Wednesday, December 4, 2013

A Day of Thanksgiving

So the title is slightly misleading. I will be talking about our Thanksgiving holiday, but I want to start with the other things we've been doing since the last post. So Thanksgiving will have to wait until last.

Things have been pretty normal around here. Naps. Reading time. Lunch. Walks. The park. You get the idea. One of the exciting things we've done involves food. I served my mission in Hungary and not unlike every other missionary I claim the food there to be superior to most other foods. So one week in October we made two Hungarian dishes. The first one I had never made before. Porkolt and Nokedli. That means a meaty stew with special noodles. The porkolt (stew) is very greasy, as you can see, but quite tasty. The nokedli (noodles) were very fun to make and tasty to eat. You use a grater to grate the noodle dough into boiling water. Similar to making funnel cake, except there are many little drops instead of one long strand. Plus it's not fried, it's boiled. Here are some pictures.
Nokedli, finished product.
Porkolt, finished product.

The other dish I have made many times before. Rakott Krumpli (stacked potatoes). It is a casserole of sorts with pepperoni sausage, potatoes, eggs, and a yummy sauce of sour cream and spices. Unfortunately for you, I didn't take any pictures.

I've talked about Thomas climbing everywhere. Well, one Sunday he climbed into the stroller storage pocket. He gets stuck every time, but still insists on doing it. He usually throws something in the pocket like a crayon or truck and then attempts to get it back. Here are some pictures.


I don't know how pleased he was to find his mama taking pictures of him instead of saving him. I laugh at him every time. He might as well get used to it.

Another thing I've been doing is a book group. So far we have read three books. At best about half the people will have read it when it comes time to meet. I think most of them are the type of people who join a book group because they want a motivation to read more. There are only a couple of us who are there because we read a lot anyway and want someone to talk to about it. Don't be surprised to find that I am one of the latter. This month we are reading A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens. I've managed a couple of pages, but I am not a Dickens fan. Other books I've read recently are Persuasion (Austen), Ender's Shadow (Scott Card), and I am working on the Iliad (Homer). I don't know how long that one will take me. Old epic poetry. Hmm.

Now we are to the Thanksgiving portion of this post.

My dad, Teresa, and Kylynn came from Oregon and California for the holiday. Teresa's brother Joe lives in Provo and quite a few of her siblings live in Utah. So they all got together and we joined them. I haven't been that stuffed for a long while. Some of the things we did we puzzles, going to the BYU bookstore, watching football, eating at Mama Chu's, eating pie (of course), visiting, and a whole host of other things I can't think of right now. It was nice to have some family nearby. I don't think I've had Thanksgiving with my side of the family since high school in 2004.

The Friday after Thanksgiving we headed to Idaho Falls via Lewiston, UT. Our nephew was baptized that Saturday. His two older brothers gave talks on baptism and the Holy Ghost. They were very good. At first I thought that someone else had written the talks and they had read them, but after asking Sam, he said that he and Jimmy had a little help but that they wrote their own talks. I was quite impressed. After the baptism, we went to a place called Leo's Place. It is a pizza joint with an arcade and play-land for the kids. It was fun to watch all the little ones run around playing. Tommy also liked watching them play. The pizza was good too. Here's Tommy on one of the rides. It took some getting used to, but after a while he didn't want to leave.
On the way home we stopped by Rachael and Clay's and hung out with them for a couple of hours. It's nice to have family to visit so nearby. Now we are home doing our normal things. Almost. I feel like Christmas is sneaking up on us. There is still quite a bit to do, and only a couple of weeks to do it.

One last little tidbit. This year I learned that Thanksgiving became a holiday during the Civil War. In the middle of the fighting Pres. Lincoln called a day of thanksgiving and it has been a national holiday ever since. True the origin of the idea is with the pilgrims, but at one of the bloodiest times of our history a great leader decided that we needed a day to remember what we are grateful for. If they had things to be grateful for, then we definitely do.
Toodle Pip.
Jackie and Family