Last Monday evening, we had chicken dumpling
and vegetable soup for supper, along with rice pudding and mango juice. For dessert, we had a couple of pieces of the
Turkish Baklava I’d ordered. Yummy
stuff.
Here’s the description: Baklava is a rich, sweet pastry made of layers
of phyllo dough filled with chopped nuts and sweetened with syrup or honey. Key components include buttery phyllo, a nutty
filling (often walnuts, pistachios, or almonds), and a sweet syrup, with
differences in spices and sweeteners defining regional styles.
Phyllo dough is a paper-thin,
unleavened pastry dough. When layered
and baked with butter or oil, it produces an incredibly crispy, flaky
texture. Unlike puff pastry, which gets
its flakiness by rolling layers of solid butter into the dough, phyllo is
extremely low in fat. It is typically
made from just flour, water, a splash of oil or vinegar, and a bit of salt.
The filling tastes similar to the
filling for an almond tea ring. We
really like it. We’re trying to be
sparing with it, to make it last.
I discovered that the Grindhead Coffee
Company has Baklava-flavored coffee, and promptly ordered some. Hopefully it would arrive before we finished
off the Baklava pastries.
That evening, Victoria sent a picture of a
beautiful dresser she got for Carolyn and Violet’s new bedroom for only $50 on
Facebook Marketplace.
Next, Hannah sent a picture of
Aaron’s new-to-him 2022 Dodge Ram Laramie 1500.
“It smells like cigarette smoke, 😐” she wrote, “So
I’m looking online for advice on that. Looks
like the main suggestion is to use an ozone machine.”
Ugh, that’s not good for a family with
a couple of people who have quite serious asthma to cope with.
An uncle and aunt of mine stayed in
one of my father’s Airstream campers for a couple of weeks – and they smoked in
it. One cigarette after another, they
smoked. Right in Daddy’s nearly-new,
spotlessly clean Airstream.
After my uncle and aunt left, my
parents paid some friends to clean the camper.
They came with rags and mops and buckets and all sorts of cleaners, and
they scrubbed and cleaned and scrubbed and cleaned. They hauled out bucket after bucket of brown
water. And after many hours of hard
work, it still smelled of smoke, and the ceiling was still dark yellow.
My father soon traded it in for a
different camper.
You’d think common courtesy would tell
people they should never, never do that in the nearly-new trailer of someone
who was kind enough to let them stay in it!
And of course Daddy never charged them a red cent – and not only did
Mama keep the camper’s refrigerator stocked, she also fixed big enough meals to
share with them every day.
Some people give more than they
take. Others take more than they give.
Here’s a picture I took with one of my first
rolls of color film: my father with our
Travelall and Airstream trailer, somewhere in the Rocky Mountains, circa
~1970. I had a cute little red camera
that took size 126 film.
Late that night, I heard a June bug hit the
front door. (The sound is unmistakable.) How did they know it was June 1st?
Meanwhile,
Larry left the light on in the bathroom so light from the window would spill
out onto the deck so he could better see what he was doing out there.
Problem: The light brought in hundreds of mosquitoes,
right through the top part of the window that kept sliding down in there! I killed dozens, but for every skeeter I
killed, two more popped up to take its place, humming menacingly around my
head.
Larry ‘fixed’
the problem the next day by screwing the top window sashing right into the
jamb. It is now immovable. 😐
At 10:00
a.m. the next morning, it was 71° on the way up to 81° that damp day. It had rained part of the night. Flowers were blossoming like everything – and
weeds were growing like gangbusters. I’d
better get busy in the flower gardens again! – but I’d better have the mosquito
spray handy; they have shown up in buzzing, malicious clouds.
These are
the old-fashioned roses that were my mother’s – and her mother’s, before
that. Mama brought home clippings from
my grandparents’ home in North Dakota when I was wee little, keeping them
wrapped in damp paper towels. We wound
up with at least three big rosebushes around our house from the planting of
those clippings.
My roses
were started from a big root I found when they moved Mama’s house. I didn’t know what it was, as it was
wintertime; but I cut it into several sections and planted it – and was pleased
when spring rolled around and tiny reddish leaves popped up, and I knew what
they were: Grandma’s old-fashioned
roses!
The
clematis, too, is blooming like anything.
I have empty pots on the front porch, which
is on the north side of our house. Now and then I see pictures from a few
years ago when the porch was covered with blooming flowers, and I think, I
need me some flowlers to put in those pots!
(‘Flowlers’ was Hester’s word, when she was just a year old. As if it’s not hard enough learning to
talk, she often added letters and syllables to words!)
And then I remember the times big storms with
high winds came through – usually late at night, when I was ready for bed – and
there I’d be, dashing out onto the front porch to grab one heavy pot after
another and bring them, often dripping, into the house. And I think, Well,
how many people actually see that front porch anyway, out here in the country?
– and the pots go on sitting empty.
I told Larry, “Someday when you enclose that
front porch, I’ll have flowers all over the place!”
He replied, and I quote, “Hmmm.” 😄😆
In
addition to the mosquitoes, we are having problems with raccoons. They got into our unfinished addition and tore
holes here and there, and generally made a terrible mess.
Aaarrrggghhh.
Here is Hester at age 6 months. I sure am glad I found this ‘lost’
album! I sent her a few of the pictures,
telling her, “Everybody wanted to hold the baby. And you had just discovered your tongue, and
could roll it up quite skillfully.”
Here’s Keith, 9, and Hannah, 8, holding Baby
Hester. I also sent her the pictures of
Dorcas and Joseph holding her that I included in last week’s letter.
“You weren’t lacking in expression!” I told
Hester, sending a few more shots.
That
evening, we met Kurt and Victoria and their four children at Pizza Ranch, for
Kurt’s birthday. On Tuesdays, children
eat free at Pizza Ranch. And old fogeys
like us get a whopping $.75 off, any day.
I filled a plate completely full with things
from the salad bar, and didn’t have even a single slice of pizza.
When I got up and went back for a piece of
blueberry dessert, a middle-aged lady who works there came running after me
calling loudly, “Ma’am!! Maaa’aaam!!!”
I looked back, and then paused to see what
she wanted. In fact, everyone in
the whole restaurant paused to see what she wanted. 😆
“You have something red all over your back!”
she exclaimed.
Everybody looked. (Except me. I’m no owl; I can’t swivel my head 180°.)
Instead, I looked at the lady. I thought of all kinds of things to
say: Huh, I didn’t feel
anybody shoot me. Or, in tones of
great alarm, “Call an ambulance!!!”
The lady, seeing my dilemma, got a good grip
and wrenched my sweater around so I could see it. (At least she didn’t wrench my head around.)
I wasn’t bleeding to death after
all. It was tomato sauce. It was on the back side of my sleeve and
along the side of my back. On my new
white sweater. My new snow white sweater.
I looked at it. And then I said, “Huh. I wonder how that got there.”
Then I smiled at the woman and said, “Thanks
for letting me know,” and proceeded on to the blueberry dessert I’d come in
quest of. The rest of the diners
regathered themselves and got back to their pizzas.
When I returned to our table, I showed the
splop (Mr. Google doesn’t think that’s a word, the poor uneducated man) to the
rest of the family. They duly admired
it, with some bit of sympathy, and Victoria offered suggestions on stain
removers.
I told Carolyn and Violet, “See, this is what
happens when you tuck your slice of pizza under your arm so you can put more
stuff on your plate!”
They giggled.
I would not learn until we were on our way
home what had probably happened.
We were driving along quietly when Larry
said, somewhat sheepishly, “I wondered what became of my second
breadstick.” ((...pause...)) “I finished eating one, and thought, ‘Did I
already eat the other one? Guess I
must’ve.’ But now I remember that, as I
walked around the salad bar with my plate, one of the breadsticks, along with
the sauce I’d put on the place, slipped a little. I thought I tipped the plate enough that it
slid back into place. I walked behind
you as you were at the salad bar...”
“—and you bumped the wayward breadstick, all
covered with sauce, on the back of my arm, and it fell off your plate and slid
down the side of my sweater, and the sweater is thick enough that I didn’t feel
a thing!” I finished for him, with some indignation.
I remembered something. “I think I saw some sauce, and possibly a
breadstick, on the floor on one side of the salad bar! But about the time I saw the whatever-it-was,
the lady called to me, and I didn’t look back in that direction again.”
Victoria would later verify that there was
indeed a breadstick on the floor, complete with a puddle of sauce around it.
Fortunately, it was nearly closing time, so
no new patrons were entering the restaurant, most people were heading out, and
no one stepped in the glop and broke a leg.
See, this is why it’s good for messy old
people to eat public meals with their grandchildren – the more, the merrier;
and the younger, the better: the
grandchildren get the blame for all the spilt food! That is, providing nobody sees the mess right
as it actually occurs.
Since that evening, I have applied various
stain removers and washed that sweater three times. A pale rusty-pink stain remains. I need me some of Grandma’s Secret Spot
Remover from Hobby Lobby! I haven’t put
the sweater into the dryer, so hope remains.
As we chatted that evening, I said, “At our
house, we have swarms of mosquitoes.”
Willie, 4, listening with big eyes, gave me
his sweet smile and exclaimed, “Can I have one?!”
Later, as we were walking to our vehicles,
Victoria said to Arnold, 2, “Arnold, your pants are slipping! Can you fix them?”
“Yes,” answered Arnold agreeably – and then
he proceeded to lean down and roll up the cuffs a couple of times.
(The funniest part, though, was how tickled
Kurt got at his little boy.)
After leaving
Pizza Ranch, Larry and I went to Walmart to get a refund for a clock I had
ordered for my great-niece Kay’s wedding. When I picked up the package from off my porch
and it sounded like a jigsaw puzzle, I knew, This can’t be good.
It
wasn’t. The glass was shattered into
teeny tiny bits; they hadn’t put any packing around that clock at all. We collected our refund, then went to the
household department and picked out another clock, this one bigger and prettier
than the first one.
Hannah sent some pictures of Aaron’s
new Ram 1500 Laramie. It’s a nice-looking
truck.
Take a good, close look at the photo
below. Can you see the passenger? That’s younger brother Levi, and, as Hannah
put it, “It was our first ride in the pickup, and he was pretty excited for
Aaron.”
Wednesday,
I had 85 more photos to crop and edit, and this project would be done. I save all my old photos, unless they’re
particularly poor quality – and I don’t pitch them even then, if it’s a
one-of-a-kind memory.
I began
refilling the birdfeeders, then headed out to rehang them. Along came the neighbor cat that Larry calls
‘Kitty Chaplin’, on account of his funny black mustache. I petted him and carried on a quite
intelligent conversation with him, and then, before I could get it hung, he
tried out the flavor of the birds’ suet. 😆 He then explored the laundry room while I
filled another bird feeder. I picked him
up and put him out on the deck while he purred and butted his head again
me. He dashed back inside before I could
get the sticky door shut. I sure didn’t
want to shut it on the kitty! I put him
out again... and he ran back in again, still purring mightily.
I went to
the refrigerator, Kitty Chaplin running happily along beside me, extracted the
bag of shredded cheese, and, rattling it enticingly, headed back to the
deck. The kitty, after taking a brief
excursion through the living room and the music room, ran after me. I put a little mound of shredded cheese on
the deck, and then, while the cat scarfed it down, I dashed back inside and got
that troublesome door shut.
“MeOW!!”
protested Kitty Chaplin, mouth full of cheese.
The cat is
not a stray; he’s very well taken care of.
I left him to his countryside explorations and got back to my own
business of showering, shining the bathroom back up again, playing the piano,
making myself a mug of Georgia Peach cold-brew coffee, and blow-drying and
curling my hair.
After
eating some breakfast, I got on with editing photos. It wasn’t long before the job was done. I added to the count a bit by taking a few
photos of the flowers outside. The
Stella d’Oro daylilies are blooming!
There are many old photos that I am
very glad I didn’t discard – this one, for example. My flash didn’t go off, and it’s a bit blurry.
I use Corel Paintshop Pro on my laptop,
and I employ the ‘sharpen’ feature often. Sometimes, a little too much sharpening can
pixelate a photo – especially a closeup on a face – and I have to soften it a
bit. I sharpened this one as much as I
dared, brightened it slightly, and added a wee bit of color. It’s about as good as I can get it – and much
better than the original.
There are a few of my old photos that
were practically ruined by light getting to the film (bad camera latch), and
I’m so glad I didn’t pitch them out, because I put a dozen or more into black
and white scale, and salvaged them very well that way.
The next
order of business was to run a backup of all my data since February onto three
external hard drives. I also put what I
needed onto my upstairs laptop. It’s my
favorite, as it’s a fasssst Acer Predator Helios 300, and it has a bigger
screen, 17.3”. But the design of that
laptop is faulty, in that they have the charging jack affixed directly to the
motherboard, which gets hot when it’s working hard – and that makes the jack
get loose around the plug end. So I keep
it in one place and try not to wiggle it, so it doesn’t fail, as a previous one
did. They replaced the machine for me,
putting my old hard drive into a new body with a new motherboard. I doubt if it’s still under warranty anymore,
though; so I treat it like a Desktop, and don’t haul it around hither and yon,
as I do the equally fast MSI Katana, which has a 15.6” display. That screen size makes a big difference. It’s so much easier to edit photos, design
quilts, and all the other things I do on a laptop, with a bigger screen. When I got the Katana (at Nebraska Furniture
Mart’s Electronics Department), I tried for a bigger screen, but the only one
they had was a Sony, and it was $1,000 more!! Yikes.
We bought
a separate quite large screen to go with the Katana, but it’s awkward to use,
as I don’t have a good place for it. So
it sits in still-pristine condition on my rolltop desk upstairs.
I had a little time to work on the design for
Violet’s quilt before our midweek church service. As I played with EQ8, I listened to a British
newscast. Sometimes the differences in
our sayings are quite funny.
For instance, here we say, “Hanging on for
dear life!”
The Brit on YouTube says, “Hanging on for
grim death!” 😅
Thursday morning it was cloudy and damp, 67° at
10:00 a.m., on the way up to 72°. Rain was
expected in an hour or so, and would probably continue through the afternoon. The Barn Swallows were happy as larks with the
big mosquito infestation, and dozens of swallows were swooping gleefully through
the yard, gobbling up mosquitoes as they went. They must think I’m in competition with them
for Haute Cuisine de Moustique, because they twitter and scold and dive at my
head as I hang out the bird feeders. This photo is from the Lewisboro Field Guide.
Did you know Barn Swallows often feed their
fledglings while on the wing? In fact,
they have been seen and photographed feeding young that are also on
the wing! The original in-flight
caterers. 😆 The picture below is by Kathy Gonder.
That day, I ran a diagnostic on one of my
external hard drives. Here’s the data
retrieved: There are 434,704 Photos in
5,952 Folders, for a total of 2.23 TB.
I spent a majority of the afternoon working
on the design of Violet’s quilt, Crinoline Ladies, in EQ8 (the Electric Quilt
program on my laptop).
The windows were open, and the birds were
singing like everything. I could hear cardinals,
robins, sparrows, orioles, and baby birds of all kinds.
By evening, I had four versions of the
Crinoline Ladies quilt completed.
The fabric colors won’t match these
all that closely. It will probably be scrappy,
though it’ll have a purple focus. As for
numbers 2 and 3 (if numbering starts at top left and goes clockwise), just look
at all those curved pieces! 😦
I posted the pictures and ran a poll
on my Quilt-Talk group, and also asked people on my Facebook page and a couple
of Facebook quilting groups which version they like best. One winds up with unsolicited advice, when one
pitches questions to Facebook quilting groups.
😅
Like this, for instance: “Question: If this is a gift for your granddaughter’s 8th
birthday, would a more youthful panel not be in order?”
My answer: “It will be all full of the things Violet
loves: Fancy ladies, lace and frills,
flowers and butterflies, purples and lavenders, and plenty of other colors.”
The only response
was the sound of crickets.
Reckon she
would’ve liked it better, had the central panel been Minnie Mouse? Daffy Duck?
Meanwhile, as I worked on the quilt
design, my friend Sue, the lady from whom I bought my Bernina Artista 730, used
her digital software program to remove the embroidered skirts from the Belle
designs I planned to use. Here’s one of
the original designs with the embroidered skirt still in place.
Those embroidered skirts are really
pretty... but I’m hoping the hankie skirts will be even prettier.
As the polls went on, the MeWe Quilt
Talk group tilted heavily toward #3; but the favorites on other platforms
balanced out until it seemed there was an almost even number of votes for each
different version. However, a lot of
people are swayed by fabric colors, and pay little attention to the actual
block pattern.
I finally asked Victoria. She chose #2, at the top right. Do you see that #2 and #3 are made from the
very same units, with convex and concave curves? They’re just set in different configurations.
Looks like I have a whole lot of
curved seams in my near future! 😄
Friday morning it was cloudy, but the sun was
trying to peek out. It was 72° by 10:00
a.m., and the high would be 86°. I
attended to the usual morning pursuits, and then headed upstairs to my quilting
studio, where I cut pieces for the first interior borders for Violet’s quilt,
and then sewed them onto the central panel.
I had a yummy little snack that
afternoon: two small pieces of Baklava. They were pricey, so we’re rationing them. Besides, I was hoping the Baklava coffee I’d
ordered would arrive soon enough that we could combine Baklava pastry with a
mug of Baklava coffee.
Each little piece is not much bigger
than a bite, and we only have two or three a day. But such a treat! I drink coffee black, whether hot or
cold-brewed. Larry likes CoffeeMate
creamer.
I used to call my father’s coffee ‘Coffee
Soup’, because of all the ingredients. He’d
put a spoonful of instant Kava into his cup (and it had to be the same cup,
every time, in order to keep the formula correct, you know), then pour hot
water over it, add a tiny pinch of baking soda (because he didn’t like the
flavor of distilled water), then a spoonful of honey – squirted from the honey
bear into his teaspoon until it just started to drip – and finally, a dollop of
half-and-half cream. It smelled soooo
good, but when he’d let me have a little spoonful of it, I didn’t like it at
all! 😅
My friend Sue finished working on the Belle’s
and emailed them to me. I loaded the
designs onto a thumb drive, attached the embroidery module to my machine,
plugged the thumb drive into my sewing machine, pulled up Belle #1, chose the
embroidery thread, put fabric and stabilizer into a hoop, attached the hoop to
the embroidery module, and started embroidering the first of the Crinoline
Ladies.
That
evening, Victoria sent pictures of Willie and Arnold’s new room – they
are moving into the room Carolyn and Violet vacated when they moved to the new
downstairs room last week.
The little boys have slept in their
new room a handful of times now, and are pleased as punch with it, and with the
decorations Victoria put up.
Larry went
to Springfield, Missouri, that day to get a flatbed trailer he bought. He sent me a picture of Truman Lake, asking, “Does
that look familiar to you?”
We had
seen Truman Lake – and a whole lot of attached arms and branches – when we went
to Missouri several weeks ago. He saw a
doe with twin fawns alongside the road, too.
He got
home at about 2:30 a.m., after driving through quite a rainstorm in southern
Nebraska.
Hannah
sent me a picture of mammatus clouds, and I sent her this screengrab I got from
a stormchaser’s live feed somewhere to our southwest.
If you’re ever looking at a live
stream with a supercell like this, grab the video slider and move it slowly
back and forth. You can really see the
rotation of that mesocyclone.
I got two blocks embroidered for Violet’s
quilt.
Saturday, June 6, was National Tetris Day.
This
Tetris quilt was made by an unknown lady named Sue. Hers looks better than most, because her
squares are each made with four half-square triangles in varying shades, giving
it a 3D look – and she put in some black spots where Tetris shapes didn’t ‘land’
correctly, giving it even more depth and dimension (and reality).
Playing
Tetris with some of the children on our first computer in 1998 is how I learned
to use a mouse. Hannah and I were
First-Rate Champions before long.
And then I
thought about the time I was wasting, and decided, I shall not play
computer games. And with that, I
was done. I might use ‘gaming computers’,
but nobody’s gonna find any games at all on them; I’ve removed every single one!
I did play
‘Oregon Trail’ with the younger children a few times; but that’s an educational
game that didn’t become addictive like some of those racing games that the boys
got when they were teenagers.
One time one
of the boys was playing a racing game, and got all exasperated about a pileup
he landed in, grumbling and exclaiming.
I said, “Either
don’t act like that, or don’t play the game.” A few minutes later, he forgot himself and
grumbled loudly.
I reached
over and pulled the computer’s electrical cord right out of the wall. He was horrified. “I almost had a medal!”
“It’s a
calamity!” said I. “Now go do your
homework, so you can get a diploma.”
It wasn’t
long before we all agreed to get rid of the racing games. They really didn’t do anybody any good, and
certainly wasted valuable time.
A whole
lot of video games have gotten really, really horrid, since then. And horrid or not, they’re dreadful
time-wasters. But I do look back fondly
on those Tetris competitions with Hannah, and the Oregon Trail, too.
Saturday
morning at 9:30 a.m., it was 75°, on the way up to 87°. I tidied the bedroom, showered, shined the
bathroom back up, played the piano, and made myself a tall mug of Georgia Peach
cold-brew coffee. Then I blow-dried my
hair and put a few curls in it, ate some breakfast, and cleaned the kitchen. That done, I headed upstairs to embroider
more Crinoline Ladies.
One design has a flying
bird. I looked at my embroidery thread... and chose a pale, variegated,
metallic pastel spool, thinking to make the bird look like a shimmering dove.
What I made is, in fact, a flying
unicorn. A miniature flying unicorn. A miniature, flying, sparkly, pastel-striped
unicorn. 🤣 (Not speaking of the shape; just the colors.)
No, I didn’t pick out the threads.
Fortuitously (and fortunately), Violet likes unicorns (and thus striped
pastels).
The Baklava coffee I ordered arrived
Saturday, right in the nick of time, as I drained the cold-brew jug of the
Georgia Peach cold brew that very morning.
I made a new jug of Baklava cold brew; it would be ready to drink Sunday
morning. If it tasted as good as it
smelled, it would be scrumptious!
That evening, Victoria sent pictures of their
newly fixed-up nursery. Isn’t it pretty?
By 11:30 p.m., I had all the Crinoline Ladies
embroidered. Now to trim the blocks to 8
½”, add the sashing and side borders, and attach them to the central panel. Four more borders after that, and I’ll be
ready to cut and piece the 52 outer blocks.
Sunday morning, it was 69° at a
quarter ’til 8. The high would be 79° on
that cloudy day.
The Baklava cold-brew coffee was
indeed scrumptious. Another flavor to
put in my list of favorites.
Plus, there are still some Baklava pastries
to eat along with the coffee! I’ve been
doing my dead level best to keep Larry from eating the whole lot in one
afternoon. 😅
(Actually, I’m doing my dead level best to
keep me from eating the whole lot in one afternoon. But
don’t tell him I said that.)
Last evening, we attended the wedding
of my great-niece Kay, my nephew Robert’s (our pastor) and his wife Margaret’s
youngest daughter.
Another great-niece, cousin of the
bride-to-be, had a new baby that morning at about 7:30 a.m. Baby Edward weighed 9 lbs., 12 oz. He already has dimples instead of knuckles! And he quite handily foiled his Mama’s notion
of attending her cousin’s wedding that night. 😅
Above is a picture a
stormchaser took near Sidney, Nebraska, last night. Sidney is 325 miles to our west.
Here is Kay and Christopher’s wedding
party. In that front row of children,
all but the tallest girl, the smallest girl, and the little boy on the far
right are my great-great-nieces and great-great-nephew. The two little girls in pink weren’t really
in the wedding party, but they sure were tickled pink ( 😉 ) to be included
in some of the pictures.
I wonder where Kay and Christopher went on
their honeymoon? Severe thunderstorms
and tornadoes have continued throughout the day and into the night tonight in
Nebraska and several surrounding states.
113 mph winds hit Salina, Kansas, a little while ago, putting tens of
thousands of people out of power, while 2.75” hail pounded Colorado.
Today is Hester’s 37th birthday. We’re planning to meet Andrew and Hester,
along with their children Keira and Oliver, at Pizza Ranch tomorrow evening for
supper.
This afternoon, I texted Joseph, “I’ve been
watching videos and reading news reports of a 7.8M earthquake in the
Philippines. Is Jocelyn’s family okay?”
He wrote back, “Haven’t heard anything
from them. So that’s good news.”
(Unless communications are down, of
course.)
The red pin on the map above shows where the family lives in Tibal-og, Santo Tomas, Davao del Norte. Just look at the earthquake map below! – all
those quakes and aftershocks. The
epicenter was approximately 115 miles south of their home.
In news from the town of Santo Tomas,
I read the following: “The tremors
caused significant concern and structural damage in surrounding areas, with
powerful aftershocks reported.”
At 20 ’til 7 this evening, Joseph
wrote, “Jocelyn’s family said they felt
the earthquake and they went outside because they were afraid the house would
collapse. But everything is fine. No damage in their area.”
That was
indeed good news.
I made a gallon jug of China White
iced tea a little while ago. It needs to
steep in the refrigerator for several hours.
That’s the last of the China White. I found about a dozen big boxes, each
containing 100 teabags, at Loren’s house when I cleaned it out. His wife Janice had purchased it, hoping it
would help her stomach cancer. It did not.
I gave a box of the tea to each of the
children for Christmas that year, and wondered what to do with the last two
boxes. I was glad to discover it made
excellent iced tea, if let to steep long enough. Larry likes it, especially when he’s working
outside on a hot day.
Time to fly into the feathers!
,,,>^..^<,,, Sarah Lynn ,,,>^..^<,,,







































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