Thank God for dirty dishes,
They have a tale to tell.
While other folks go hungry,
We're eating very well.
With home and health and happiness,
We surely shouldn't fuss.
For by this stack of evidence,
Life's been good to us.
 
 

COOKIE JAR

A house should have a cookie jar,
   For when it's half past three
And children hurry home from school
   As hungry as can be,
There's nothing quite so splendid
   In filling children up
As spicy, fluffy ginger cakes
   And sweet milk in a cup.
A house should have a mother
   Waiting with a hug
No matter what a boy brings home,
   A puppy or a bug.
For children only loiter
   When the bell rings to dismiss
If no one's home to greet them
   With a cookie and a kiss.
      - unknown

Grandma's Recipes

This has always puzzled me, just how much is a pinch?
These recipes of dear Grandma's surely are no cinch.
A "snip" of this, a "dab" of that, a "lump" of something else,
Then "beat it for a little while", or, "stir until it melts."
I have to be a wizard to decipher what she meant,
By all these strange proportions in her cookbook worn and bent.
How much nutmeg in the doughnuts? Grandma wouldn't flinch,
As she said, with twinkling eyes, "Oh, just about a pinch."
There must have been in her wise head a measuring device,
That told her just how much to use of sugar, salt and spice.


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