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by Leelou Blogs
Under the plan of heaven, the husband and the wife walk side by side as companions, neither one ahead of the other, but a daughter of God and a son of God walking side by side. Let your families be families of love and peace and happiness. Gather your children around you and have your family home evenings, teach your children the ways of the Lord, read to them from the scriptures, and let them come to know the great truths of the eternal gospel as set forth in these words of the Almighty.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Please Read This!!

I read this over at Mandi's Vintage Revival Blog. I am posting it here, and have added the link to Jessica's Blog too. Please pray for this little girl and her family.





They found out yesterday that their 4 year old daughter has Stage 4 cancer. They are at Primary Childrens right now preparing to operate. Get on your knees and pray for Jessica and her parents, and while you are there thank Heavenly Father for your sweet babies. I know with all my heart that the Lord hears our prayers so please pray for this beautiful family.


This was the email I recieved.

Hey Vera,

PLEASE PASS ON....

Bob has been making calls to the Elders in the ward to call all their home teaching families, and start praying for the Schmitt family. He is also letting the Elder's Quorum know that they will be having a fast as a Quorum on Sunday and anyone else who can participate would be great.


Here is the update. We just spoke with Chandra's family and things are pretty bad. Jessica was complaining of a side ache for a couple of days and when the pain intensified today, they took her in this morning to the doctor. She has been having tests done all day and the doctors here confirmed that she had STAGE 4 cancer. The tumor size in her liver was bigger than her heart. It is pushing into the lungs. Stage 4 means it has gone from one organ into another. Cody and Chandra are flying to Primary Children's tonight and they are going to run tests on Jessica all night. In the morning she will be having surgery to remove the tumor. Chandra's family said the doctors said they would be there at least a month. Right now the best thing we can do is pray that her little body will do good in surgery tomorrow morning.

Please keep all of the Schmitts in your prayers.

We will keep you updated. Cody is keeping in touch with Bob.

Thank You
Becky Burns



For anyone that would like to donate or to recieve updates I have set up a small blog
{jessicasmiracle.blogspot.com}

Please pass it on.





Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Merry Christmas!!!
1 Old Farm Truck
2 Happy Parents
3 Awesome Kids.
= One TotaLly AweSoMe, QuirKy, FuNny, and CoOl PictuRe thIs YeaR.



Photobucket

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

This stuff is gonna be a perfect snack for the kiddos!!



6 cups of oatmeal
1/2 cup wheat germ
1 1/2 cups slivered almonds
2 1/2 cups chopped pecans
1 cup coconut (flaked)
1/2 dark brown sugar ( I use a little more)
1/2 cup non flavored vegetable oil
1 tsp cinnamon
2 TBS vanilla
1-2 cups assorted dried fruit (I use dried cherries)
1-2 cups of add-in (mini chocolate chips, mini marshmallows, cereals)

Preheat oven to 225 degrees.
Mix all ingredients except dried fruit and add-ins in a large bowl. Mix well to coat evenly. I omit the coconut, not all of us are fans. Distribute on 2 large rimmed baking sheets.

Bake for 1 hour 15 minutes. Turn every 15 minutes.

Remove from oven and cool completely.
Stir in dried fruit and add-ins. I put dried fruit and add-ins in individual bowls and let everyone make their own customized blends if we have it for breakfast.





Thursday, September 16, 2010

Therapeutic? Is it Really?

***Keep in mind this is the first time I have ever shared my deep thoughts in the blogworld.

Have you ever wondered how much someone really cares about you? Well, today I got a little reminder when I went to get into my car today for work. My question is really, do we even realize how much others think about us, love us, or maybe even hate us. I know in my own life I often wonder if the people that I am around even know how much I think about them. Do we always say what we are thinking? Do we say what we want to say? Do we get scared to say how we feel… Did we think someone looked so darn cute that day and didn’t even tell them. Do you ever wonder if that could have changed there day? Ya know what I mean? Now I am just thinking how much of an affect it could have on all of us. Have you ever said something to someone and then later thought “oh my heck” I hope she didn’t take that the wrong way. Man I know I have done this stuff way to many times. I’m just sayin. And Each time I do this I beat myself up over it.

Okay so I guess those of you who do read my blog you might be wondering what the heck I’m doing. I have decided to start writing some of the random stuff that goes through my head.

I’ve been told its Therapeutic? Really is it??

Til Later

Jackie

Friday, August 6, 2010

Jackson's First Baseball Tourney

Jackson's First Baseball Tourney
in Cedar City
3-1 Record
July 30, 2010


Jackson showing off his batting skills. He got a Home Run in his 3rd game. Even if it was by the other team making bad throws. It was still a Home Run Right!!!

Jackson was doing a great job on his throwing. He threw out 2 players from center Field in the last game. One on second base and one all the way over to first base. He is having a blast. The Coaches are so great with the boys. A big Thank You to the Red Rox Baseball Team.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Apricot Recipe

Sweet and Sour Jam

I will let you know how this recipe turns out. It sounds yummy!!

Ingredients
  • 1 habanero pepper
  • 3 cups fresh apricots, pitted and chopped
  • 1 cup shallots, sliced into thin slivers
  • 1/2 cup green bell pepper, chopped
  • 1/2 cup red bell pepper, chopped
  • 1/2 cup fresh pineapple, chopped
  • 1/4 cup cherry tomatoes, chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 teaspoon minced fresh cilantro
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1/4 cup freshly squeezed lime juice
  • 1 (1.75 ounce) package powdered fruit pectin
  • 6 cups white sugar
  • 1 cup brown sugar, packed
  • 1/2 teaspoon butter

  • 9 sterilized half-pint canning jars with lids and rings

Directions

  1. Wearing rubber gloves and avoiding touching your eyes or face, seed and mince the habanero pepper. Place the habanero pepper, apricots, shallots, green and red bell pepper, pineapple, cherry tomatoes, garlic, cilantro, cumin, and lime juice into a large pot over medium heat, and stir in the pectin until dissolved. Bring the mixture to a boil, and mix in the white and brown sugars, stirring until completely dissolved. Return the jam to a full rolling boil, add the butter to reduce foaming, and boil hard for 2 to 3 minutes, stirring constantly.
  2. Turn off heat, and skim and discard any foam that forms on the jam. Pack the jam into the sterilized jars, and top each with a sterilized lid and ring.
  3. Simmer the filled jars in a boiling water bath for 10 minutes, then remove the jars and store upside-down on a cloth towel for about 5 minutes. Turn right side up, and allow the lids to seal (listen for the popping sound). Let jars cool completely.

Apricot Jam Recipe from Thought Palace


This will be the recipe I use first thing in the morning when I start making Jam. I am still on the lookout for more recipes...


Apricot Jam Recipe

Here’s my family recipe for apricot jam, handed down through generations. One generation, really — my mom got it from a pamphlet put out by some local womens’ group, after we moved to an old ramshackle house in the middle of a huge but disused apricot orchard. The trees were old, but a lot of them still produced fruit, and it was no trouble to walk around and collect bucketsful. So we needed some way to make use of all that fruit…

This recipe is different from the usual one you find packed in a box of pectin, because, well, it doesn’t use pectin. Instead, you thicken the jam by cooking it a lot longer. This means it tastes less like fresh fruit; but it has a wonderful taste of its own, a bit like dried apricots, and a nice gloopy texture. As a bonus, putting an apricot kernel1 in every jar gradually adds an almond-y aroma2.

The Pep Talk

Making jam is much easier (and safer) than most people think. After all, 100 years ago everyone used to can food, unless they were millionaire financiers or nomadic tribesmen. If our primitive ancestors could do it, so can you! And jam is easier than canning vegetables because the acidity of the fruit inhibits microorganisms, so you don’t have to be paranoid about sterilizing everything.

Jamming basically boils down [sorry] to mixing the fruit with lots of sugar and some lemon juice, cooking it, and pouring it into clean canning jars. The heat of the boiling jam helps sterilize the jar, and turning it upside down at first gets the lid too. As the air at the top cools, it shrinks and forms a partial vacuum that holds the lid on tightly to maintain the seal.

The jam keeps for years, although unless you make a lot of it, you’ll run out long before then. We’ve eaten three-year-old jam that still tasted great. A very few jars go bad — maybe one in 20 — and a bad jar is pretty obvious because it’s either lost its seal or has mold on top, so you just throw it away and get another one.

It takes only about an hour of active time, it will make your house smell amazing, and you’ll end up with yummy jam and syrup that you can enjoy for years. Do it!

But: Read The Directions All The Way Through First. Some of the details are important.

Requirements

You’ll need to buy:

  • Apricots, duh. Firm and slightly under-ripe if possible. (As a rough estimate, it takes about 1 1/2 cups of cut-up apricots to make an 8 oz jar of jam.)
  • Lots of sugar. Get one of those big sacks. Don’t skimp on sugar or the jam won’t turn out right. NutraSweet™ is right out.
  • Several lemons.
  • 8oz canning jars, usually made by Ball or Mason. Most supermarkets have them, usually in the baking aisle. Make sure the jars come with the screw-on rings that hold the lids on.
  • Jar lids. These are usually sold separately because, unlike the jars, they’re not re-usable. Make sure they’re the right diameter for your jars.

Your kitchen needs to have:

  • A big non-aluminum3 cooking pot.
  • A big stirring spoon, ideally wood.
  • A ladle.
  • Optional: A quart-size jar or sealable plastic container (for the syrup).
  • Optional: a hammer (to extract the kernels).

Preparing The Fruit

Cut the apricots in half and put them in a large non-aluminum cooking pot. Set aside the pits for later. For each cup of apricots, add 3/4 cup sugar and 1 1/2 tsp lemon juice.

Let the mixture stand at least two hours, and watch as the magic force of osmosis sucks the water out of the apricots, dissolving them and the sugar into yummy goo.

Cooking

Now put the pot on the stove and bring the goo to a boil over high heat. At first you’ll just need to stir occasionally to keep it from scorching, then as it comes to a boil you’ll need to stir continuously. Once it’s at a steady boil, set a timer for 25 minutes and keep stirring…

When it first starts boiling, it’s going to produce lots and lots of pale orange foam, which you’re going to have to skim off with a ladle to keep the pot from overflowing. When I was a kid, we serendipitously discovered that, if you put the foam in a quart jar and let it settle, it turns into apricot syrup. Do this!! The syrup is awesome on pancakes or ice cream. Keep it in the fridge.

The foaming will stop, I promise, even though you’ll feel like the Sorcerer’s Apprentice for a few minutes. Then just keep stirring, stirring, stirring…

When the timer goes off, take a look at the mixture. If it still seems liquidy, let it boil another five minutes (but no more). The goal is to have reduced the volume by about half, and for what’s left to be fairly thick; sort of like boiling jam. When it’s ready, turn off the heat.

Flashback: Preparing The Jars

You will have first prepared4 a bunch of canning jars. The jars will have just gone through the dishwasher (even if they’re new). The lids will have been soaking in a bowl with boiling water poured over them. The rings will have been just sitting around.

(If you didn’t first prepare this stuff, while the apricots were dissolving in sugar, you’re in trouble now. Serves you right for not reading the recipe through! All you can do is let the jam cool a bit, pour it into any clean containers you have around, and put it in the fridge. You’ll have to eat it all in a few weeks. Get friends to help.)

As an optional but recommended bonus: Extract enough kernels from the pits so you have one intact kernel per jar. To do this, get a hammer and put the pit on a clean cloth on a very hard surface like the sidewalk. Whack the pit with the hammer, hard enough to crack it open but not hard enough to mush the kernel inside, which looks like a little almond. This takes a bit of practice, so it’s a good thing you have dozens of pits.

Filling The Jars

Now fill each jar as follows: Take it out of the dishwasher, turn it right-side-up (very important!), drop in an apricot kernel, and ladle jam into it up to about 1/4” below the rim. Try not to get jam on the rim5. (The right amount of airspace is important for getting the jar to seal.) Put a lid on top6, then screw a ring over it tightly. Turn the jar upside-down (very important!) Go on to the next jar. Repeat till you run out of jam.

You’ll probably end up with a half-full jar at the end. This won’t seal properly, so keep it in the fridge. Or if you run out of jars first, you can put the remaining jam into any other closeable containers you have around, and put them in the fridge. Either way, the refrigerated jam will keep for a few weeks.

When the last jar is filled and flipped over, set a timer for 5 minutes. When it bleeps, flip all of the jars back upright and let them stand for a little while. You should soon hear a little metallic “ping!” sound as each jar seals shut — the cooling air shrinks and forms a partial vacuum that pulls the lid tight and makes it flip from convex to concave.

If any jars haven’t popped shut by themselves in 15 minutes, they’re not properly sealed, so put them in the fridge and eat the jam soon.

Tighten the sealed jars’ rings some more, and label them with the type of jam and the approximate date. In a reasonably cool place (basements are good) they’ll keep for at least 2 years.

(Before you open a jar for the first time, press on the lid to make sure it’s still sealed. If you can pop the lid down, or if you can pull it off without a fair amount of force, it’s lost its seal and you should throw the jam away. But this happens really rarely.)

Notes

[1] As a child, I knew that apricot kernels were full of deadly cyanide, and felt sort of nervous about using them in the jam. (But not too nervous to eat it.) It turns out, though, that the concentration is really pretty minimal.

[2] I am told that almond extract is often made from apricot pits, and that marzipan sometimes is too.

[3] The acid in the fruit would react with the aluminum, giving the jam a nasty metallic taste.

[4] I’ve always wanted to write that!

[5] A canning funnel, which is a squat wide-mouthed funnel, is helpful here. Your better cooking-supply stores, like Williams-Sonoma, should carry them.

[6] Don’t forget that the water the lids are in is still hot! Tongs are one way to get them out. Even better, we have a nifty magnetic-tipped wand we got from Ball a few years ago.

Monday, July 12, 2010

2010 Pioneer Trek

Jason and I sitting at the lookout over the Grand Canyon at the End of the Trek.


Making homemade butter from cream. This stuff was amazing. I love butter

President Wilson and his cute wife. Taking a quick break.

Don Hayes and Robbie Gleave watching the Food...

Jake and Jen loving the Trek.

Parker and President Wilson making moccasins. Parker was the lucky guy that got to walk for 2 days in these. He was such a good sport. He actually wore them til they fell apart. Now he still wears slippers, I think its a simple reminder for him of the things the Pioneers had to go through.

Ma and Pa Young...

Our Trek Family. They were simply amazing.





Here is our Trek Family. Aunts and Uncles and all...
Pa Leavitt

Ma Leavitt and Ma Young

Bishop Webb

Ma Leavitt and Aunt Gleave

Our Daughter Hallows, and Pa Leavitt

Our Family Flag

Our Trek Son's

Jen Green and her cute smile!

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Jackson's Baptism

Jason, Jackson, Parker, McKayla, and Jackie

Yes I am a little late in getting this on my blog. I have a few good excuses that maybe we will discuss at a later date. I am just glad to finally be able to share this special day with all of you.



Cameron, Buff, Lauren, and Gracie
These are some of our great friends and the kids are only about 2 weeks apart in age. We were so excited to be able to have them be baptized on the same day. Congrats to all three of them on there baptism.





Parker and Jackson

Jackson smiling because his big brother is so proud of him.



Summer Cooking Class Anyone?

McKayla decided that she wanted to have a cooking class with the kids in the neighborhood. She thought she was gonna have about 4 kids, but when it was all said and done she had double. She was amazing (of course I am biased) and she had a blast and was so darn cute with the kids. Here are some of the pictures I was
able to get when I came to check in on the class.
McKayla showing off her balancing skills as well as cooking.


Kylee


Bree

Gracie, Bree, and Hannah

The whole gang!

Hannah thought I should take one more picture! How cute is she!

Of course Jackson couldn't miss out on a cooking class. He borrowed the hat
from one of the other chef's.

Gracie, I tried and tried to get a big grin, this is her, she is always happy.



Do they look like they are having fun or what. I am sure they will be back for week 2. I mean who doesn't want to learn how to cook cupcakes and decorate them. Oh yeah and eat them when they are done.



Fourth of July Baseball Tourney



Fourth of July Baseball Tourney in
Heber City!
These 3 boys are inseparable!!!

Parker, Hunter, and Braden

Parker and Braden are getting ready to mow the Baseball Field Lawns. I sure hope they don't get caught.


Parker is stealing from First Base to Second Base.


Parker is getting a little lead-off.


He is now getting ready to hit a triple. He sure can hit the ball when he wants too..


He is asking the Coach what he wants to do on the next pitch! What sign is that again!!


Hunter was doing all he could to keep a straight face. I was able to get a smile on the first picture of this post. Ha Ha Hunter!!

The boys all played really well. The all did some amazing things in the games they played. We hope to get into the Championship one of the tourney's.