Thursday, December 27, 2012

Christmas Cherry Wine Cake

I adapted this Cherry Wine Cake for Christmas this year from the Blackberry Wine cake recipe developed by Paulette Yost and Barb Teague of  Weathervane Winery. This cake can be made from any cherry favored wine but I love the Weathervane Winery Santa' Sweetie wine. Any box white cake mix can be used but I found a Betty Crocker Cherry Chip cake mix at Big Lots that I thought worked well with this recipe. The original recipe uses a pound cake pan lined with parchment paper but I used my Calphalon 10" crown 12 cup capacity BUNDT pan. The cake was quite flavorful and moist and I was pleased with the cake results.


Christmas Cherry Wine Cake

Weathervane Winery Santa's Sweetie
Cherry Wine Cake Directions:

Ingredients:
1 box white cake mix
4 eggs
¾ cup oil
1 cup Santa' Sweetie wine or other cherry wine
1 (3 oz) pkg. Black Cherry jello

Glaze:

½ cup Santa Sweetie or other cherry wine
1 ¾ cup confectionary sugar


  1. Line pound cake pan (sides too) with parchment paper or use a 10" BUNDT pan that can be lightly sprayed with BAKER's JOY. 
  2. Preheat oven at 325 degrees. 
  3. Combine cake mix, jello, eggs, oil, and 1 cup of wine. 
  4. Pour into pan. Bake for 60 minutes or until cake is done.  
  5. Remove from oven and pierce cake while in pan with pick. 
  6. Make glaze. 
  7. Pour over warm cake. 
  8. Let cake sit 15 minutes before removing from pan. 
  9. Enjoy!


Friday, December 7, 2012

Pfaltzgraff Christmas Heritage Pattern




Pfaltzgraff introduced the Christmas Heritage pattern in 1981. The Pfaltzgraff Christmas Heritage is a delightful Christmas version of the more traditional, white Pfaltzgraff Heritage pattern that can be used together. The festive accent of the Christmas tree wonderfully decorated is the heart of this classic pattern. The pattern features a toy village and train set spread out beneath the ornament-laden boughs of a Christmas tree. A tiny, simple band of Christmas green provides a finishing touch along the edges of each piece. The Christmas Heritage collection is made from durable, chip-resistant stoneware and is microwave and dishwasher safe. This casual stoneware brightens meals on a daily basis throughout the holiday season.
Pfaltzgraff retired the Christmas Heritage pattern on December 31, 1996.


Table and china hutch decorated with Christmas Heritage 

Monday, November 26, 2012

Wild Turkeys - Happy Thanksgiving!




Wild turkeys feeding in the field at the mountain house

The wild turkey is omnivorous and primarily feeds on nuts, berries, acorns, grasses, seeds, and insects. 


These turkeys are enjoying the winter rye that was recently planted.




Tuesday, November 13, 2012

The Green Violinist 1923-24 by Marc Chagall
the inspiration for the title of the musical,
Fiddler on the Roof

“A fiddler on the roof. It sounds crazy, no?” asks the poor Jewish milkman. “In our little village of Anatevka you might say every one of us is a fiddler on a roof. Trying to scratch out a pleasant simple tune without breaking his neck. It isn’t easy. You may ask why do we stay up here if it is so dangerous? We stay because Anatevka is our home. And how do we keep our balance. That I can tell you in one word. Tradition!”


The fiddler is a metaphor for survival in a life of change and uncertainty through the upholding of tradition and joy.  Chagall used the fiddler in many of his paintings to illustrate happy celebrations in Jewish lives. Chagall painted "The Green Violinist" in 1923-1924, thirty years after Aleichem’s novel, Tevye's Daughters (or Tevye the Milkman), and forty years before the Broadway production of Fiddler on the Roof.

Monday, November 5, 2012

Winston-Salem Journal Review - "Fiddler"

‘Fiddler’ inspires us to weigh tradition’s place
Sunday, November 4, 2012 12:00 am
Matchmaker
Ken Keuffel/Winston-Salem Journal

Do we uphold tradition or let it erode?

That’s the principal question at the heart of “Fiddler on the Roof,” the popular musical that Twin City Stage is reviving. And it’s a question we’re inspired to care about in numerous ways as we take in the often-funny show, which opened Friday at the Arts Council Theatre.

The show, directed with aplomb by Bobby Bodford, also thrives on the able music direction of Margaret B. Gallagher and the imaginative choreography of Benji Starcher. The cast often fills the stage, but you never feel that it becomes unwieldy or unmanageable.

“Fiddler” is set in a Jewish settlement in a Tsarist Russia that is intolerant of it and ultimately shuts it down. The musical transports us to a time when resistance to “modern” ideas was beginning to weaken.

One result: a man and a woman might just bypass a matchmaker and marry because of their love for one another, even if such a union meant financial struggles, dislocation or being stigmatized for marrying outside one’s faith.

Tim Austin as Tevye
Tevye (Tim Austin), the loveable milkman, contends with revolutionary notions taking hold in his three oldest daughters as they find love and pursue marriage. The daughters are Tzeitel (Mary Lea Williams); Hodel (Katie Skawski); and Chava (Gracie Falk).

Austin is at his best when the rest of the play’s action freezes and he engages in a mini-soliloquy, weighing the pros and cons of a momentous dilemma. Tzeitel, for example, might not enter an arranged marriage with a wealthy butcher old enough to be her father, opting instead for Motel (Latimer Alexander), a poor tailor.

In each mini-soliloquy sequence, Austin goes back and forth thoughtfully between two extremes, beginning each scenario with “on the other hand.” His struggles emerge as genuine, exposing the tensions between rigid inflexibility and greater openness.

For some reason, I hadn’t seen a production of “Fiddler on the Roof” until I reviewed the current Twin City production. But I had certainly heard parts of it many times in the great songs by composer Jerry Bock and lyricist Sheldon Harnick. These were powerful enough to enter the collective consciousness and stay there for almost 50 years, delighting young and old alike. The original Broadway production of “Fiddler” opened in 1964, spawning numerous professional and amateur revivals.

On Friday, it was a joy to experience such classics as “Matchmaker, Matchmaker”; “If I Were a Rich Man”; and “Sunrise, Sunset” in their original contexts. The humor in Joseph Stein’s book, though sometimes a bit corny, usually hits the nail on the head in its expression of universal truths about life, money or the lack thereof.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Can Woolly Worms predict Winter Weather?
Just Ask the Wooly Worm!


Wooly Worm 2012
Many people in the Appalachian mountains have used the wooly worm to predict the upcoming winter weather for generations. The wooly worm caterpillar is the larva stage of the Isabella tiger moth.  The woolly worm has 13 alternating black and reddish brown stripes and each stripe corresponds to one of the 13 weeks of winter, from December to March. 

According to the wooly worm, the prediction for the 2012-13 winter in the High Country in North Carolina:
  • Beginning on December 22, winter will open with 4 weeks of snowy, cold weather.
  • Week 5 (Jan. 20, 2013, to Jan. 26, 2013) of winter will feature light snow and cool temperatures.
  • Weeks 6 through 11 (Jan. 27, 2013, to March 9, 2013) will bring normal temperatures.
  • Week 12 (March 10, 2013, to March 16, 2013) will be unusual, with an ice storm possible.
  • The final week of winter, week 13 (March 17, 2013, to March 23, 2013), will be cold and snowy.
We found this wooly worm crawling outside our house and is seems that this caterpillar's segments correspond to the official wooly worm's prediction from the Wooly Worm Festival in Banner Elk. We will just have to wait and see how the winter unfolds as the mountains have already seen snow and it's still fall.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

First Snowfall in the High Country


it isn't even Halloween yet and the first snowfall in the High Country occurred on October 29 this year. Banner Elk got an early winter snowfall from Hurricane Sandy and two other weather systems with 4 to 6 inches expected to fall during the overnight hours. Heavy snow is possible and is expected to continue over parts of the western mountains with additional snow accumulation of up to 2 to 4 inches. Happy Halloween!

View from the porch
Trees and grass are beginning to be covered with snow


Sunday, October 28, 2012

Winston-Salem Journal Article
"Twin City Stage presents "Fiddler on the Roof"


Katie Skawski, Tim Austin, Mary Lea Williams and Gracie Falk   Credit:  Photo Daniel Alvarez
By: LYNN FELDER | Special Correspondent 
On a warm October night, in the parking lot just outside the rehearsal hall of the Arts Council Theatre, people in groups of two, three and more interacted intensely. One group worked out complex musical harmonies. Another group danced a simple routine. Yet another shouted their lines to each other.
Small groups like these are the threads that ultimately will come together to form a big, sprawling tapestry of a musical, "Fiddler on the Roof." It's a story that is as intimate as family and as epic as the Jewish diaspora. Twin City Stage will present it starting Friday night.
"That's exactly what you have to do," director Bobby Bodford said of the need to break the show into bite-sized pieces. "First of all, it helps when you have a really good musical director (Margaret B. Gallagher) and choreographer (Benji Starcher). I have to put it all together, but I don't have to teach music and dancing. It's really about collaboration, and when you have three professionals, right off the bat things go well."
Gallagher hires the musicians, conducts the orchestra and teaches the music to the cast, so she's working closely with professionals and amateurs.
"It's really rewarding working with community theater," she said. "There are people who haven't been in a show since high school and some who have never been in a show. It's great to see friendships form, and it's great to see people get bitten with the theater bug."
The music is by Jerry Bock, who won Tony awards for "Fiddler." "It's beautiful, beautiful music," Gallagher said. "It's not as complicated vocally as, say, Sondheim, but the music really helps the story unfold. In the opening piece, 'Tradition,' you get introduced to the families the children, the parents, the grandparents."
And "Fiddler's" music has stood the test of time. It opened on Broadway in 1964. "I know people who still use 'Sunrise, Sunset' in their weddings," Gallagher said.
Inside the recently renovated rehearsal hall, a big piece of the tapestry was enacted in "Tevye's Dream" scene, which includes special effects and nearly the entire 60-person cast. Another big piece of the tapestry is the performance of "Sunrise, Sunset," a longtime audience favorite. The large chorus created a full, rich sound in the rehearsal of this scene.
"That's now, in a raw rehearsal hall with no dramatic lighting," Bodford said. "Imagine how effective it will be when it's finished. And when it gets on the stage, it's never exactly what you envision in the rehearsal hall."
Gallagher concurred. "I'm very happy with the chorus. The more experienced people help the less experienced," she said. "And we just do it till they get it. The music is simple enough that we can spend time on nuance."
"Fiddler" is set in Tsarist Russia in 1905. Tevye, a poor dairyman played by Tim Austin, tries to teach his five daughters the value of traditions in a changing world. Charlene Martin plays Tevye's wife, Golde. Mary Lea Williams (Tzeitel), Katie Skawski (Hodel), Gracie Falk (Chava), Logan Welborn (Shprintze) and Isabella Ellis (Bielke) play their daughters.
The original Broadway production opened in 1964 and was the first musical-theater show in history to surpass 3,000 performances. "Fiddler" remains Broadway's 15th longest-running musical. It was nominated for 10 Tony Awards and won nine, including best musical, score, book, direction and choreography. It has been revived four times on Broadway and was made into a film in 1971.
"It's such a well-structured musical," Bodford said. "I totally understand why it's timeless. Some musicals are hard to sit through, but I don't think 'Fiddler' will ever be like that. It's about change and tradition. Tevye's children are going to go away, and he'll probably never see some of them again.
"It's very easy to grasp this and get into these characters or find one you can identify with. They have three days to get everything sold or given away. I don't know if there's a sadder scene than seeing those villagers say goodbye to each other. Their faith and hope keeps them alive.
"Then, at the end of the scene, Golde says, 'Anh, it's just a place.'"
In addition to occasionally directing shows at Twin City Stage, Bodford is the artistic director at The Children's Theatre of Winston-Salem and directs for other youth groups. He places a high value on the relationships that theater fosters.
"You saw the elements of it," Bodford said. "These young people are forming friendships that will last forever."
Those relationships also extend to the larger theater community.
"What the job has done is give me contacts in a 30-mile radius," Bodford said. "It's a small world, and it's great to be connected and know all the talent in the area.
"Our sound designer is from UNC School of the Arts. They get to come in and do their thing without a professor grading them."
As far as getting a good performance out of his cast of 60, plus musicians, Bodford isn't worried. "The job has a certain amount of stress built into it, but I've been doing it for a long time, and I know what's needed," he said. "It needs to be a good experience for the audience and for the participants, too." 
And that's the definition of community theater, isn't it?

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Black Fuzzy Caterpillar


Caterpillar at rest showing red/orange bands and spikes
I found this huge black caterpillar climbing up the rock wall at our house in the mountains. The caterpillar has spikes and red or orange bands around the segments or ribs when at rest. The red or orange colored bands between its segments become visible when the caterpillar rolls into a ball for defense. The caterpillar can be described as hairy, bristled, fuzzy, spiky, furry or woolly. 

Caterpillar climbing rock wall
So what is it? This is a Giant Leopard Moth caterpillar and is sometimes called an Eyed Tiger Moth. Some call it a black wooly bear but the scientific name is Hypercompe scribonia. 

This black fuzzy caterpillar will turn into a white moth with black circles or spots. Its abdomen will have blue and orange that will not be seen when the caterpillar is at rest.
The black fuzzy caterpillar tuns into this white moth

Thursday, October 11, 2012

"Fiddler on the Roof Cast" at Twin City Stage


November 2-4, 8-11; 15-18, 2012 Thursday-Saturday at 8pm  and Sundays at 2pm

Tevye, a poor dairyman, tries to teach his five daughters the value of traditions in a changing world. Humor, warmth and honesty continue to delight audiences years after the show became a Broadway legend.


Director - Bobby Bodford
Music Director – Margaret Gallagher
Choreographer – Benji Starcher


Cast List:
Tevye -Tim Austin
Golde -Charlene Bray Martin
Tzeitel -Mary Lea Williams
Hode - Katie Skawsk
Chava -Gracie Falk
Shprintze -Logan Welborn
Bielke - Isabella Ellis
Yente - Michele Groneck
Motel - Latimer Alexander
Perchik, the Student - Carlos Nieto
Lazar Wolf, the Butcher- Roy Carlson
Mordcha, the Innkeeper - Cameron Williams
Rabbi - Mark Walek
Avram, the Book Seller - Brandon Lloyd Hicks
Nachum, the Beggar- Norm Birdsall
Grandma Tzeitel - Jean Wentz
Fruma-Sarah - Donna Bissette
Constable - Michael Burke
Fyedka - Gray Kinnier
Shaindel, Motel’s Mother - Sally Meehan
Yussel, the Hat Maker - Devlin Burke
The Fiddler - Annalisa Ebbink
Sasha- Ryan Ball
Priest - James Toole, Sr
Villagers:
Mammas –
Anna Kellner, Miriam Davie, Hannah Wright, Synthia Folwell, Angela Hodges, Carol Simes, Margie McKenzie, Brenda Dailey, Georgann Schultz, Charity Hampton

Daughters – 
Erin Barile, Hannah Schultz, Danielle Schultz, Gracie Phillips, Lauren Danielle Stacks, Isabella Gorden, Molly McKenzie, Katie Hines, Mary Cathryn Wolfert, Madeline Kendrick, Selin Yalcinkaya, Olivia Crowell, Ava Louise Foster, Elizabeth Wentz-Moore, Eileen Dixon



Papas- 
Michael Gendy, Pat Beard, John S. Foltz, James Toole, jr.

Sons -
Landry Bohn, Marc Bertoni, Gary Freedman


Russians - Mat Tabat, Fred Crowell

, Ryan Ball

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Patterns at the Beach, Fall 2012

Underneath the Cherry Grove Pier, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
Sand patterns at low tide
I think this looks like a sand dollar with a starfish on top!
Ripple pattern at low tide

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Canning Grape Juice (the simple way)

Here’s what the jars look after processing 

Ingredients:
1 cup whole grapes per quart, off the vine

1/3 cup sugar
 per quart
1 quart of water per quart
Directions:
  1. Sterilize jars and lids.
  2. Stem, wash, and drain grapes.
  3. Prepare a syrup by combining the sugar and water.
  4. Bring syrup to a boil, stirring until the sugar dissolves.
  5. Add 1 cup of grapes to each quart jar. 
  6. Ladle hot syrup into jars, being sure to release the air bubbles, until there’s 1 inch headspace.
  7. Wipe the jar rims and place a lid on jar, add a jar ring and tighten.
  8. Scuppernong Grapevines
  9. Pressure can jars for 10 minutes at 5 pounds.  Allow to cool overnight before testing the seals on the lids. If any didn’t seal, refrigerate immediately and enjoy.
The pressure from the canner causes the juice to squeeze out of the grapes and fill the jar. Most of the grape skins will fall to the bottom of the jar eventually. I love how easy this recipe is! No cooking, no squeezing, no juicing; how great is that! This is the second year I have used this recipe with some Scuppernong grapes we grew at our mountain place. The grape juice is really good and by using a smaller amount of sugar in the syrup, the natural grape sugar comes out!

Monday, September 3, 2012

Snowballs that Don't Melt!


These snowballs don't melt. The Snowball Bush that my Mother planted in the Seventies has grown quite large (A Snowball Viburnum Bush can grown up to 12 tall and 15 feet wide). This bush flowers in mid spring and will last through early summer. 


This ornamental shrub's dark green foliage will take on tinges of red or purple in the autumn months before dropping. 




I think these bright white blooms look like cheerleader pom-poms.



Sunday, August 19, 2012

Squash Casserole

Made with squash grown in my garden!

Squash Casserole 

Adapted from
 "The Fearrington House Restaurant Cookbook"

2 pounds yellow squash thinly sliced
1 sweet onion diced
Salt and pepper
1/2 pound white cheddar cheese, grated
2 eggs
2 Tablespoons milk
Pinch of sugar
Parmesan cheese

1.    Slice squash and dice onion. Cook until soft and drain well.
2.    Grease two quart rectangular casserole pan or baking dish. Place squash and onion mixture in pan.
3.    Salt and pepper to taste.
4.    Grate white cheddar cheese in a medium bowl.
5.    Mix eggs, milk, and sugar with cheddar cheese
6.    Pour cheddar cheese mixture over squash.
7.    Sprinkle top with Parmesan cheese
8.    Bake 350 degrees for 45 minutes. Serves 6. 

Friday, August 3, 2012

"Annie Get Your Gun" Montage



The Stained Glass Players performers sing songs from "Annie Get Your Gun"

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Stained Glass Playhouse "Annie Get Your Gun" Trailer 1

The Stained Glass Playhouse's delightful Summer 2012 Musical "Annie Get Your Gun".  A fun musical for the whole family proving "There's No Business Like Show Business."
Performance dates and times:
Friday and Saturday, July 20, 21, 27, 28
August 3, 4, 2012 8 pm,
Sundays, July 22, 29,
August 5, 2012 at 3 pm.


Sunday, June 24, 2012

Stained Glass Playhouse "Annie Get Your Gun" Cast

Annie Get your Gun is an American musical comedy loosely based on the life of sharpshooter Annie Oakley.  Some of the musical numbers include: “Doin’ What Comes Natur’lly”, “The Girl That I Marry”, “You Can’t Get A Man With A Gun”, “There’s No Business Like Show Business”, “They Say It’s Wonderful”, “Moonshine Lullaby”, “My Defenses Are Down”, “I Got The Sun In The Morning”, “An Old Fashioned Wedding” and “Anything You Can Do”.

CAST LIST:
Frank Butler – Brandon Lloyd Hicks
Buffalo Bill Cody – David Mazzola
Dolly Tate – Alexis Siebert
Tommy Keeler – Michael Ackerman
Winnie Tate – Maggie Booz
Charlie Davenport – Adrian Quarles
Ma Wilson – Angela Hodges
Mac, the Prop Man – Devlin Burke
Chief Sitting Bull – Harold Claytor
Annie Oakley – Kelly Flick
Jessie, Annie’s Little Sister – Charlotte Fonda
Nellie, Annie’s Other Little Sister – Amanda Burke
Little Jake, Annie’s Little Brother – Robert Lintner
Running Deer – Claire Gunzenhauser
Eagle Feather – Christian Wiley
Dining Car Waiter – Ryan Ball
Sleeping Car Porter – Devlin Burke
Pawnee Bill – Jere Dailey
Messenger – Logan Magoun
Band Leader – Ryan Ball
Mrs. Sylvia Potter-Porter – Angela Hodges
Mrs. Schuyler Adams – Debra Hanson
Ensemble – Debra Hanson, Claire Gunzenhauser, Ryan Ball, Logan Magoun, Christian Wiley, Briana Wilson, Isis Claytor, Angela Hodges