When you’re just not quite sure what you need to make that decision, well, here’s a little inspiration in the form of my cat.
Recipe: Lactose-Free Cheesecake
As someone who would marry cheesecake if she could but married her lactose intolerant husband instead, this cheesecake is a winner. If you think it can’t possibly compare to “real” cheesecake, I challenge you to make it.
The way I got around my oh-so picky husband was not telling him what I used. I just said it was “lactose free” sour cream and cream cheese. Once I got the resounding two thumbs up, then I told him what it was made with.
Recipe
1 Graham Cracker crust
12 oz. Better Than Cream Cheese (cream cheese substitute)
2 eggs, beaten
3/4 cup sugar
2 teaspoons Vanilla
1/2 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
1 cup Sour Supreme (sour cream substitute)
3 1/2 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon Vanilla
Directions:
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
- Combine first five ingredients and beat well until light and frothy.
- Pour into Graham Cracker crust.
- Bake for 26 minutes.
- Remove and cool for 10 minutes.
- Mix last three ingredients (sour cream, sugar, vanilla) and pour on top.
- Bake 10 – 15 minutes.
- Refrigerate 5 hours.
- Beat husband off with stick until cheesecake actually cools completely.
Answer to the question you must be asking…
The stuff they use to create the sour cream and cream cheese substitutes is actually tofu. Oh yes, you heard me. I’m not a tofu political activist by any stretch of the imagination. I’ll eat it if it’s in front of me, but I don’t go out of my way to seek it out.
I am not kidding when I tell you, it’s very hard to tell the difference.
Proof? Three step-children and picky snobby snooty husband ate it like it was their last meal on earth. And I’m done.
I got the original recipe from, I think, Diet for a Small Planet by Frances Moore Lappe, but the substitute stuff was pure Rachel Gunn information.
~Melissa
I’ve Joined the Bird Ranks (not really)
Actually, I just joined Twitter.com. Get the bird reference? (No, not that bird reference, honestly!)
I’m currently unable to search on Twitter so all I have to go on are the “suggested” users, which smells a bit like “featured advertisements” with a few randoms thrown in for good measure, but that’s okay. It’s a good place to start.
If you want to find me, I’m here: http://twitter.com/melissabianco
Hopefully I’ll remember to update on a regular basis! I think I should stop with Twitter and Facebook.
I tried MySpace, but the ads and the flashing blinkies and the loud music and the black text on black backgrounds and stuff really gave my eyes a headache. I’m huge fan of clean easy-to-read apps and unless they make me uber sad, I’m pretty loyal. I’m sure there are other social networking sites, but I haven’t found any I can really sink my teeth into.
If anyone has a suggestion, I’m always up for hearing it!
~Melissa
10 Things That Cheer Me Up, No Matter How Crummy I Feel
In no particular order:
- Freshly laundered sheets.
- The purr of a happy cat.
- Baby smell (after a bath and before the vomiting or pooping).
- A really good prat fall.
- Having my hair brushed.
- Bright stars in a clear night sky.
- The smell of camping (trees, not fire pits)
- Ice cream.
- Celtic pan pipes.
- Curling up to a good book.
As a Society, How Far Have We REALLY Progressed?
A long time ago, when we turned on the television, the things that amused us were genuinely funny situations – a touch of slapstick, an embarassing moment, a truly witty comeback.
But when did we start to change? Turn into the darker culture we are today?
Was it in the late 1960s and early 1970s when the buzzwords peace and love became synonymous with free sex and all the drugs we could ingest? Maybe it was the 1980s when, as Michael Douglas’s character put it, “Greed, for lack of a better word, is good”? Or how about the 1990s when television began to push the boundaries of what is normal – nudity, sexual promiscuity, coarse language, and excessive violence?
Does anyone remember a time when seeing someone else’s pain on television shocked and grieved us rather than provided us ammunition to mock, judge, or gossip? As if our lives were perfect and above reproach? As if we were in a place to judge?
What was the moment?
We have transitioned into a Now Society, an entitled society – regardless of whether or not we’ve earned it. We have a do it if it feels good philosophy about everything from politics to religion and we’re oh-so tolerant, as long as others ideals match our own. We’re critical, yet socially malleable. We created the rules, broke them, and then re-wrote them. We have placed high value on individuality, personal choice and freedom, religious autonomy, and finding our inner selves, yet we have no sense of personal responsibility and accountability for these choices. We have made it painfully clear that our ‘liberal’ way is the only way, which changes every few years as our moral and ethical winds change course.
So let’s gauge our success so far…
We have the freedom to do anything we want with our bodies (and the bodies inside us) whether it is drugs, sex, abortion, over-eating, under-eating, violence, or addiction. We have the personal freedom to choose any spiritual path we like, in fact, we are encouraged to find all of the answers of this mind-boggling universe…within.
We are offended when forces we do not comprehend, or even try to, tell us that our choices are immoral or may cause us pain in the future. We don’t want to hear about God unless we can genericize, homogenize, or simplify Him to our own personal needs, as if we could possibly change something just because there are pieces we don’t want to recognize or accept. We ignore our consciences or, better yet, deaden them with alcohol, partying, television, work, play – whatever keeps our brains occupied so that we don’t ever have to actually think about the repercussions of the choices we make. We are The New Justifiers. We don’t compare ourselves up, we compare ourselves down because it makes us feel better about ourselves. That’s our new moral compass? Have we stopped trying?
We are our own universe, we are the makers of our own eternities, and we are all we will ever need…morally and spiritually. And, as an added bonus, if we don’t get it right the first time, we’re free to come back as many times as we like until we actually get it right. No judgment and no consequences.
Consequences are reserved for those who offend us, wrong us, rock our boats, make us feel as if we have done something wrong, or make our lives “uncomfortable”. Consequences do not, should not, apply to us because we are “good people” and God knows that. And we’re certainlly better than “them”, right?
With all of the freedoms that we enjoy, personally, socially, and culturally, when we truly take stock in ourselves, are we really a happy, satisfied, better adjusted, and peaceful people? The bigger question: are we healthy? Or has our cultural laziness, gluttony, greed, narcissism, and moral slippage poisoned and deadened our sense of common decency, servitude, and goodness? Have we become anesthetized to our own shortcomings and mistakes that we simply don’t even notice anymore?
Are we, as a society, pleased with our progress?
- Are our schools teeming with educated and responsible students?
- Have we produced children who are givers and doers?
- Have we established a responsibility to take care of our generations to come?
- Do we value family above the almighty dollar?
- Do we surround ourselves with media that educates, challenges, and stimulates us in a positive way?
- Do we give back to the ministries and programs that have provided for us?
- Do we appreciate what we have?
- Do we have a healthy respect for the lives we have been given?
Really?
City of Heroes – Mac Launch!
So, you may or may not know, but City of Heroes and City of Villains are now available on the Mac!
Below are a few videos that we’ve put on YouTube to get you thinking about it. You might recognize the “style”.
The videos are very funny!
City of Heroes – I’m a Hero. I’m a Villain.
City of Heroes – I’m a Hero. I’m a Villain. – Day Jobs.
City of Heroes – I’m a Hero. I’m a Villain. – Sidekick
Tongue Twisters
Where I get these ideas, I don’t know, but I was on the search for some really good tongue-twisters and I think I’ve found some good ones:
- unique New York
- knapsack straps
- cheap ship trip
- lovely lemon liniment
- Greek grapes
- Peggy Babcock
- flash message
- truly rural
- Pacific Lithograph
- pre-shrunk silk shirts
- please pay promptly
- shredded Swiss cheese
- tragedy strategy
- selfish shellfish
- black bug’s blood
- girl gargoyle, guy gargoyle
- good blood bad blood
- inchworms itching
- mixed biscuits
- Sixish. Sixish. Sixish.
- thieves seize skis
- Tim, the thin twin tinsmith
- two toads, totally tired
Try those a few times fast!
Facebook Makes Me Sad (Lately)
It was bound to happen, of course. You can’t absolutely adore a program and not have it start to disappoint eventually.
I was a recent victim of the whole “Flash Update” Facebook malicious virus. I had a friend (whom I trusted on Facebook) send me a link that I thought was to YouTube and got the “You need to update your Flash player” message. Unthinking, I clicked.
And then my world at work fell apart.
Suddenly, this nasty little virus took hold of my machine and immediately sent the same email I received to 20 of my Facebook friends, thus making THEM susceptible to the same virus. As soon as I managed to get control of my computer again (trying to CLOSE Facebook simply prompted it to open more copies and then more copies…it was CRAZY!) I sent out a Facebook mail saying:
“Learn from my idiocy. Don’t open that message from me.”
Luckily, a Facebook friend recognized the issue for what it was and sent out a message via reply-all to everyone sent that message and said it was malicious.
I ended up having to restore back to the previous week and now I have to get a replacement computer, which means a whole lot of re-installing programs and headaches. So, lesson learned. I guess social programs like Facebook and MySpace are the perfect breeding ground for nasty malicious programs perpetrated by people who…I don’t know why they do these things. I can’t fathom why – quite honestly. Bragging rights, to me, isn’t enough of a reason — but since I’m not walking a mile in the shoes of a miscreant, I guess I don’t know.
Anyway, so that was ONE reason Facebook has made me sad lately.
The other two reasons are far more minor (though no less irritating!):
- It takes forever to load!
- I am not super wow’d by the new layout
Okay, I’m done nit-picking.
Oh, and the yuotube instead of youtube — really should have been a give-away for me. I saw that AFTER I clicked that dang video link.
Live and learn.
~peace
The Front Fell Off
This video is classic.
Matt Dancing
This is funny and touching. Had to post it.
You must be logged in to post a comment.