Archive for December, 2005

WritersWeekly is seeking new writing-related titles for its bookstore

Wednesday, December 21st, 2005

Angela’s busy spending time with the children and Richard (and shaking her presents), so her column will return after the holidays.

WritersWeekly is seeking writing-related ebooks to add to their bookstore. WritersWeekly.com, a division of BookLocker, does NOT charge any setup fees to list non-fiction ebooks on their site. We also only ask for non-exclusive electronic rights (that means, yes, you can sell your book anywhere else you choose!) and pay 50% royalties on a monthly basis, and you can terminate your contract at anytime. To submit your manuscript for consideration, surf to: http://publishing.booklocker.com/submit.php

I’m Shakin’ My Presents!!

Wednesday, December 21st, 2005

The children are terribly excited about Christmas coming on Sunday and I have to admit their excitement is contagious. I, myself, have a hard time going to sleep at night with visions of sugar plums dancing in my head. And, since I’m pregnant and craving sweets like mad, those sugar plum temptations are quite overwhelming right now!

Eleven of us attended the Penobscot Theatre’s showing of A Christmas Carol yesterday! It was a new, humorous adaptation by award-winning playwright Leslie Bramm and the actors involved the audience in the performance. Max is only four years old but he sat mesmerized for an hour and a half. We all loved it!

We’re planning to go to our neighbors’ house on Saturday for their annual Christmas Eve party, and will then come home and have our traditional Christmas Eve fondue dinner. Zach’s girlfriend will be joining us because her parents will be traveling back from New Hampshire that night. So, that will add to the festive atmosphere. We’ll close the evening with a reading of Twas the Night Before Christmas, and will then put the children to bed. And then Richard and I will wait until Frank goes to sleep so we can sneak into his room to put up his winter window coverings. This keeps his room dark and prevents him from waking up at 4:00 a.m. on Christmas morning. We came up with that trick a couple of years ago and it works! Heh…

And Monday, of course, is our annual Boxing Day party, complete with the ever-popular White Elephant gift exchange, which usually results in, um, slightly raised voices and threats of a brawl. It really is loads of fun.

We pray all of you and your families will have a Happy Kwanzaa, a Merry Christmans, and a Happy Hanukkah!

Happy holiday hugs to all!
Ang

P.S. Want to read real query letters that landed these contracts? Woman’s Day-$2,800; Redbook-$3,500; Ladies Home Journal-$3,000; DiscoveryHealth.com-$2,000; Lifetime Magazine-$3,000; Life Extension Magazine-$6,480; Natural Remedies-$11,300; and many more! See: http://www.writersweekly.com/books/1409.html

“Secret” Family Recipes? Ha!

Wednesday, December 14th, 2005

Max (age 4) kept blowing air out of his nose, loudly and in a rhythmic fashion this morning. “Puff, puffpuffpuff, Puff Puuuuuufff…” I finally turned around and asked him if he needed a tissue.

He replied cheerfully, “No, I’m singing a song with my nose.”

The children hit the mall last weekend and started (and finished!) their Christmas shopping. Gee, I wish my list had been that easy!

We give candy and cookies to our friends here in Bangor for Christmas so Ali and I are baking up a storm this week. I’m trying to make Peppernuts for the first time ever this year. My mom’s been making them for years. We received them in a tin each Christmas from one of mom’s friends for years and the lady would never give out their secret family recipe, despite all those years of begging and bribes from my mom. My mom was into ceramics at that time (she even had her own kiln) and, one year, the neighbor’s daughter came over and asked my mom to make a ceramic teddy bear for a friend. She was willing to pay. Mom said she, of course, couldn’t take the girl’s money, but she would like the girl to run home and get her mom’s peppernuts recipe. She did and my mom’s been laughing wickedly about that every Christmas since. And, of course, Mom gave the recipe to all of us.

That was long before the Internet was born. I did a search just today and found tons of recipes for peppernuts. The closest one I found to “mom’s recipe” (ha ha) is the Anise Oil Peppernuts recipe on this page – http://www.hungrybrowser.com/phaedrus/m122902.htm#3. Be careful to use the right one. There are several peppernuts recipes appearing there and I definitely would not recommend the ones with raisins and coconut. Yuck! I must warn you peppernuts are extremely addictive. If you plan to make them, better add “pants with elastic waistbands” to your Christmas list.

We’re also making peppermint bark this year, which everyone always raves about. And, it’s so easy I almost feel guilty making it.

Angie and Ali’s Peppermint Bark

1 bag semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 bag white chocolate chips
Lots of candy canes

Melt semi-sweet chocolate chips on medium heat in the microwave for about 3 minutes; stir often.

Spread the melted goo, about 1/4-inch thick, on waxed paper, and put it in the freezer.

Melt white chocolate chips the same way, but don’t put in freezer yet.

Once the mixture in the freezer is hard enough, spread the white chocolate mixture on top of the hardened semi-sweet mixture. If you do this too early, the white chocolate will start to melt the dark chocolate.

Put candy canes in a Ziploc bag and smash them. The kids love doing this with a hammer but the broken candy canes can make holes in the bag and make a big mess, so be careful.

Sprinkle the candy canes generously on top of the melted white chocolate. Push them into the white chocolate (gets messy, but just lick your hands afterward) so they’ll stay there after the candy hardens.

Put the pan back into the freezer. Once the candy hardens throughout, peel the waxed paper from the bottom and break into pieces.

Serves: Two families…but only for about a day. It’s pretty yummy!

Oh, and don’t store this near the heater!

Hugs to all!
Ang

P.S. Want to read real query letters that landed these contracts? Woman’s Day-$2,800; Redbook-$3,500; Ladies Home Journal-$3,000; DiscoveryHealth.com-$2,000; Lifetime Magazine-$3,000; Life Extension Magazine-$6,480; Natural Remedies-$11,300; and many more! See: http://www.writersweekly.com/books/1409.html