Thursday, September 23, 2010

First Day of Fall!- My Favorite Apple Crisp

It's the first day of fall!  I have mixed feelings about fall.  I enjoy the beauty of autumn, but it is such a short season and seems to be just an opening act before freezing cold winter.   I'm not a fan of winter,  which will be here all too soon. On the bright side; at least the skunks will hibernate in winter! So, I will enjoy the high 80 degree temps today and try not to waste to much time worrying about winter's chill. We have some great fall memories, here is a photo of the two of you enjoying Ty's first fall!
A partial list of some of the things I like about fall:
* colorful trees (so beautiful)
* crunchy leaves (like music for walking)
* pumpkins (ready to be carved or baked up)
* apple picking (and eating, yummy)
* hayrides (a farm/childhood memory)
* squirrels hiding nuts (wonder how they find them again?)
* a big orange harvest moon (looks so amazing, thanks God!)
* apple cider (tangy)
* Halloween (little kids dressed in costumes & all that candy)
* corduroy (love the feel, so bumpy)
* chai tea (a cozy drink on a cool day)
* acorns falling from trees (don't let them hit you on the head)
* bonfires with s'mores (warm + toasty = sticky goodness)
* honking geese flying south (glad to see them go!)
* apple crisp (an autumn favorite!)

My Favorite Apple Crisp

I believe an apple crisp is a little better with several types of apples, don't be afraid to mix it up.  If you have 2 or 3 varieties of baking apples to mix together you will create a delicious crisp.  Only one type on hand?  No problem!  Granny Smith and McIntosh are both great for baking!

3 (or 4) large apples, peeled, cored and sliced
1/2 cup white sugar
cinnamon
1/2 cup butter, softened
3/4 cup flour
1/2 cup oatmeal
1/2 cup brown sugar

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Grease an 8" or 9" baking dish and fill with sliced apples, you can add more if your dish has room.  Sprinkle with white sugar and cinnamon.  
In a mixing bowl, cut butter into the flour, mix in the oatmeal and brown sugar.  Crumble this mixture over the apples and bake for 45 minutes.  

This recipe doubles easily. 
Sometimes I make extra topping because it is so yummy.  
I enjoy eating this apple crisp warm, Ty seems to like it cold, and Dad and Em just like it!

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Wacky Cake

My friend Kim, who is always full of good ideas, told me about something she is doing with her mother-in-law.  Kim came across a booklet with  a "life inventory", which is a list of questions often used by hospice workers to help people look back on their life.  Kim is using it as a way to get to know her mother in law better.  They live far apart so Kim sends one question in an email and Alan's mom thinks about it and sends back her response.

I thought this would be a great way to learn more about my own father and your Grandmother, Fern.  So I am emailing them questions and they are emailing back their answers.  I am printing out the emails and keeping them in a binder, as a record of our "conversations".  We are only on the 2nd question, it's going to be a slow process, but very interesting for me!

The first question I asked them was "What is your earliest memory as a young child?"  I used my own answer to that question in my post about Grandma Renshaw.  I thought from time to time I might use the questions in my blog to tell you more about me.  The second question asks to "describe your family, brothers, sisters, etc."  This could take a long time to answer!  However, I thought it might be fun to give you a quick look back at my sibs as I recall them from our childhood.


Our family had 4 children; Charles Lee, Janice Elaine, Shirley Marie & me, Lori Beth.  I have always thought of our family as 2 separate families because Chuck and Janice are separated from Shirley and me by six years.

Chuck is 10 years older than me.  The only boy in a house with 3 sisters and one bathroom!  I remember the stories he told me, designed to keep me from using the bathroom too long:
*the strange mark in the bottom of our bathtub was left by Grandpa  Renshaw's foot after he stayed in the tub too long and his foot started to attach to the tub!
*the water from the bathroom taps is "witches water", don't drink it, it will make you sick!
*if you sit on the toilet too long the devil will reach up and pull you in!
It's amazing I ever went into the bathroom!
We lived in a big old farmhouse, Shirley and I would get sent to bed first at night since we were the youngest.  I would lie in bed and listen to the sounds of the house, the TV downstairs, quiet voices talking, the occasional creak of an old house. Chuck would come up the stairs to use the bathroom snapping his fingers and clapping his hands in a rhythmic way, or taking the stairs 2 at time, then going back down the steps in 1 big jump.  Sometimes we would hear a creaking noise and lie in bed terrified, was it just the house or was Chuck sneaking up to scare us?  Suddenly in our doorway was what looked like a huge gorilla! It was Chuck with the back of his shirt pulled up over his head, arms swinging, knuckles dragging, jumping about, making ape noises.  Shirley and I would scream in fright and pull the covers up over our heads!!!
Chuck graduated from high school when I was 8 years old, in 1968.

Janice is 8 years older than me.  She was the "perfect" older sister.  Perfect hair, great clothes, pretty nails.  She had a watch, a manicure set, read teenage magazines, etc, etc, etc.  She had a shower cap, set her hair on big plastic rollers and used a hairdryer with a hose, so grown up!  She had her own perfect room and we weren't allowed in very often. She had a boyfriend.  She got good grades, had the coolest notebooks and really neat-o handwriting. She did things we were to young to do.  I wanted to be grown up like her!

But...... could she crack a whip! Shirley and I hated it when Mom put Janice in charge of cleaning up after meals.  She watched to make sure every dish was clean and dry, or back in the sink it would go until we "little girls" got it right.  Shirley and I would try to get out of helping when Janice was in charge by going to the bathroom.  Whoever got there first, stayed until the dishes were done, which left the other one to deal with Janice on their own!
Janice graduated from high school when I was 10 years old, in 1970.
Janice and Chuck both got married in the summer of 1972 when I was 12.

Shirley is 2 years older than me.  Since we lived on a farm with no other kids nearby, Shirley and I were everyday playmates and best friends. We did most everything together.  We helped Mom together in the house. No electric washer for us, Mom had a ringer washing machine! Plus, Mom grew her own vegetables and canned everything, including chickens! At least we didn't have to churn our own butter! We helped Dad with the chores, gathering eggs, feeding the cattle, and slopping the hogs. We worked pretty hard for little girls!
But we had plenty of time to play and very active imaginations. In the summer we played house in the grove of trees around our farm.  In the fall we raked leaves into elaborate floor plans on the lawn and continued playing house.  In the winter we played outside in the snow till our fingers and toes were numb!  When the weather was bad we spent hours cutting out paper dolls from the enormous Sears catalog.  I'm so glad I had a big sister who loved to play!
Shirley graduated from high school when I was 16 years old, in 1976.
Mom died later that same year.
I graduated from high school in 1978.  Dad and I got married in 1982.
Shirley got married in February of 1988, when Emily was 1 year old.

Wacky Cake

This is a simple cake that Mom often asked us to make. Even little girls couldn't mess it up! 

3 cups flour
2 cups sugar
2 tablespoon cocoa
2 teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoon vanilla
2 tablespoon vinegar
3/4 cup oil
2 cups water
 
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Sift dry ingredients into a greased 9X13 cake pan.  Make 3 depressions.  In one put the vanilla, another the vinegar and in the last one the oil.  Pour water over all.  Mix well with a fork.  Bake for 30 minutes.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

We interrupt this blog for the Twins baseball season!

As you know the Minnesota Twins are enjoying a great season!  Your father is enjoying it too!  Since he has access to games on MLB.com, he is online most evenings cheering for the home team.  Which means, now that school is back in session, I have limited time to work on my blog.  I will try to sneak a few posts in during the season but until the end of the World Series my time will be limited!  Meanwhile, grab a hotdog, tune in to the game and "cheer for the Minnesota Twins today!" Go Twins!!!