living water

living water

 

“There is a kind of love that is similar to a brook after a rainfall, which quickly ceases after the rain stops.  But then there is a love similar to a spring, which erupts through the earth and never ceases.  The first love is human love, and the second love is Divine Love.”

Saint Isaac of Syria


lenten chocolate pudding

choclate pudding

I know, the picture looks like it could be the beginning of a salad of sorts, but nope.  It’s dessert.

You just have to try this to believe how good it is.  By now almost everyone has made the chocolate tofu mousse, but if you are like our family and cutting down on such a high soy intake during the Fast, then that dessert is out.

This is a a paleo lenten chocolate pudding recipe and the base is bananas and avocado.  Years ago I read that they make an ice cream out of avocado in South America, so making a pudding isn’t too far of a stretch.

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Lenten Chocolate Pudding

Ingredients:

  • 2 ripe avocados
  • 2 ripe bananas
  • 1/4 cup full fat coconut milk
  • 1-4 tablespoons maple syrup (optional – ripe bananas are very sweet, give it a taste before you add)
  • 1/4 – 1/3 cup cocoa powder (Penzey’s,
  • 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • pinch of sea salt
  • optional : pinch of cinnamon

Peel bananas and scoop avocado out of shell.  Place remaining ingredients in a food processor or blender.  Process until creamy.  Place in individual dishes and serve right away or refrigerate.

You can top with toasted coconut, toasted almonds or hazelnuts.

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Simple.  Easy. Delicious.  Everyone wants more lenten chocolate pudding.

 

all done




patience and peace

establish patience

 

 

 

All of them say that the perfection of the Christian life is in extreme humility. This means that patient long-suffering is what we most need in this life. We must bear everything patiently and forgive all. If we have good thoughts and desires, these thoughts will give us peace and joy even in this life, and even more so in eternity.

 Our Thoughts Determine Our Lives:

the Life and Teachings of Elder Thaddeus of Vitovnica


melomakarona

melomakarona

“Perhaps because they are so rarely made, sweets are the only foods on the islands for which written recipes exist… Each island home always has one or two kinds of cookies in the pantry, such as crunchy ring shaped cookies scented with cinnamon and orange, or simple almond and sugar paste cookies, fragrant with rose water and tangerine juice or zest, or honey drenched melomakarona, the richly aromatic Christmas cookies that are served through the holiday season to the end of January.”

Foods of the Greek Islands – Aglaia Kremezi

Melomakarona are hands down one of our family’s favorite cookies.  Like all things worthwhile, they take a bit of effort, but they never disappoint.  Our family makes melomakarona about once or so during every Fast, usually to take with us for Church coffee hour or as a snack after the Presanctified Liturgy.

This recipe is made with whole wheat flour and while I used the recipe from Foods of the Greek Islands as my starting point, I have tweaked it over the years to incorporate the whole wheat flour and also to minimize the sugar (in this case, the syrup which called for one part white sugar, one part honey and one part water), I didn’t change the amount of sugar in the dough.

You’ll see that in this recipe the melomakarona cookies are drenched in a syrup of only honey and water, scented with orange zest and that it is heated only a little, just enough to thoroughly blend the honey and the water. The reason is that raw honey has enzymes that are beneficial to our bodies which also allows it to metabolize easier.  Once honey is heated over 120 F, the enzymes die and the honey is no different to our bodies than white sugar.

If you would prefer not to use whole wheat flour, substitute and equal amount of pastry flour in it’s place.  We also grind our own flour, which has made all the difference when it comes to whole wheat.  These melomakarona cookies have a nutty mellow flavor – and are very soft and moist.

Grinding your own flour is very simple, and really opened my kids up to the deliciousness of whole wheat.  Whole wheat flour from the store can sometimes have a stale quality, so grinding it fresh and using it within a week (keep in freezer) brings a depth of flavor that we had no idea we were even missing.  Plus you get the fiber and vitamin and mineral content that are missing from refined white flour.

Most grocery stores sell whole wheat in the bulk section.  You’ll want to chose soft white wheat for this recipe.  For grinding, Kitchen Aid has a mill attachment for their mixers, both Blend Tec and Vitamix can grind wheat into four, or you can purchase a flour mill.

 A dear friend, whose parents came to this country from Greece was kind enough to ask her sweet mom for me whether she remembers ever using white flour growing up… because I wanted to be true to the traditions of even how sweets are made.  Her mom remembers using whole wheat…  so it’s an appropriate adjustment.   About a hundred years ago, families would have taken their wheat to the village mill for grinding, and their breads and pastries would have been made from whole white wheat.

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Melomakarona Cookies

Ingredients:

for the dough

  • 1/1/4 cups olive oil (don’t use canola or vegetable, please)
  • 1/3 cup raw turbinado sugar cane
  • grated zest of three oranges
  • 3-4 cups whole wheat pastry flour
  • 2-1/2 teaspoons baking powder (buy brands that say aluminum free on the label)
  • 1-1/2 cups finely ground semolina (Bob’s Red Mill carries it)
  • 1/2 cup brandy (don’t skip this… it imparts an elastic quality to the dough)
  • 1 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 cup fresh orange juice

for the Syrup

  • 2 cups raw honey
  • 1 cup water
  • 1 tablespoon orange zest

for the filling

  • 2 cups walnuts
  • 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

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In a large bowl mix flour, semolina, cinnamon, cloves, baking powder and orange zest.

dry ingredients melomakarona

In a separate bowl, whisk orange juice, olive oil and brandy.  Add to dry ingredients and form into a dough.  Turn out onto a floured surface and knead lightly.  Place back in bowl to rest.  You will notice that the dough has a very elastic quality, not quite like yeast but activated from the brandy.  (Note: the brandy and orange juice will begin to neutralize the phytates in the flour, making the mineral content of the whole wheat assimilable to our bodies.)

Let stand for 20 minutes.

Place walnut and cinnamon filling mixture into a blender or food processor and pulse until ground.

When you are ready to make the cookies, line a cookie sheet with parchment paper and turn the oven on 350F to preheat.

dough melomakarona

To prepare the dough into cookies, we start by scooping out portions and placing them on a cookie sheet.

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To form melomakarona cookies, take a ball of dough and flatten in your hand.  Place a small scoop of the crushed walnut cinnamon mixture into the center and close it up.  Squeeze the seams together and place seam side down on a parchment lined cookie sheet.

forming cookies

Once you have formed and filled all of the cookies, place the leftover walnut cinnamon mixture aside.  You will use this to sprinkle on top of the cookies after they are baked and drenched in the syrup.

ready for the oven melomakarona

Bake in oven for about 30 minutes.  You will know they are done because the house is enveloped in a lovely aroma.

While they are baking, place the honey and water and 1 tablespoon orange zest into a large sauce pot over medium heat.  Stir constantly until just warm.  You should be able to place your finger in it without it feeling hot.  Remove from heat and pour into a 9 x 12 pan.

orange zesty honey syrup

When the cookies are done baking, remove them and place them into the baking dish with the honey syrup.  Let them sit over night.  You may turn them once to get them really saturated.  Most if not all of the liquid will be gone in the morning.  If you have started these cookies early in the day, then let soak for about 5 – 8 hours in the syrup before finishing them.

getting a honey orange marinade

Now you will take the remaining walnut mixture and spoon it atop of each cookie.  Place each one into a large paper cupcake holder.

yum

And now, for the best part…. enjoy your melomakarona!



simplest snack – ever

avocado snack

Looking for a healthy easy snack for the Fast, or just any time?  If you have an avocado, a little salt and pepper and just a squeeze of lemon, you have the world’s easiest snack, complete with it’s own bowl.

Halve and put the avocado, squeeze half a lemon atop of it, and sprinkle with salt and pepper.  Spoon it right out of the peel.  It is delicious, a good source of fiber, vitamin B, C and E.  They are also a source of good fat (monounsaturated)  and contain plenty of potassium.  Besides that, they are just delicious!


wisdom from the hive

wisdom of the bee

Or go to the honeybee, And learn how she is a worker And how solemnly she does her work,  Whose labors kings and common people use for health; And she is desirable to all and glorious;  And although she is weak in bodily strength, She leads the way in honoring wisdom.

Proverbs 6:10-12

A hive of bees is centered around the fullness and joyful labor of their common life together.

An observer to a beehive is struck at the seeming joy the bees take in each of their appointed tasks.  Over her life, a bee will have provided for the sustenance of the hive by laboring at every available position to support the colony.

 As soon as she is born, a young bee gets right to work as a nursemaid.  In this role she feeds and tends to the eggs and larvae of the hive.  At about two weeks of age, she will begin producing wax- and despite the sheer darkness within the hive, the bee will effortlessly draw out beautifully perfect geometric combs for the storage of nectar as it becomes honey.

Then there are the bee chefs… and they produce royal jelly and beebread.  If you are fan of fermentation, then you will appreciate the production of beebread.  Beebread is a combination of fermented pollen, sweet little bee secretions and honey and it’s kind of like a bee sourdough!

As she grows and matures, the bee will learn to guard the hive at the entrance and will also  get into great shape constantly fanning her wings for the cooling or warming of the hive.

Once she is about three weeks old, this little lady then really spreads her wings –  gathering floral sunshine as she forages for nectar and pollen.

It is this foraging for nectar which  is the bees most precious gift for mankind.  Although we crave their honey, it is their pollination that is vital to our wellbeing.   When a bee finds a rich source of nectar, she will dance a joyful circular little bee folk dance, for her sisters.  This lets the other bees know where to locate the forage.  Her dancing directions are remarkably accurate and reference flight patterns focused on angles of the sun.

At one point in her life she will even take on the merciful task of undertaker – that is removing the bodies of any bees that die in the hive.  There are no idle moments for bees, they work day and night, and live for about six weeks.  When her body finally succumbs to death,  the industrious and watchful bee will never have slept a moment in her life.

Nature never taught me that there exists a God of glory and infinite majesty.
I had to learn that in other ways.  But nature gave the word glory a meaning for me.
I still do not know where else I could have found one.”–C.S. Lewis

A hive of bees is considered a single organism – a body.  And each little bee is a but a tiny part of the body of the hive, yet collectively their common labor yields a wonderful harvest.   There is no “down time” and certainly not a lot of distraction in a hive.  Collectively, as members of the body, they labor toward what is needful and beneficial for life.

In this way, one senses neither judgement nor conflict amongst the bees.  Despite the various roles a bee will take on over the course of her life, each bee appears quite satisfied exerting herself with the current task at hand, focusing on her own labor but also indebted to the roles of her fellow laborers in the hive.

Bees live and act as one, and all of this is for the common good of the colony.  It is a life of service, as evidenced by their communal labor and the constant droning buzz, which is the eison of life and of service within the hive.

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“… I pray that you may enjoy good health and that all may go well with you, just as your soul prospers.”

3 John 2


our thoughts and our lives

our thoughts and our lives

 

Our thoughts determine our whole life.   If our thoughts are destructive, we will have no peace, if they are quiet meek and simple, our life will be the same, and we will have peace within us.  It will radiate from us and influence all beings around us – rational being, animals and even plants.

Elder Thaddeus of Vitovnica

Our Thoughts Determine Our Lives