Posted in Homemaking, Inspiring, Photos

Use Your Freezer, part 3

Español: Cocinando carne para hamburguesa al g...
 

So, what else can we do with a deep freeze? Plenty.

My favorite trick with it is freezing hamburger meat.

Cooked.

That’s right, I cook ground beef and then freeze it.

Whenever it is on sale, I buy however much I can afford, stir and fry until crumbly, huge pans of it with onion, salt, and pepper. Drain it well, box it, and freeze. One pint fried is about one pound raw.

This serves a couple of wonderful purposes.

First it is a money saver, in that it allows me to cash in on sales.

Second, it is a time saver if I want to make spaghetti or chili in a hurry. While the liquids are heating, I put in a box of frozen, cooked ground beef and once all is hot, the meat is thawed. Or pour a dab of water into a small pan and add a pint of this meat to warm on low until thawed, while you do other things. Then stir in your favorite sloppy-jo ingredients and serve. Fast and easy.

Actually the deep freeze is great for saving money, stocking up on many sale items such as meat, bread, flour, and garden seed. It saves money on ice if you make your own ahead and store it there. It saves money on bulk foods, because you do have room for it all.

We have a diabetic friend who must eat wild meat, so he hunts. When he bags a deer, he hires the meat all ground. His wife then makes it all into patties which he spends a whole day grilling to “near done”. They freeze these and have instant grilled burgers all year. They say to warm them takes only a few minutes and the taste is like it was just off the grill.

Probably everyone has heard of cooking casseroles on a monthly basis to save cooking time, but if you even make one extra or double entre whenever you cook, you can reduce your kitchen time nearly 50%.

The freezer certainly saves much frustration by allowing you to prepare ahead the food for guests and have it ready to pop into the oven so you can enjoy visiting in a relaxed manner.

I have cooked ahead when I knew I’d have no help after childbirth. It was so easy for my family to dip into the freezer while I was resting.

I’ve cooked ahead when my best friend’s mother was coming for dinner – an exquisite dish that takes hours to prepare. It was no hassle, because I prepared it a couple of days earlier, when I had the time to spare.

I have cooked ahead when my husband invited his best friend for supper the same night I had to be gone. My teenagers baked that big dish with a teenage flair that brought delight to the guest and joy and pride to Dad.

However.

Did you know your freezer needs a little tender loving care? More tomorrow.

Posted in Blessings of Habit, Home School, Inspiring

Summing up Summer

Green common beans on the plant.
Green beans. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Do you ever come to the end of the summer vacation with NO IDEA where the days went?

I have found a solution that we love, that worked several summers for us.

We kept a journal.

It wasn’t fancy—just some lined paper stapled between construction paper, but we made it more fun than it sounds. You may want to copy this idea.

After the children chose the color for their journal cover, they took turns adding decorations to the front. These usually were made with crayon and stencil, for ease and speed, but you could do some creative cut and paste and make the cover, itself, part of the event.

My kids are so no-nonsense.

You will need enough pages for the whole summer, say, ninety days. We eventually made ours simple as possible, but if you would like illustrations along the way, inside your journal, you will have to allow more pages. We would put two day’s of activities on each page, in a list form.

Some days’ activities were planned for us. We always shopped on Tuesdays, for instance. When green beans HAD to be canned, they just had to be, regardless of our wishes. Excess rains might mean an extra mopping chore. No matter. Whatever we did, we recorded.

The other minor rule we used was that we would do two note-worthy things each day. They did not have to be magnificent or impressive; they just had to be things we actually DID. Of course, the children preferred writing about the fair and the water park, but our goal was to realize where the summer went, and if it went to mopping and canning, then so be it.

In the end, we had a great little reminder of each day, plus a good grasp on where all those days went. Try it this summer, and see!

Posted in Husbands, Inspiring, Photos

Weekly Photo Challenge – Hands

About a month ago, someone plowed our garden spot. Then he tilled it. Then he harrowed it. Then he marked it into rows. Then he planted and planted and planted. Onions, cabbages, corn, tomatoes, all are out there. Everything is growing. The corn is two inches tall. Last night, I got this gorgeous posy:

radish bouquet

It is more than just a clump of radishes.

  1. It is saving and scrimping to buy land.
  2. It is buying and maintaining a tractor.
  3. It is watching weather and planning ahead for planting.
  4. It is keeping a vegetable inventory, to know how much to plant each year.
  5. It is changing diet to fit what grows in our area.
  6. It is walking out to the garden every day to be sure things are okay.
  7. It is stringing irrigation hoses out there and paying for water when the rain refuses to fall.
  8. It is seeding it over in autumn with crimson clover so we either get a cover crop or else some venison.
  9. It is buying and maintaining a small tiller for between rows, later.
  10. It is researching through gardening books for help with pests and diseases.
  11. It is sharpening and oiling the hoe, shovel, and rake.
  12. It is pulling rocks out and chunking them into the ditch.
  13. It is winding twine round and round and round stakes to support plants.
  14. It is shredding piles and piles of newspapers for mulch.
  15. It is staying up late and going out with a dorky “headlight cap” on and covering tender plants before a surprise frost comes.

All of the above, and more, go into the first bouquet of the vegetable gardening season. And here you see it, held in the hand that provided it, the hand of someone who, though he doesn’t eat many radishes, knows who does.

Posted in Believe it or not!, Health, Inspiring, Photos, Wisdom

Leaving the Twilight Zone

Amazingly helpful site, inspired by one woman’s painful experiences. My nod to Mental Health Month.

brain injury self rehabilitation (BISR)'s avatarbraininjuryselfrehabilitation

It was time to get back to work following a closed head injury.  I thought everything was going well and my simple concussion was resolved.  Oh, if I only knew what was yet to come.  So by Monday November 4, 1991 and 5 days later I was ready to return to work.  After all a few days have passed since I was hit in the head and certainly there should not be any reason to keep me from working.

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Posted in Believe it or not!, Inspiring, Photos, Scripture, Wisdom

Failure Is NOT Fatal . . . IF – Part 4

Christ's Charge to Peter by Raphael, 1515. In ...
Christ's Charge to Peter by Raphael

Each of us will at one time or another fail the LORD, and when we do, usually it will be because we have taken our eyes off Jesus. What a perfect time for Satan to tell us that we are finished and our future is destroyed!

That is not God’s message to us.

One of our greatest goals is never to fall. Our greatest glory, however, is not in never falling, but in our Savior Who never fails, Who holds us up, and Who lifts us each time we fall.

We may not be able to reclaim the loss, undo the damage, or reverse the consequences. However, our beautiful Savior restores us, and we can make a new start. We can be wiser, more sensitive, renewed by the Holy Spirit, and more determined to do right.

The best part is Peter’s story does not end in Luke 22:62.

Peter did not have to live the rest of his life with a heavy burden of sorrow and regret.

Instead, after he grieved, Peter ministered to the others grieving over their failures.

Later, Jesus asked Peter to become a leader of the church.

“So when they had eaten breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, ‘Simon, son of Jonah, do you love* Me more than these?’

“He said to Him, ‘Yes, Lord; You know that I love** You.’

“He said to him, ‘Feed My lambs.’  He said to him again a second time, ‘Simon, son of Jonah, do you love* Me?’

“He said to Him, ‘Yes, Lord; You know that I love** You.’

“He said to him, ‘Tend My sheep.’  He said to him the third time, ‘Simon, son of Jonah, do you love** Me?’

“Peter was grieved because He said to him the third time, ‘Do you love** Me?’ And he said to Him, ‘Lord, You know all things; You know that I love** You.’

“Jesus said to him, ‘Feed My sheep. Most assuredly, I say to you, when you were younger, you girded yourself and walked where you wished; but when you are old, you will stretch out your hands, and another will gird you and carry you where you do not wish.’” John 21:15-18

Jesus had a plan and purpose for Peter. He has a plan and purpose for each of us in spite of our failure.

Failure is not fatal if:
We recognize that everyone fails,
We remember that God’s love and forgiveness are not dependent upon our success,
We learn and grow from our failures, and
We put our failures behind us and go on.

We already know that we need to give our sin to God, but we can do more than that.

When we sin and fail the Lord, we should not give up. We should repent, get back up, and try again. He still has a plan to use us.

Rebuke Satan when he condemns you as a failure.

He is a liar.

Take your eyes off yourself and look at Jesus, saying, “I’m going rise up and keep trying. With God’s grace and the power of the Holy Spirit, I’m going to let God change me from one degree of glory unto another into the image of Christ. I will keep my eyes on Jesus, the Author and Finisher of my faith, the One Who is able to keep me from falling.”

If you have fallen, won’t you look unto the Lord Jesus, reach up to Him, and let Him put you back on the Way again? Confess and repent of that sin that made you stumble. Ask God forgive you and renew you with His Holy Spirit so that you will have power to be His witness again.

____________________

*agape love, God-like love, as in 1 Corinthians 13
**phileo love, brotherly love

Peter was upset, here, because of the dwindling degrees of love that Jesus was asking him about. Remember His huge vows of loyalty, loyalty greater than all the others, now squelched by his realization of his humanity, of reality, of how much Jesus knew and how little he knew, how quickly and predictably he failed. May we all recognize our frailty, stop living in denial, and learn to cling to Him ___________________

Image via Wikipedia

Posted in Believe it or not!, Inspiring, Photos, Scripture, Wisdom

Failure Is NOT Fatal . . . IF – Part 3

"The Kiss of Judas" is a traditional...
The Kiss of Judas by Bondone c. 1306

Failure Is Not Fatal IF… We learn and grow from our failures.

Take advantage of your failure!

Don’t waste it; learn all you can from it.

Every bitter experience can teach us something.

How did you learn to ride a bike? You got on and you fell off, over and over.

Falling was painful but you learned a little with each try. Finally, you got on it and stayed on it for five seconds, then ten seconds. Eventually, you succeeded because you kept trying. However, if something unexpected caused you to fall again, you got on again.

Failure is the refusal to get back on that bike.

“For though a righteous man falls seven times, he rises again.” Proverbs 24:16 Even the righteous stumble. Those who are earnestly trying to live a godly life, fall. They mess up and they sin. They don’t quit; they get back up and continue.

One trademark of those who serve God is that they learn, repent, and get up after falling. Some people think their mistakes are unforgivable, but the Bible says, “Surely the arm of the LORD is not too short to save, nor his ear too dull to hear.” Isaiah 59:1

When you fall, reach up, and slip your hand back into the hand of the One able to keep you! (Jude 24-25)

Failure is not the time to give up. When we fall, we reach up to the Father, and let Him pull us back into active life, back into wholeness, completeness, and healing.

Some of us have failed to do that. Oh, we are saved, but we still have haunting memories like a black cloud. We failed. We know it, and we know others remember it. We need to take our eyes off ourselves and our failure and look up at Jesus.

Everyone has failed. The greatest failure is failure to learn and grow from the experience. People who serve God simply accept God’s grace and forgiveness. They understand and accept that God has promised to forgive, and forgiveness becomes reality for them.

You are never a failure until you give up.

Sorrow is not necessarily fatal; it can mean a new beginning. It can be part of repenting, learning, and getting back up. Peter’s weeping was a healthy response to sin and failure. (Luke 22:62)

“Yet now I am happy, not because you were made sorry, but because your sorrow led you to repentance. For you became sorrowful as God intended and so were not harmed in any way by us. Godly sorrow brings repentance that leads to salvation and leaves no regret, but worldly sorrow brings death.” 2 Corinthians 7:9-10

I mentioned taking a look at another person this week: Judas. Judas responded to his failure, betraying Jesus, with worldly sorrow instead of godly sorrow.

“When Judas, who had betrayed him, saw that Jesus was condemned, he was seized with remorse and returned the thirty silver coins to the chief priests and the elders. ‘I have sinned,’ he said, ‘for I have betrayed innocent blood.’”

“‘What is that to us?’ they replied. ‘­­That’s your responsibility.’ So Judas threw the money into the temple and left. Then he went away and hanged himself.” Matthew 27:3-5

Judas made a huge mistake and miscalculation by betraying Jesus.

His reputation and name was ruined.

He quit trying.

He failed to reach up to God.

He failed to look at Jesus for forgiveness.

He failed to repent and get up again.

He failed to learn and grow from his failure.

Judas is an example of how not to respond to failure. He never gave Jesus a chance. He could have had a wonderful testimony of Christ’s forgiveness as did Saul, who had persecuted Christ, then repented, was saved, born again of the Spirit, and became Paul, the writer of most of the New Testament.

Failure Is NOT Fatal IF… We Learn and Grow From our Failures

Posted in Believe it or not!, Inspiring, Photos, Scripture, Wisdom

Failure Is NOT Fatal . . . IF – Part 2

Brooklyn Museum - The Third Denial of Peter. J...
The Third Denial of Peter - Jesus' Look of Reproach by James Tissot

Failure Is NOT Fatal IF . . . We remember that God’s love and forgiveness are not dependent upon our success.

No matter how you have failed, no matter what sin you have allowed into your life, the Savior who died for you still loves you.

He loved you and died for you when you were His enemy. Why would He love you less now? Your failure doesn’t change his love.

The story of Christianity is the story of failed men and women who found new futures through the forgiveness of Christ.

In Luke 22:61 we find a single sentence of explosive power: “The Lord turned and looked at Peter.” What kind of look did Jesus give to Peter? We do not know, but we do know Peter broke down afterwards.

He went out and wept bitterly.

It is to Peter’s credit that all that the Lord had to do was look at him to bring him to the place of recognition of what he had done.

That is the beginning of repentance.

No matter how effective the look of Jesus, it would have been wasted on Peter if Peter had not been looking at Jesus.

But Peter was looking at Jesus.

Jesus had predicted a turning point for Peter back in Luke 22:32: “But I have prayed for you, Simon [Peter], that your faith may not fail. And when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.”

This was that turning point, for it was at that point that verse 61 tells us, “ . . . Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how He had said to him, ‘Before the rooster crows, you will deny Me three times.'”

Jesus knew Peter would fail. He knew Peter was not as strong as he thought he was. Still, Jesus loved Peter and prayed for him.

Jesus also knows us, loves us, and prays for us.

I am going to include the next passage of Scripture as if it were a poem, because it is so beautiful:

What, then, shall we say in response to this?

If God is for us, who can be against us?

He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all–
how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?

Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen?

It is God who justifies.
Who is he that condemns?

Christ Jesus, who died–
more than that, who was raised to life–
is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us.
Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?

Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword?

As it is written:
“For your sake we face death all day long;
we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.”

No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us.

For I am convinced that
neither death nor life,
neither angels nor demons,
neither the present nor the future,
nor any powers,
neither height nor depth,
nor anything else in all creation,
will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Romans 8:31-39

Failure Is NOT Fatal IF… We remember that God’s love and forgiveness are not dependent upon our success.

_________________

Image via Wikipedia