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Family Recipe: Egyptian Salad

Flashback Summer: Family Recipe - Egyptian Salad

First, to clarify, no, my family is not technically Egyptian, and despite this, I am still going to share this recipe as a family recipe.  I will tell you why.

Egyptian salad is eaten by every family in Egypt, and I'm pretty sure there are no exceptions.  I call it a family recipe now because this salad is one of those things that, to me, tangibly represents how my family has been affected by our move overseas.  When we went to Egypt, we didn't know.... well, anything, basically, about Egypt.  As we grew to love the people and the culture, we began integrating parts of that culture into our own lives.

For me, Egyptian salad represents that.
When I eat this salad, it tastes like home.  It reminds me of how my Egyptian friend David teased me and said I would never get married because I didn't know how to make a correct salad or even dice the vegetables "properly."  It reminds me of sitting in the kitchen talking to my mom and sister as I chopped the vegetables into tediously small cubes.  It reminds me of going to the local vegetable store and having the owner, Mohammed, help me pick out the best vegetables to use in the salad.

This salad has become a family recipe that represents all the good about Egypt that has become a part of each of us.

Flashback Summer: Family Recipe - Egyptian family eating meal
An Egyptian family eating.  source.
So now that you now how awesome the meaning behind this salad is, I will share the recipe with you!  It's super simple, extremely healthy, and ridiculously refreshing.  Seriously, I make a giant bowl to leave in the fridge and eat as a snack throughout the week.  And I normally consider salads to be "rabbit food," dear readers, so you know this salad is GOOD STUFF.

This salad is very much done in a "to taste" fashion, meaning there are no specific measurements.  I've tasted lots of versions of it with differing proportions of ingredients, and the instructions below can be considered a base that you can work off of to make it your own!

Ingredients:
cucumbers
onions
tomatoes
cilantro (not pictured, but definitely worth including)
olive oil
lemon juice
salt and pepper
* A good veggie proportion would be 1 cucumber and 1 tomato to 1/2 onion.
Flashback Summer: Family Recipe - Egyptian Salad

1.  Dice the tomatoes into small pieces and put in a bowl large enough to mix everything in.  The smaller the pieces, the more authentically Egyptian.  Chop up the cilantro and add it as well.
Flashback Summer: Family Recipe - Egyptian Salad

2.  Do the same with the cucumbers and onions.
3.  Next, pour enough olive oil in to coat the veggies, but not so much to as to make them feel oily and drippy.  Just a bit.
Flashback Summer: Family Recipe - Egyptian Salad

4.  Next, add a quick splash of lemon juice and mix the salad.  Now taste it, and if you'd like more lemon taste, splash some more in there.  (Note, it's always better to have to add more than to have a too-sour salad, so start with small amounts until you like it.)
5.  Lastly, salt and pepper all of it to taste.
Flashback Summer: Family Recipe - Egyptian Salad

You can leave this in the fridge and it will get better after sitting for a day or so.  The flavors blend together more and become even tastier! 

P.S. In the making of this post I had a very sad jadeite accident.  Does anyone do mosaic/craft/collage work that could use jadeite pieces?  They're such a beautiful color, I'd prefer not to waste them by throwing them away.  Anyone have a use for these or know someone who would?  I'll give them to you!

Tea Latte Recipe and the Importance of Hot Beverages in Life

Flashback Summer: Tea Latte Recipe and the Importance of Hot Beverages in Life - Eurasia Cafe

Perhaps some of you are not quite as passionate about tea as Mr. Suzuki up there (why don't I have a room specifically devoted to drinking tea?!), but I think as the cold weather comes around even the most Larry the Cable Guy-esque of Americans could concede that hot beverages have a place in everyone's heart.

Since living in Egypt and Sudan where tea is had more often than water, I have learned the power of a hot beverage in bringing people together to enjoy life.  Tea requires preparation (if you'd like to do it right!) in getting the tea ready, warming the water, etc.  It isn't something you can do fast.  If you've ever tried to drink hot tea quickly, you know that the result is unhappiness and a burnt tongue.  Drinking tea forces you to take a pause and enjoy life slowly.

And what better time to pause and enjoy life but in fall?  The leaves change colors so quickly, and if you don't take the time to enjoy them, you'll miss them altogether!  Perhaps you can take time this week to make a tea latte with the recipe below, sit outside in a scarf and mittens, and sip and chat with a loved one and just enjoy how pretty the world is right now.

Flashback Summer: Tea Latte Recipe and the Importance of Hot Beverages in Life - Eurasia Cafe

Flashback Summer: Tea Latte Recipe and the Importance of Hot Beverages in Life - Eurasia Cafe, social justice

Tea Latte Recipe
I credit my discovery of the drink to Eurasia Cafe, the company whose delicious tea I am also using for this recipe!  This fantastic company not only produces amazing tea and coffee products, but the box explains the good they're doing with their products: "Handpicked quality teas are sourced directly from gardens that guarantee livable wages and better opportunities for farmers and their families."  As well, the company gives their profits back to social justice causes in 44 countries and territories.  These causes include sex trafficking prevention and rehabilitation, education, addressing poverty & spiritual emptiness, helping refugees, and healthcare for those with HIV/AIDS.  Check out their site to learn more and take part in their awesome business!

Flashback Summer: Tea Latte Recipe and the Importance of Hot Beverages in Life - Eurasia Cafe, social justice

Ingredients:
1 tea bag (I recommend a berry or floral tea.  I'm using Eurasia Cafe's Jasmine Green tea.)
vanilla flavor syrup
hot milk
hot water

Directions: 
- Put the tea bag in the mug, and add just enough hot water to give the tea something to steep in.
- As the tea steeps, heat up the milk.  (If you're doing this on the stove, the secret is to never stop stirring so the milk won't burn!)
- Add 2-3 pumps of vanilla flavor syrup to the tea-steeping water (for a 12 oz cup).
- Lastly, add the hot milk, stir, and enjoy!

You can also use an espresso machine to heat and froth the milk!


Flashback Summer: Tea Latte Recipe and the Importance of Hot Beverages in Life - Eurasia Cafe, social justice

Eurasia Cafe has not collaborated with me on this, and I spent my own money for their tea.  I truly love the company and all they do, so I wanted to share about this company with you guys!

Hospitality: Company's Comin'!

In honor of everyone's Thanksgiving preparations, I have the song "Company's Comin'" by Porter Wagoner!  It pretty well describes the atmosphere in my house.  Haha.

"Company's Comin" - Porter Wagoner (1963)
(And just look at his sweet suit!)

This evening my mom and I made the pies, and I also tried out my great-aunt Cindy's cornbread casserole recipe, which I'll share with you guys!  It's super easy, quick, and a delicious twist on a good ol' southern food.


Flashback Summer:  Company's Comin- cornbread Casserole recipe


Ingredients:
- 1 can creamed corn
- 1 can drained whole kernel corn
- 8 oz sour cream
- 1 stick butter
- 1 egg
- 1 small box corn muffin mix
Flashback Summer:  Company's Comin- cornbread Casserole recipe


Directions:
1. Melt stick of butter.
Flashback Summer:  Company's Comin- cornbread Casserole recipe

2. Add butter, sour cream, and egg into mixing bowl and stir well.
Flashback Summer:  Company's Comin- cornbread Casserole recipe

3. Add in the corn muffin mix and cans of corn.
Flashback Summer:  Company's Comin- cornbread Casserole recipe

4. Pour everything into a greased, preferably glass pan and bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes.
Flashback Summer:  Company's Comin- cornbread Casserole recipe

5. Serve and enjoy!
Flashback Summer:  Company's Comin- cornbread Casserole recipe

Family Recipe: Southern Biscuits & Chocolate Gravy


There are few things that I remember more fondly about my childhood than biscuits and chocolate gravy.

I spent a lot of time at my grandmother's house before she died, and this was one of the tried-and-true, sure-fire winners at her house!  Chocolate gravy was always a celebrated meal choice.  The recipe itself has been passed down many generations in my mother's family, and I shall carry on the proud heritage and spread the joy that is chocolate gravy with you, dear readers.  This is a recipe found in many American Southern homes, and everyone claims with pride that their mother or grandmother makes the best!  (But others are lying.  I am telling the real truth when I say this is the best version.)

I will warn you, however, that this is a true Southern recipe in that it starts with a stick of butter.  It is not gluten-free, low-fat, or healthy in any way, but it will raise your spirits and comfort your disheartened morale in a way that a literal ton of carrot sticks and bran muffins could never, ever do.

Though this recipe is from many generations ago, it was my grandmother who made the chocolate gravy I remember from my childhood, and she was especially known for her "dippin' biscuits" that were hardier than normal and could withstand being dipped in chocolate gravy.

And, without further ado, here is the chocolate gravy recipe:

Chocolate Gravy
(Serves 2-4 hearty servings)
1 stick butter
1/4 cup flour
3/4 cup sugar
4 tbsp cocoa powder
dash vanilla extract
2 cups milk
pinch of salt

Directions: Melt the butter in a large pot first.  Add the dry ingredients in and mix thoroughly.  (Set the burner on a medium-high heat.)

Next, pour in the milk and stir for a long time.  The gravy will continue to thicken.  When the gravy begins to thicken up (and begins to glop off the stirring utensil rather than run), add in the vanilla extract.  Stir a little bit longer to work in vanilla, then remove from heat.  (It will continue to thicken as it sits, even off the heat, so don't worry if it's not quite as thick as you like it yet!)

Note:  There are two camps in the chocolate gravy world: dippin' and forkin'.  Dippers choose to place a bunch of gravy on the plate and dip the biscuit in.  Fork-users pour the gravy over biscuits.  Choose wisely.

Serve these with thick slice bacon and coffee for a perfectly Southern breakfast!

Be sure to subscribe to Flashback Summer Emails for tomorrow's email that includes my grandmother's "hearty dippin' biscuit" recipe!  Created just to go with this gravy, these dense biscuits hold up to dipping without falling apart and won't get soggy quickly like normal biscuits!
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African Curry Recipe

Flashback Summer: African Curry Recipe

This African curry is the ultimate "make do and mend" version of a recipe.  It works well in Africa because so much of it can be substituted or skipped, depending on what's available.  It's a great way to use up random bits from the fridge and pantry while making a filling meal that everyone can customize to their own liking!
This recipe is basically a chicken curry sauce served over rice.  The thing that makes it awesome is all the optional toppings, which I've listed below.  You can use as many or as few as you like, but the more the merrier!
Curry Sauce Ingredients:
This makes enough sauce for about half a chicken.
1/4 cup curry (I used mild yellow curry)
1 diced apple
1 diced tomato
1 diced onion
1/3 cup margarine/butter
1 tsp salt
1 clove garlic, minced (optional)
1/4 cup flour
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1/4 tsp dry mustard powder or a dash of mustard
1 tsp pepper
2 tsp sugar
1 cup chicken broth
1 cup milk (evaporated milk, whatever)
1/2 cup shredded coconut
1/2 chicken (any cut, whatever works)

Directions:
- Boil the chicken and keep the broth.
- Cook onion and garlic in butter until clear, then mix in the rest of the spices.
- Add in and stir the flour until all is coated.
- Add the tomato, apple, and cocunt and let it simmer for 5 minutes.  (It burns easily!)
- Stir in chicken broth and milk.
- Shred up chicken and add to sauce.  Let it simmer for 15 more minutes.
- Serve over rice and enjoy!

Flashback Summer: African Curry Recipe
Granted, the color of the curry looks a little icky here.  But I SWEAR it's good!

Optional ingredients:
nuts
shredded coconut
pineapple chunks
apple bits
tomato bits
raisins
diced onion
banana pieces
mango bits
bell pepper
(and whatever else you think of!)

How to Make Southern Sweet Tea


As I've written about before, I've got a bit of American Southern heritage in my upbringing, and one of the main components of Southern culture is tea.

Not hot tea.
Not herbal tea.
SWEET TEA.
Sweet ICED tea.

A few posts ago, someone asked about how to make Southern sweet tea, and I told her I'd be glad to oblige with a recipe!  You know what's even better?  You may notice that the photos below are when I had long hair... and it's sunny outside...

I've been anticipating this post for a long time!

The first thing you gotta know about Southern sweet tea is that it's basically diabetes in a glass, and also that it's delicious.  It may take a while to learn how to hold your tea like a Southerner, so don't feel bad if you go into a sugar coma the first time you try it.  That's how it's supposed to be.

That being said, you can adjust the sugar content as you like.  In America, the sugar levels in ice tea increase the further south you go in the country, so this beverage can still be authentically American no matter how much sugar you've got in it.  But if you want it to be Southern.... add the sugar.


So enough of the back story, here's how you make Southern sweet tea, via my husband's technique.  This recipe will make about a gallon.

Ingredients:
- 2 family sized tea bags, or 4 individual ones
Orange pekoe tea tastes the best, but black tea works, too. Try to find a brand of tea that is "smooth" when brewed. Cain's and Tetley are good brands to use if you can find them!
- 3/4 cup of sugar
- medium pot

Directions:
1. Fill the pot full of water and put it on the stove to heat.
2. Add in the tea bags and sugar and let it steep.
3. It's okay if the water boils; just make sure the sugar is dissolved and the water is pretty dark from the steeped tea.  This is your sweet tea concentrate.
4. Pour this mixture into a pitcher, and fill the rest of the container up with cold water, and add some ice cubes if you want to drink it immediately.

There you go!  Now you've got Southern sweet tea!  Grab a wine glass or giant mason jar and get to sipping!

Hospitality: Retro Kitchen Highlight!

Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!

Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!



This past weekend I spent a few days at my Aunt Paula's house.  It's always nice to get to spend time with her and my Uncle Bud, and their house is SO CUTE.  Though it may not be very big, my Aunt Paula does an amazing job of bringing so much personality and style to it, and today I'm highlighting her wonderfully vintage-style kitchen!



I asked her some questions about it, too, and this is what she had to say:




What was the inspiration for your kitchen?
Usually, it's something I see, maybe on blogs or in real life that inspires me, like a color combo or a simple item, one simple little item I see that makes me think, "Oh my goodness!  I'd love to do my whole kitchen like this!"  For this kitchen, I was going through Etsy and I was looking for vintage aprons, and I found this craft apron in red and aqua, and it just absolutely killed me!  I thought,"I LOVE THAT!"  And that apron started all this madness! 
(check out her "before" kitchen photos here and read her post on the kitchen transformation progress here!)


Your kitchen is definitely vintage inspired, but it doesn't look like it exactly fits one era.  It seems to have a bit of 40s, bit of 50s, different eras here and there.  Why is that?
As much as I love the 50s era, I don't like all the hard edges.  I tried to incorporate the softer elements of the 40s with floral prints and such.


Where do you find the items you decorate with?
You know the sort of  "gathering" part?  For me, that's kind of the fun part of decorating. I found pieces from World Market, on the side of the road, altered art kits from Etsy, Vintage Hart Fabrics, flea markets, etc.

(Then she picked up a few items and told their specific stories.)
I was also involved in a tag swap, and we did a retro kitchen tag swap where everyone picked a retro kitchen appliance and put a favorite family recipe on it.  All of my dearest blog friends got involved in that, and that just really inspired me to continue the madness!   And this darling garland (pictured below) was made by one of my blog friends... and this darling little camper that she made for me... it's just crazy how involved everyone gets!  They just kind of lose their mind with you... It's great!


You mentioned your blog friends; what kind of role have they had in your life and even in decorating this kitchen in addition to the tag swap?
A lot of my "gathering" was both fun and challenging, and putting it on my blog put me in touch with people that knew resources for where I could find these things or helped me find things I was looking for.  Sometimes out of their generosity they would send me things, or sent me a link, or whatever... When they realized I was doing this, they started sending me all these wonderful old things!  Everyone was in on helping me make this kitchen fabulous!  I just kept going and going and going!!!

Also, I was in a very depressed place for a bit, and I was having a really hard time.  We were financially strapped, and I was just really down.  And someone, I don't know who, sent me this fantastic little camper game, knowing Bud and I had done a Route 66 trip, and it just made my day, made me cry!  I still to this day have no idea who sent it to me.  Just someone from blogland I suppose; I've gotten such support from those ladies!  It really is a community of support that has gotten me through a lot of hard times.


Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!

Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!

Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!

Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!
Here's the garland that was mentioned above.  Gnomes!
Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!

Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!
There are those 1940s florals!  Love 'em!  Accented by prints of old cookie jars
Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!

Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!

Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!
(road trip game mentioned above)

Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!
She painted this chair!  Amazing, right?!
Flashback Summer:  Retro Kitchen Highlight!
Her dog, Webster.  Isn't he cute?!
So what do you guys think of her style?  What parts do you like?  Is it something you would have in your own home?

Decorating a Renter's Kitchen on a Budget, Vintage Style

Flashback Summer: Decorating a Renter's Kitchen on a Budget, Vintage Style

As many of you have read on Instagram and other places, my husband and I just moved from a house into a new flat.  I won't go into all the details of the jankiness we dealt with in our previous home in the "Springfield slums," but I will say the straw that broke the camel's back was

Old Fashioned Beauty Tricks - Ice, Egg, Orange

The idea of starting fresh in January put me in mind of things I can do to start fresh every day, especially when it comes to skin care.  My skin is high maintenance, so my beauty routine has been evolving to try to find something that is optimal for it.  While I'm on the search, I'm always intrigued by the beauty tips and tricks I read about in vintage sources.  They use things I would never think to use these days, and I wonder about their effectiveness.  Oftentimes they're coming from movie stars whose skin does, indeed, look radiant, so can it be that these things really work?

Here are three vintage tricks I decided to try out for myself and share my experience with you!

Ice
On the Glamourdaze site I ran across an old article that described a movie star's solution to large pores: ice!  (I can't seem to find the page for the life of me, I apologize.)  This made sense to me, since we've been told to use warm water to open the pores, the opposite must be true to close them!  I have large pores, especially on my cheeks around my nose, so I tried it a few mornings in a row before I put on my makeup.  It's not like my pores completely disappeared, but I did notice a difference!  It also seemed to help keep my makeup just on the surface of my skin.

Orange and Lemon Tonic
I found a recipe for a 1930s orange and lemon tonic (facial), and I made it and tried it out.  The milk and the citrus mix strangely while cooked, and it was a very clumpy texture to spread on my face.  I put it on and let it sit for a bit, and while my skin did feel a bit tingly, it was only marginally softer when I rinsed.

Egg Shampoo
I don't have an exact source for this, but I do remember reading several stories as a kid that talked about getting an egg shampoo (perhaps in an American Girl book?), and I knew I had to try this one!  The things I do for you guys.

It felt weird, very weird.  I shampooed with an egg, left it in for a couple minutes, then rinsed and let my hair dry.  It might be a little shinier and softer... but I can't say that it is by much, if any. It might work well for other hair types, though.


Would you be willing to try any of these?  Have you tried any old school tips?  Did they work or not?

Liebster Award!

This week I received the Liebster Award from my friend Sharon of Freely Ronnie!  How sweet is that?!

The Liebster Award is for bloggers to recognize and get to know their blogging peers, especially the beginning ones (like me!).  



Here are the rules for all nominees:
1. Post 11 things about yourself
2. Answer the 11 questions created by the person who nominated you
3. Create 11 questions of your own to ask the bloggers you decide to nominate
4. Choose 11 bloggers with less than 200 followers to nominate and link to them on their blog post
5. The nominated bloggers must be notified of their award!
6. No tag backs! 


11 Random Facts About Moi!
1.  I did archery for fun as a kid and shot many an innocent box in my backyard.
2.  I'm LOVING the heeled tennis shoe trend.  (Is it vintage.... not in the least... but I like them!)
3.  Two of my favorite TV shoes are M*A*S*H and Frasier.
4.  My dad's side of the family is into car racing, so I've been to a few races and spent some time at the track.
5.  I love climbing things.  Rocks, buildings, trees, you name it.
6.  I was never on any sports team until here in college (where I play intramural powderpuff football).
7.  I do a Crossfit-type class at my school gym with some other ladies.
8.  I'm getting a degree in International Multicultural Studies (people, pretty much).
9.  I can't stand hairballs in showers.  Anything else in the world I can deal with, sure, but not those.  BLECH.  I have no idea why.
10.  My favorite furniture item to sit on in all the world is a Lovesac.
11.  Biscuits and Chocolate Gravy is my favorite family recipe.  YUM.


11 Questions from Sharon:
1. Favorite movie?     "Gladiator", "Pride and Prejudice", and "What About Bob?"

2. Starbucks order?   Hmmmm.  My sister ordered something really delicious the other day... and I can't remember what it is..... 

3. Childhood memory?   I would pick random leaves and store them in a pouch.  When I got a scrape or something, I would chew up the leaves and put them on the scrape.  I was convinced this is how Native Americans used to do it and that it would help!

4. Biggest challenge you face with blogging?  Trying to keep good perspective.  Blogging success means being in it for the long haul, so I need to remind myself not to compare to bloggers that have been at it much longer than me!

5. Soundtrack?  Jane Eyre

6. Favorite Quote?  "Dream manfully and nobly, and thy dreams shall be prophets." -Edward Bulwer-Lytton

7. Where do you get your inspiration?  historical sources and other bloggers!

8. Last tweet or status?  "I just heard this coming down the hall, 'ALL HAIL THE BEST ROOMMATE EVER!  SHE GOES BY JESSIE KUE! ALL HAIL THE BEST ROOMMATE EVER! SHE GOES BY JESSIE KUE!' Such a great floor. - Amber and Jessie"
9. Snow Day plans?  Sit, chill, snuggle, and watch movies while sipping hot chocolate or tea.

10. Biggest fear?  Hating my job in the future and being stuck in it.

11. Greatest accomplishment?  Coming through culture shock successfully in Egypt and Sudan as a teenager.

11 Questions For My Nominees:
1. Most beautiful thing you've ever seen?
2. If you could add one item to your wardrobe (money is no object!) what would it be and why?
3. Top three places you'd love to visit?
4. Favorite kind of cookie?
5. Favorite song?
6. If you could play any instrument masterfully, what would it be and why?
7. Sweet or unsweet tea?
8. Favorite holiday to celebrate?
9. Favorite tattoo idea?
10. Strangest/most random thing you like?
11. What would your dream kitchen look like?

My 11 Nominees:
Helen Mae || Lovebirds Vintage
Aunt Ruthie || Sugar Pie Farmhouse
Mary || Mary Van Notes
Miriam || Miriams Kafferep
Katie || The Little Red Squirrel
Nabby || This Old Life
Nancy || There Is Grace