.
"No."  I cranked it up louder.  "Is that too loud?" I asked her.
"No." She cranks it up louder.  "Is that too loud?"
"No." I cranked it.... well... you get the picture.

Then.
We arrive at our hotel to find this:


I said, "Which bed do you want?"  And she let me have the clean one! Again, Awesome!....

Aug 3, 2012

North Carolina's Original Hilbilly

I suspected driving through a town called Bat Cave would bring added excitement to our trip, I just didn't quite expect it to be in the form from a prehistoric culture.

We had spent a luxurious weekend at the Grove Park Inn snuggled in the mountains of Asheville.  We were cutting through Bat Cave to stop by Chimney Rock and Lake Lure on our way home.  We were flying around a curve on Hwy. 74 along the ever cute and adorable Moonshine Creek when we all four were daringly drawn to this sign:


Well who wouldn't want that?


Two or three U-turns later we found Hilbilly Sam walking up the highway towards us.

We approached slowly, we weren't sure it was really Hilbilly Sam.  I mean what if you were walking along the road on a hot Sunday afternoon and some people pulled over assuming you were Hilbilly Sam.  You might be rattled.

So we approached slowly.   By "we" I mean Jackie, Doug and me.  Tom didn't approach slowly, Tom marched right up and started talking.
It wasn't long before Crazy Ellen, Hilbilly Sam's wife came out.

"I'm Crazy Ellen!"  She announced as she held out her hand.

Jackie offered her hand and said, "Who gave you that name?"

Crazy Ellen scrunched her eyes and said, "I did.  I gave myself that name."

Well OK then.
Hilbilly Sam's roots go straight back to Carolina mountain, but Crazy Ellen comes from Ohio.  For years she made afghans nearby at the Manual Woodworks and Weavers place up the road.  She says it took her 59 years to get married. Yeah, it's a match made in Heaven.

Crazy Ellen and Hilbilly Sam are practically newlyweds.  Married only 4 years now.  (They dated lived together 20 years prior)    "When he makes me mad," Crazy Ellen snorts, "The dogs eat, but he don't."

We had a great chat there on the side of the road.  I missed parts of a chat where Doug ("Doug Busbee South-Carolina-Pleased-to-Meet-You-Doug) enquired about some moonshine activity.  I'm pretty sure Hilbilly Sam denied any moonshine activity, yet when we stopped later to put something in the trunk......  I found this cradled beside Doug's camo bag.


I'm not sayin'.....  I'm just sayin'.

Other Busbee/Sliker adventures:
In Which We Go To Alaska
In Which Doug and I Go Rotatin'
Busbee/Sliker Gatorade Challenge
In Which We Conclude a Business Meeting the Redneck Way
In Which We Travel Flintstone Style
In Which They Teach Us Yankees About Snow


Other NC Mountain Destinations:
Grandfather Mountain
Blowing Rock
Linville Falls

Aug 1, 2012

Where Do You Find Motivation?

We curled up on the couch, my granddaughter and I, feet up on the armrest, bowl of popcorn in hand and watched the #Fab5 USA women's gymnastics while they competed both as a team in international Olympic competition and individually against each other for the two open spots for individual Olympic competition.


My granddaughter, age 7, is a second year gymnast so her interest and that of her grandparents interest in the Olympics is focused on the gymnastics.  Although we did get sidetracked with swimming and some type of kayaking on whitewater....

The very next day after we watched the surprising results and heartwrenching coverage of Aly Raisman claiming an individual spot over the expected Jordyn Wieber, I watched my granddaughter practice at the gym.  The place was feverish with intensity and revived dedication.


When my son was young, he would have to pause the sport he was watching on TV, run outside and play the sport furiously, then return and start over.  He could not resist playing.
Watching sports is motivational.  Watching an athlete perform convinces us, in our own mind, that we, too, can do what they are doing if we just get up off the blasted couch.

What motivates you? 
Olympics Info: