tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-242237432024-03-13T16:05:26.130-04:00Cranial SoupPeas, carrots, green beans, and gray matter.Apphttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04973805741360160102noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24223743.post-87234204167103763462008-08-23T09:33:00.004-04:002008-12-11T02:24:10.271-05:00When Grandma died, she took her Christmas cookies with herAfter reading <a href="http://wassupblog.com/2008/08/14/why-so-many-people-choose-to-blog/">a post on WassupBlog</a>, it got me thinking again about this issue, and I feel that you should take a moment to think about it, too. You have a will and life insurance to take care of the big details, but are you overlooking another big one that needs taking care of and preparing for?<br /><br />In just about every family I know, there has occurred a similar situation, where a loved one has died and all of the recipes that person was responsible for, that became an integral part of that family's culture and traditions, were lost forever.<br /><br />When a death occurs in a family, it is hard enough to deal with the loss of that person without adding the loss of family culture and tradition on top of it.<br /><br />Sure Christmas will never be the same without Grandma, but now you don't even have her cookies to help keep her memory alive and feel like at least that part of her is still here.<br /><a href="http://momscookbook.blogspot.com/2008/06/16-bean-soup.html"><img style="margin: 20px 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; width: 158px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_qlCAUZtia6Q/SFPxdkPXuzI/AAAAAAAAAVw/PCNaGfOwpPw/s400/16-bean-soup.jpg" alt="My 16 Bean Soup" border="0" /></a><br />I would like all moms, grandmas, and anyone else that has ever cooked any food for their family, from holiday dinners to Friday night pizza, to take a moment to think about what would happen to your recipes if anything ever happened to you. If you are a newly wed, and don't really have many yet, think about what could happen in the future when you have plenty.<br /><br />Are all of your recipes written down and all in one place? Does your family know where to find them? What would happen if your house burned down, taking your paper copies of your recipes with it? Do you have any of Grandma's recipes that need to be protected so they can be handed down to future generations?<br /><br />Consider publishing all your recipes to a blog, maybe including photos of the prepared items, or even better, photos of your family members enjoying them. Make sure every member of your family has the URL bookmarked.<br /><br />You might want to create this recipe blog on a free service like <a href="http://blogger.com/">Blogger</a>, so there will be less risk of them being lost by being deleted by a hosting company, just in case something happens to you and the hosting bill doesn't get paid.<br /><a href="http://momscookbook.blogspot.com/2007/04/easy-mexican-vegetarian-enchilada.html"><img style="margin: 20px 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; width: 206px;" src="http://appsapps.info/blog/EasyMexicanVegetarianEnchiladaLasagna_A719/EnchiladaLasagna013.jpg" alt="My Enchilada Lasagna" border="0" /></a><br />The bonus you will get for doing this, besides peace of mind, is that while you are still alive, all your recipes will be in one place, easy to share with family and friends, protected in case a fire or flood destroys your home, and you will be introducing others to creations that could possibly become part of their own family culture and traditions.<br /><br />But more importantly, should anything happen to you, your family will still have that part of you kept alive. And it will be a big comfort to them to still be able to have that. It will be like you coming back every once in awhile to give them a big hug when they really need it most. All of the good memories that go along with the foods will be well preserved in their hearts & minds, when the taste is still on their tongues.Apphttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04973805741360160102noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24223743.post-12218967812431028562007-12-13T20:49:00.002-05:002008-08-27T05:38:29.095-04:00Chicken Soup<p><img style="margin: 0px 0px 0px 5px" height="150" alt="Chicken Soup" src="http://lh4.google.com/omgplzstfukthx/R3Gpk9ifrGI/AAAAAAAAAGw/fxnH1dCM1Jw/ChickenSoup4" width="200" align="right"> I have this horrible cold right now and it's making me feel pretty miserable...like I have been hit by a truck or something.</p> <p>I can't get any decent sleep on account of all the coughing. And I have been coughing so much that my back & stomach muscles ache.</p> <p>I don't feel like doing anything, especially anything that resembles work. So knowing this, my husband decided to be 'nice' to me and find me some work to do. </p> <p>He went out and bought all the ingredients to make a big pot of homemade chicken soup. He's not going to make it...I am.</p> <p>The one key ingredient that makes it chicken soup is missing though. He didn't buy any chicken. This was on purpose. He had this brilliant idea that instead of putting chicken in the chicken soup, I should make it with the handful of shrimp I have in the freezer.</p> <p>Yeah, that's right...in his mind there is no difference between chicken & shrimp and by making it with shrimp, he thinks it's still chicken soup.</p> <p>Now my stomach muscles hurt even more, from laughing.</p>Apphttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04973805741360160102noreply@blogger.com0