2015 – Bringing in the new year!

The holidays have come to a close for another year.  Christmas decorations are coming down this week.  Since it took me nearly a week to decorate this house I’m sure it will take equally as long to get everything put away.  Right now things are piled high on the dining room and kitchen tables waiting for boxes, bins and packing paper.

This year we traveled to visit with family for Christmas, attended a late Christmas Eve service in my family’s church where we were all married and all our children baptized.  I truly enjoy going back to those roots and the warm and friendly members of that small community.  I was busy cooking Christmas Eve dinner at the farm followed by Christmas Day dinner for my father-in-law.  We missed our oldest daughter and her husband.  Now that she is a married woman with in-laws in New York we will be sharing her on the holidays…new territory for us…but a sign that life is ever-changing.

Before the holidays I spoke with a childhood friend, Susan. We haven’t seen each other in a decade.  Her family lived on a farm which adjoined our farm by the way of a short stretch of paved country road.  Susan and I not only attended school together, but Sunday school, church and Confirmation.  After church on most Sundays, Susan and I would hop on our motorcycles and ride through the orchards laying on the throttle when on the road connecting our farms.

When talking with Susan she mentioned a French apple pie of my mother’s that she makes.  I vaguely remember it but while going through some of her things after her passing, found a newspaper article with this recipe, another of her Grand Champion winning pie recipes at Apples-On-Revue, October 16, 1969.  Though the name has been changed, to promote the farm (not to protect the innocent), I’m certain this is the one.

Ivy Hill Frosted Apple-Raisin Pie

Ingredients:

  • Pastry for a 9-inch double crust pie
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 2 tablespoons flour
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 6 cups tart apples, peeled and sliced
  • 1/2 cup seedless raisins
  • 2 tablespoons orange juice
  • 3 tablespoons butter
  • Powdered sugar frosting:  1 cup powdered sugar, 3 tablespoons orange juice, 1 teaspoon orange rind

Divide pastry into 2 parts; roll one part into a circle and line a 9-inch pie pan.  Combine sugar, flour, salt and cinnamon.  Mix with apples and raisins;  place in pie pan.  Sprinkle with orange juice and dot with butter.  Cover with crust, seal edges and bake at 400 degrees for 15 minutes.  Reduce heat to 350 degrees and bake for 40 minutes longer.  Remove pie from oven and spread Powdered Sugar Frosting over hot pie.

To make Powdered Sugar Frosting – Combine powdered sugar, juice and orange rind.  Spread over hot pie.

Needless to say, I had to make this pie during my brother and sister-in-laws recent visit.  It was delicious!  Hope you enjoy it too!

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Cooling and smelling oh so good!

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On display, waiting to be served.

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What is a piece of pie without ice cream?

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Layers of flaky heaven!

 

I used Rome Beauty apples.  I had purchased them to make a Williamsburg apple and pineapple cone for a centerpiece and ran out of time to assemble it.  The apples seemed a little ripe and soft when I sliced them .   Would they hold their shape or turn into applesauce?  I shouldn’t have worried…It was perfect.  Mom certainly did have a winner!

I didn’t use Mom’s pie crust recipe using lard.  My cholesterol levels are creeping up and I can’t find good quality lard in the stores.  Instead I used my fall back pastry recipe from a Crabtree & Evelyn cookbook, using mostly unsalted butter (okay, I know that’s no better for my blood work than lard!)  and a few tablespoons of vegetable shortening.  I subbed  1 1/2 tablespoons of vodka for part of the liquid added to the pastry to help with the flaky texture.  The crust was super too!

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Christmas Market, Bernkastel-Keus, Germany

One of the highlights of our trip to Germany was Opening Day of the Bernkastel Weihnachtsmarkt.  A friend of ours noticed I was making Facebook posts from Germany where she and her husband were currently assigned.  She reached out to me and invited us to tag along to this fabulous German town along the Mosel River.  It was a town where Charlie and I visited many years before when he was the BIG 22 squadron commander.  What a treat to visit again!

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The obligatory “selfie”

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Bernkastel-Keus with vineyards

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Building on Market square that is a life size Advent Calendar

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My favorite picture, sampling the gluhwein, white and red!

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At dusk

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I can’t think of a better way to begin celebrating the Christmas season!

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Ramstein Germany

Our first two days on our Germany trip have been in an area where Charlie was stationed and we lived some 25 years ago. We returned with some treasured memories to a German family and friends who welcomed us so warmly into their lives. We are so fortunate to have maintained contact with the Goettel family and our friend Yvonne.

I called Water and Elfriede several days before we departed and asked if they would be home on Sunday. We were coming to visit. Elfriede squealed with delight and immediately invited us to eat with them like they had done many, many times before. She served two of our favorites….Knodel and Donauwellen Kuchen! We spent several hours there and enjoyed the company of their 20 year old and 17 year old granddaughters. Elfriede does not speak English but amazingly we conversed well with my broken German and the occasional help of their granddaughters. It was a delightful time.

Then through Facebook I contacted Yvonne who lived in our little village of Albersbach and often would babysit for Kristen. Yvonne visited with us in Yorktown, VA when she was 17 and we have also maintained contact mostly through Facebook. Yvonne now has 2 children of her own, Yasmin, 17, and Finn, 18 months and she lives close to our hotel in Ramstein. I’m so happy that she brought Finn to see me and we had a fantastic morning catching up on her lovely family and getting her up to date with the Lyon’s. We covered a lot of territory in a short period of time.

What a perfect way to start our trip to Germany…it couldn’t have had a better beginning!

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Leaving on a jet plane!

Just a quick check in before we board our flight to Germany! I’m so excited to see our former landlords when we lived there nearly 25 years ago! They accepted us into their family. We spent our holidays with them, attended church with them, participated in their sons wedding and Kristen also appeared in the German newspaper in a photo of their large family reunion. I called our landlords, Elfreide, a few days ago and she was so excited. She only speaks a few words of English and my German is rusty at best. Charlie saw them last year and delivered a small quilt I made for her. This trip she will receive a wool pincushion that made. It’s a pineapple…a symbol of Williamsburg, VA and hospitality! I hope she likes it.
Hopefully I will have some connectivity this week and a half. If so I will be posting updates of our trip. By the way, Charlie’s trip is business related and mine is for pure enjoyment! Tschuss!

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New Beginnings

Welcome to my new blog. I plan on continuing similar posts on my favorite topics…home, hospitality and happiness….but with an easier domain name. My first blog cookingkaren.com will stay up for awhile until I get things transferred to karenlyon.net. Please join me as I share with you my projects and thoughts…lots of new beginnings to share!

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