Skip to main content

From Thanksgiving to Now

Stuart came down with a cold the day before Thanksgiving that knocked him out for two or three days.  This is how he he spent all of Thanksgiving Day.  He's a handsome devil.
The rest of us were undaunted.  With Stuart's blessing, we pressed forward with our Thanksgiving preparations.  The girls made sweet potato casserole and green bean casserole and fruit cup (with the bitters).  And all that I needed to do was assemble the stuffing and cook the birds. 
We were alone for Thanksgiving.  I really hate that we are so far from family and friends because I would love for my house to be full of company. I suppose it was for the best on this particular holiday. Our guests would have gone home incubating plague germs!  Anyway, it was just the seven of us so I decided to serve Cornish game hens instead of the traditional (enormous) turkey.  The kids were delighted with the size of these tiny birds and christened them ptarmigan.  Perhaps we were the only family in America that celebrated this Thanksgiving with ptarmigan.
It wasn't enough to celebrate just one holiday on Thanksgiving.  We hauled out the Christmas tree and had it set up before our feast came out of the oven.  (More to come on that later.)
A few days after Thanksgiving, Stuart was on the road to recovery but the children were dropping like flies.  They've been drinking plaudamentum by the pint.  (John stole the name from The Lamplighter and applied it to the gallons of lemon water they've been making for themselves.)  They seem to be on the mend so, today we started our next Christmas project.  Cookies. This one was much easier than last weeks candy canes.  (The candy canes, by the way, went wrong.  Something happened and after we got them on the tree, they began dripping and warping.  They look like a Salvadore Dali creation! They're still tasty so it was not a complete disaster.) 
We made rich butter cookies from The Joy of Cooking.  Here the kids are spreading them with the first layer of confectioner's frosting.
O Christmas tree, O Christmas tree, how frosty are your branches. Charlie put about a pound of frosting on this cookie.  He can't wait to eat it! This was definitely a good project for him.  He had a great time helping to mix up the cookies and the frosting.  He frosted about five or six cookies before he got distracted and began to taste the frosting and nibble on the broken cookies.
Lauren used a little more finesse and a lot less frosting and created some beautiful cookies.  The girls really got into this project.  I was impressed with their creativity and focus. 

Here are a few of the finished results ready for a Christmas party in the near future.

Comments

Sarah said…
The cookies are beautiful, Kate. Makes me want to try something like that here. I'll show your post to the kids before I do though. I hope everyone recovers from their colds soon.

sem
tammi said…
Firstly, I'm glad to hear your family is finally on the mend! Good to get it all over with before Christmas! ;)

Secondly, WOW, those cookies look FANTASTIC!! Your kids are so talented!! What did you use to apply the icing ~ just toothpicks? How did they make the fine lines and swirls?

I dream of one day sitting down for a whole afternoon or evening and making cookies beautiful, but so far, have been a little intimidated by the whole process!
Kate said…
Tammi,

Yes. We just used toothpicks. Step one: We spread the first layer of frosting with a knife. Step two: We thinned the frosting out just a tiny bit with a few drops of water to make it the right consistancy for decorating with the toothpicks.

Kate
Anonymous said…
Those are gorgeous! I know ours will not look anything like that when we get around to the holiday cookie decorating... :)
*snort* Just the seven of us. That really made me laugh!

John keeps me laughing with all of the names he comes up with. You have the most creative, imaginative children...

Maybe you should have stuck with the Salvadore Dali theme for the tree...that would have made for some interesting pictures!

Xandra
Jennifer Jo said…
What gorgeous cookies and what creative kids! And what a patient, clever mama. You inspire me.

-JJ
Faith said…
Sorry about the sickness, but wow what beautiful cookies! You all are inspiring me to make some. :) (And I love The Joy of Cooking. :))
Thanks for your comment on my blog and for your prayers!
ocean mommy said…
I sure hope you are all well!!

The cookies look great!!!!
Anonymous said…
Pretty! My mom is visiting this week, and she is planning on doing this with my kids, too.
Anonymous said…
The cookies look fabulous! Great job girls! I'm sorry about all your sickness. Love the picture of your hubby though...the toilet paper on the bed...that's keepin' it real, right there! :)
Unknown said…
The cookies look so good. Mayu looked at them and said "I want to eat them!" so we did pretend eating.
Can't wait to start baking with her again.
tammi said…
Thanks for answering my question! They really are beautiful.

Popular posts from this blog

4-H Exhibits-Updated

Update: Blue ribbons all around! 4 of our projects will go onto the state fair. John's headboard exceeds size limitations and so we will lug it home tomorrow. We are relieved. That thing is heavy! ************* For the past few weeks we have been busy sewing, sawing, quilling and painting 4-H projects. The kids have been in 4-H for about a month and they started with a bang. The annual 4-H fair is tomorrow. So this morning we loaded these projects and four kids wearing slippers into the car. The fifth one had sense enough to wear flip-flops. (The other four complained as we pulled out of the driveway that their feet were sweating.) John reclining against the headboard that he built with Stuart. He wrote the 10 Commandments of Table Saw Safety to accompany this project. Claire's quilling project. Lauren modeling the apron that she sewed. Lauren and the dog painting she has been working on in art class for the past few months. Faith and her quilling project. So now...

Finding Rest: Part Two (Scroll down three posts to read this story from the beginning)

Why share such a personal story ? I share it because I have talked to enough women to know that underneath the makeup and the matching outfits and the small talk that make up our exteriors, we are a broken people. To pretend otherwise creates isolation. Thoughtful honesty creates closer relationships and greater understanding. When we share the way God works in the difficult things of life it encourages first oneself and then others. For some of us, the pieces have been patched and restored and there is wholeness where there was none before. But some of us are walking wounded, barely hanging on and wondering if there is hope. We have a choice. We can either be completely shattered by bitterness, depression and anger or we can lay the fragments before the One who can take the sharp slivers and jagged pieces and create a beautiful, productive life. Here is the conclusion to John's story. When John was ten, he was sullen and moody and difficult and so was I. But I was no longer proud....

Aviary Amphitheater (Wordless? Wednesday)

We're slow starters in the morning. The children lie on the sofas and read. Charlie sits and eats a graham cracker and a bowl of yogurt at the table before breakfast. Lauren and I take turn cooking oatmeal, or muffins, or scones... We eat somewhere between ten and eleven. Today, in the midst of all this leisure, the house became exceptionally quiet and I went to figure out why because "too quiet" is never a good thing. Except that it was today. I peeked out the living room window into the backyard and found five chairs and five children lined up on the patio. I opened the door and everybody shushed me. "Hush, Mama. We're watching the birds. Come sit with us" Six or seven hummingbirds were zipping around the feeder, frantic to fill their little gas tanks before they migrate. The children were silent, heads tipped up, eyes squinting against the morning light. I went in to get the camera. I took a few pictures of the children but could not capture the hyperacti...