August 17, 2012
As summer ends, the school season begins
Page 2 of 2
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Childhood and school days can be a happy and fruitful time. One thing is certain -- it can never be repeated. We have one chance to lead our children the right way. After they are grown, it is too late.

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We have had a lot of requests for the recipe to make sauerkraut in a quart jar instead of a churn. Thanks to Shelby Taylor, we now have the recipe.

KRAUT MADE IN QUART JAR

Put one teaspoon of canning salt in bottom of quart jar. Pack shredded cabbage tightly in jar. Put another one teaspoon of salt on top, with one tablespoon white vinegar, and one teaspoon sugar. Fill with boiling water and seal. This will be ready to eat in 21 days but is better if left longer. You can cold pack it then, but not necessary. It will pressure seal itself and keep for at least three years.

Someone inquired recently about making tomato kraut (also called green pepper kraut) in quart jars -- I don't see why a person couldn't use this same method.

We have a request from Shirley Cunningham of Summersville asking how to make parched corn. I remember Grandma O'Dell parching corn, but I don't know how she did it. It seems that she used an iron skillet. Was it field corn or sweet corn? I hope someone remembers.

Roberta Hughes of East Bank has a friend who is looking for a recipe to make crockpot apple butter. Mom used to make it in a heavy aluminum pan in the oven. This required stirring about every 20 minutes, and was time consuming. We never heard of a crockpot.

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Here is a poem that I have kept for years. It sums up my feelings right now.

SKETCHES

By Ben Burroughs

As the months go racing onward

And the old years fade away,

We are often prone to thinking

Of a dead and bygone day.

Of course we know it does no good

To dwell upon the past

But somehow something makes us drift

To things that did not last.

 

No doubt it's human nature

To desire to go back

Upon the road of yesterday

And scan the almanac.

For mankind cannot seem to face

The fact that time has gone,

We cling to golden yesteryears

As time goes marching on.

 

We live again through memory,

And that's why we recall

The periods of happiness

That mattered most of all.

So it is and always will be

And I know you will agree

It is a tonic for the heart

To drift in memory.

 

Here is a parting thought from Charles Bennett, who writes, "When I retired the first of July, everyone told me that when you retire, you will wonder how you ever had time to work. It is true -- I've never been so busy. Now I know why my grandfather lived to be 94 -- he never had time to die!"

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