Thursday, October 06, 2011

Anna’s Buffalo Chicken Dip!


Just typing up the ingredients list of this dip is making my mouth water!

This makes a “BIG” batch and is great for a large crowd of people. Think guild meetings, Superbowl parties, New Years Eve party, etc.

It would be really easy to split the recipe and make a half batch for smaller gatherings.

(Note, pic shows a smaller batch!)

Buffalo Chicken Dip

4 boneless chicken breasts

2 - 8 oz packages of cream cheese

1- 16 oz bottle of ranch dressing

1 cup of celery, chopped

1 - 12 oz. bottle of hot sauce (yes, 12 oz. it is a big bottle!)

1 pkg. monterey jack cheese, shredded (About 2 cups --Or can use a jack/cheddar blend)

Boil chicken breast. Drain, cool and shred meat. Place shredded chicken in the bottom of a 9" X 13" casserole dish.

For ease of clean up, use a foil pan and toss when done! There won't be any left overs to worry about either---the pan will be EMPTY!

Heat both packages of cream cheese and the bottle of ranch dressing on the stove together until smooth. Pour over the chicken. Next, spread the hot sauce over the cream cheese/dressing mixture. Chop celery and place on top of the hot sauce. Finally sprinkle monterey jack cheese on top. Bake in oven preheated to 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Serve with tortilla chips.

YUM!!

Check this out!!

My friend Jenifer of 42 Quilts and Quilt Retro has a really cute stitchery pattern on her blog today as a freebie!

She has such a wicked sense of humor, I just love her!

((Jen,I still love the one with the dog too…LOL))

She doesn’t know I’m even writing this little post to get you to go over there, so when you do, just leave her a comment that says “Bonnie Sent Me” ;c)

Let’s make her day!

And while we are at it, there is still time to comment and enter for the book drawing of Quilt Retro I’m doing on Saturday! That’s a workshop day for me in Lexington Park, Maryland, so it might be evening time before I draw.

Click HERE to COMMENT!

If you are having trouble commenting….choose ANONYMOUS and just leave your name and email at the bottom of your comment.

Leave the “keep me signed in” box unchecked if you get sent through the google sign in.

I also have a sneaky suspicion that if you click PREVIEW that might be the problem according to another commenter who finally got through after many tries. DON’T CLICK PREVIEW! Just send it!

Good Luck, Everyone!

Pineapple Blossoms in Oak Ridge!

I know my posts are kind of scrambled and not in order --- this is what happens when you don’t have enough days in a row to post all the things you want to post in a row because OTHER things…like posts on tobacco farming ((Such a quilty subject, right?!?)) Get thrown into the mix!

Our workshops in Oak Ridge, TN were held at the Oak Ridge Civic Center, and what a neat place that is! It’s next to the library, it has a gym for basketball, a pool for aquatics, a room with pool tables ((okay, sounds better if I say billiards??)) and ping pong…..and rooms where people can meet for different purposes, just like we did!

There is also a lovely paved walking track that goes around the outside, but it had turned cold and windy and I was wimping out because I didn’t have a warmer jacket with me --- or I would have used it!

Our room was large and well lit --- and because we had the room for Friday AND Saturday, we didn’t have a “Have to be out by” time on Friday night! Some stayed and sewed quite late! We just had to tell the people at the desk that we were done so they could lock up. It was also nice that those who came on Friday AND Saturday could just leave their stuff in the room locked up safe, and not have to repack and unpack machines and “stuff” the next morning.

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This design was on the floor right outside our room! Yep…it’s a good sign, isn’t it?

We had a great time playing in our strips, making pineapple blossom blocks. What I love about this class is that it goes SO FAST…you get a lot done in one day…just look at what these ladies accomplished:

And of course….LUNCH BUFFET!!

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Do you see what I mean about it being IMPOSSIBLE to be “good” on these trips? The food was phenomenal. I did stick to the lovely salads. Oh, and some home made chili, and yes….Anna’s decadent hot buffalo chicken dip. OH MY!! If I can find where I put the recipe she gave me, I’ll post it. It was SCRUMPTIOUS! But then anything with melted cream cheese in it gets my vote.

I think I could just eat melted cream cheese with a spoon. Smile with tongue out

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THIS STUFF!! This is the stuff that I can’t turn away from. It’s a simple bowl of salted peanuts with candy corn thrown in, but what a mix of salty sweet! It’s dangerous. If you see this at a guild meeting, do NOT START on it. You won’t be able to stop! This has followed me EVERYWHERE since I first had it in Kansas. And did you know that brach's also makes a "caramel apple" candy corn!? Do NOT start on that either. Seriously dangerous.

Things are flying by so fast time-wise that I just realized we have less than a month until it’s time to CRUISE!! Our November cruise is going to be loads of fun. We’ve got 56 cruisers this time! ((!!!)) We have four days at sea where we are just floating about, not going into port, and those are the days we have class. The first 2 days I’ll have half the cruisers and Pat Sloan will have the other half --- and on the way back we flip flop! Isn’t that going to be fun?

So I’m kind of in a tizzy getting all the kit stuff together. It’s twice as much STUFF as the last cruise! Talk about BURIED under kit stuff. But what a way to go, right?

Wednesday, October 05, 2011

Hey You, Tar Heel!

Did you ever wonder why North Carolina is known as the “Tar Heel” State?

Historians have recorded that the principal products during the early history of North Carolina were "tar, pitch, and turpentine."

In 1862 "tar-heel" was introduced as a term of ridicule. It was during one of the fiercest battles of the War Between the States, so the story goes, that the column supporting the North Carolina troops was driven from the field.

After the battle the North Carolinians, who had successfully fought it out alone, were greeted from the passing derelict regiment with the question: "Any more tar down in the Old North State, boys?" Quick as a flash came the answer: "No, not a bit, old Jeff's bought it all up." "Is that so; what is he going to do with it?" was asked. "He's going to put on you-un's heels to make you stick better in the next fight."

Creecy relates that General Lee, upon hearing of the incident, said: "God bless the Tar Heel boys," and from that they took the name (Adapted from Grandfather Tales of North Carolina by R.B. Creecy and Histories of North Carolina Regiments, Vol. III, by Walter Clark).

And along with Tar, Pitch & Turpentine from the pine forests, North Carolina has long been famous for its tobacco. North Carolina farmers have grown tobacco since the 1660's, but the biggest boom in production started in 1880 and lasted until the 1990's. Until the advent of modern machinery, farmers relied on hand and mule power to grow the huge supplies of tobacco demanded by the public.

Ever since moving to North Central North Carolina about 3 1/2 years ago ((It will be 4 in February..how can time fly that fast?!)) I’ve been fascinated by the tobacco fields that sprout up each spring, and watch them grow all through the summer and fall…

I love watching the process. It’s so linked to the history of this area. And yes, I wish it were an “edible” crop, and not something so nasty, but still. The whole process is fascinating. It’s very much still done by hand, by hired workers, and not as much machinery as you would think, when it comes to comparing with big time "modern" farming and harvesting.

I love the old tobacco barns that still dot the country side.

The pic above is one I took of a field on my return from Kansas. We were on our way home from the airport, and I made DH pull over and let me get a pic. Click it to biggie size it. You can see the workers doing their thing in the field. It was a lovely warm early fall evening.

I don’t know if you can see it, but all the leaves are cut by hand and laid on these big “tobacco wagons” that hook to each other like a circus train being pulled behind a truck. They are hauled off to a drying/curing facility…..and this time of the year, I can HEAR the sound of the truck pulling the tobacco wagons through the little roads near my house. I often wake up to this sound for just the few weeks when harvest is in full swing.

Yesterday out on my walk with Sadie, I heard the tobacco wagon coming and had to hurry quick to get some pics! Of course he didn’t stop or slow down to make it easy for me…..just zoomed on by, probably wondering what the crazy lady with the dog was doing trying to take pictures with her phone.

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This truck has 3 little wagons behind it….full to the brim, ready for the drying and curing!

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They sure make a racket when they go down the road, each trailer has one axle and you can hear them coming a long ways off. I would like to follow them sometime…see where they off load and what happens next…they go out the back of our subdivision somewhere that we’ve never been able to see as the road turns to “PRIVATE” and we all know we are not “ALLOWED” to go back there ;c)

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And there he goes! Can you see how our leaves are starting to turn “just a bit?” This was about 4:30pm last afternoon.

Today, the sunshine was SO beautiful that after having lunch with Karen and running some errands, I vowed to make myself take a side road to get some closer pictures.

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Now THIS is what we call a Carolina Blue sky! Can you see the rows? This REALLY looks like a quilt when flying over it….I see this often when I leave Greensboro for points elsewhere. The fields aren’t giant…usually just about this big….with an empty field next to it. My guess is they rest the plots every other year, but what do I know? I’m not a farmer!

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The leaves are large and heavy….as they mature, they start removing leaves from the bottom of the stalks…..they go from green to yellow.

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I was trying different angles and such to get the feel of what it’s like in these fields…TODAY? Temps were warm and beautiful! I hope it stays this way a bit longer!

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See the leaves? As I was pulled over to the side of the road, this farmer stopped to ask if I was all right…I was just getting out of the car. I said “Yep! Just stopping to get some pics!” He said…”well, have you seen my mule?” I nearly busted out laughing. “Are you really looking for your MULE?!” he said “Yep, the old coot took off about an hour ago, I’m about a mile up the road yonder.” ((YES! HE REALLY SAID YONDER!)) I said “If I happen to run across him, I’ll send him home!” Gotta love these local small town folks. Sometimes it makes me wish that I lived home more than half time, you know?

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I made a U-turn near a field that has been recently harvested. There is nothing left on these stalks at all! Remember, these leaves are all being picked by hand! When a field is being harvested, there will be many workers in the field filling up those tobacco wagons.

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These stalks will all be tilled under and the soil prepared ((and rested)) for the next time it is used to grow something.

**NOTE** These pictures were taken from the side of the road. I didn't wander into the middle of anyone's "PRIVATE" field to shoot these pics.

And update! This just came in email from Thearica:

Awesome post Bonnie.

The Burly tobacco is chopped at the bottom of the stalk and the entire thing hung to dry.. The tobacco Bonnie has shown is what my hubby grows and is called Flue Cured tobacco.

Some people harvest the Flue Cured tobacco by machine but for those farmers like us who cannot afford that expensive piece of machinery, our workers harvest it by hand. And not to confuse you as to the word "cut" the leaf...there are no tools in the men's hands... they hold the leaves in one arm while taking the other hand and making a swipe from the left of the stalk with their hand and then a swipe around the other side, breaking the leaves off with their bare hands. They continue until their holding arm is as full as they can hold. Then they go to the wagon behind the tractor and unload their arm and go back and start again.

In a good year, you would not see those "rows". We have not had enough rain to make our crops be what they could be. If the rain would come, the leaves would be so wide and long that they would touch each other from one row to the next and you would not see the middles.
Thank you for sharing your comments, Thearica!

This is not a quilty post at all, but just something I thought I’d share for the sake of sharing it. As much as I love traveling and discovering interesting things about places I visit, it’s awful nice to share the interesting things I drive past when home too!

Enjoy your Wednesday evening, however you spend it!