Saturday, February 26, 2022

Tofu Based Garlicky Mayo






It is so good I can eat this by itself.  Finger licking good and it is not even a KFC fried chicken.  It is wonderful with any bean burger for example.

Tofu Based Garlicky Mayo


8 oz silken tofu

2 tablespoons raw cashews

1/2 lemon, juiced

3 tsp spicy brown mustard or Dijon or other type

1 tsp maple syrup (optional)

2 garlic cloves, minced         

1/2 tsp onion powder        

1/4 tsp salt                      

black pepper to taste                 

1/8 tsp paprika               

1 tsp white vinegar          

                               

Blend in a small blender till smooth.  Double the recipe if you are using a big blender.




Friday, February 25, 2022

Creamy Cauliflower Puree as Pasta Sauce or As Soup








This is an easy versatile cauliflower puree made right in a Vita Mix blender. I had cauliflower soup at the Kitchen Restaurant recently which triggered this urge to create this concoction. I also saw Fettucine Alfredo prepared in the new show The Good Dish using something similar as sauce.  Voila! These inspirations gave birth to this creamy, delicious, oil free, and nondairy alternative to fat filled recipes using dairy cream or cream cheese. 

I am happy with this puree.  I almost devoured all the pasta dish I made with it in one sitting.  It was especially good with crusty bread and green salad when used over pasta or soup.


Creamy Cauliflower Puree


Adapted from this site


  • 5 loosely packed cups fresh cauliflower florets or frozen cauliflower
  • 1 tablespoon dry onion flakes (note 1)
  • 1 tablespoon dry garlic flakes (note 1)
  • 1 1/2 cups vegetable broth
  • 1/2 cup raw cashews
  • 1 cup unsweetened nondairy milk 
  • 1/4 cup nutritional yeast
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon black pepper 



Microwave the cauliflower for about five minutes. 

Add the cauliflower and the rest of the ingredients in the Vita Mix blender. (note 2)

Blend at highest setting till you see smoke out of blender suggesting it is heated. You can feel the sides of the blender getting hot to the touch.

Pour over cooked pasta. or eat as soup as is or thinned out with little water or broth.

Sprinkle with dry parsley. 

Notes:

1.  I used dry onion and garlic flakes to simplify the steps in the prep by skipping the need of sauteing these aromatics. 

2.  One can use other types of blender then transfer the mixture to a pan and heat the puree in the stove.  One can also just heat the ingredients in a pot and puree the mixture using an immersion blender.



Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Cauliflower Walnut Chorizo

 


Well this is the closest I can get to Chipotle's Plant Based Chorizo Bowl.  I tried several recipes of vegan chorizo and finally used an adapted recipe from of all things, vegan baked hard cheese.  What!! Yes.  I was tasting the cheese before baking and it was what my mind wants my chorizo in my bowl to taste.  I just deleted the use of water.  For me, it is better than Chipotle's which is made from pea protein plus tons of other ingredients.  





I have in the past used another cauliflower walnut meat recipe, but this is different.  Love both. This recipe is smokier like chorizos should be and has a tangier twang to it.  Both are good.


Cauliflower Walnut Chorizo


  • 2 cups cauliflower florets roughly chopped 
  • 1 cup walnuts, chopped coarsely
  • 1 tablespoon tomato paste
  • 2 1/2 tablespoons rice vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika 
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • 2 teaspoons garlic powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
 

Mix the cauliflower and walnuts in a bowl.  Set aside.

In a small bowl, mix the rest of the ingredients.  Add to the cauliflower and walnut mixture. 

Bake at 350 F for 8 min or less in air fryer   Place in lowest shelf.  Or just place in skillet to just warm the mixture. 

pray share chat 2/23/2022 focus prayer of mutual presence

 Focus of today's meeting is on prayer of mutual presence.

1.  Meditation

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=AOTmqTHhHak


2. Song The prayer

https://youtu.be/yLp41Zsulo4

'

3..  Narrative

Richard Rohr

Prayer of Mutual Presence

 

Tilden Edwards is a spiritual teacher and co-founder of The Shalem Institute, a contemplative organization. In this passage, he describes the purpose of prayer:    

Authentic prayer is opening to God’s gracious presence with all that we are, with what Scripture summarizes as our whole heart, soul, and mind (Matthew 22:37). Therefore prayer is more a way of being than an isolated act of doing.

Prayer is aimed at our deepest problem: our tendency to forget our liberating connectedness with God. When this happens we become lost in a sense of ultimate separateness. From this narrow outside-of-God place rise our worst fears, cravings, restlessness, and personal and social sinfulness. . . .

Prayer also arises from our deepest hope: for the abundance of life that comes when we abide in our deepest home, our widest consciousness. Prayer is our bridge to Home.

Edwards goes on to distinguish between two types of prayer:

Active prayer is present where our wills normally shape our opening to God, with faint or strong promptings from deep within. Intercession, petition, confession, thanksgiving, and praise are forms of active prayer. These are forms of prayer that most of us learn as children and find reinforced in corporate worship and Scripture. Their content and shape rise naturally out of our daily lives and evolving spiritual life.

Quiet, contemplative prayer happens when we are still and open ourselves to Christ’s Spirit working secretly in us, when we heed the psalmist’s plea: “Be still and know that I am God” (Psalms 46:10). These are times when we trustingly sink into God’s formless hands for cleansing, illumination, and communion. . . . We are in a state of quiet appreciation, simply hollowed out for God. At the gifted [that is, graced] depth of this kind of prayer we pass beyond any image of God and beyond any image of self. We are left in a mutual raw presence. Here we realize that God and ourselves quite literally are more than we can imagine. . . .

Such contemplative prayer finds us in what Scripture calls our “hearts”: our deepest, truest self in God, the self that is deeper than our normal sense of mind and feelings, yet includes these in a transfigured way. Here is the “home” of God in us, where we are most together, “I pray that Christ will dwell in your hearts through faith” (Ephesians 3:17). It is the core dimension of our being where we most realize our divinely gifted nature, indeed, where we sense ourselves being intimately breathed in and out by God continually. In the placeless place of the spiritual heart we are in touch before thoughts, beyond thoughts. We can bring into that inner sanctuary only our naked trust and longing. . . .   

If the fundamental spiritual discipline is prayer, opening to God, then the fundamental discipline of prayer is turning to our heart and inviting a sustained mutual presence.

 

 

Tilden Edwards, Living in the Presence: Spiritual Exercises to Open Your Life to the Awareness of God (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1987, 1995), 11–13.

 

 

 4.  Prayers

A Prayer for Living in God's Presence (ibelieve.com)


Pray God Reveals the Barriers in Your Heart

Dear Lord, show us how to live in a place where we are aware of our constant communion with You.

As Your child I humbly come before You. Thank You that I get to rest under the shelter of Your wings, here in the secret place of Your presence. I praise You, and I worship You, Lord.

“He who dwells in the secret place of the Most High

Shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty.” (Psalm 91:1 NKJV)

I humbly hand over my heart to You, and I say, “Lord, here’s my heart, search me and know me, show me anything in my life that is keeping me from being as close as I can be with You.”

“Search me, God, and know my heart;

    test me and know my anxious thoughts.

See if there is any offensive way in me,

    and lead me in the way everlasting.” (Psalm 139:23-24 NIV)

As You show me these things in my heart and in my life, Holy Spirit, will You show me what You would like me to do? Will You show me how to let go of these things? Will You show me if there is any unforgiveness or pride in my heart?

“Create in me a pure heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me. Do not cast me from your presence or take your Holy Spirit from me. Restore to me the joy of your salvation and grant me a willing spirit, to sustain me.” (Psalm 51:10-12 NIV)

Anything I am hanging on to that belongs to You, anything that I have willingly allowed into my life that is not in alignment with You and Your ways, I lay it down at the foot of the cross. I surrender all to You, Lord Jesus. Thank you for taking these burdens, Lord. Thank you for what You did on the cross to set us free from death. In You I have victory! I praise You, Jesus!

“Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.” (Matthew 11:29 NIV)


5.Meditation

https://youtu.be/AKy6Jx59fis



 6. Song  remember by lauren daigle

https://youtu.be/B9TE8D5Vs8k





Friday, February 18, 2022

Spinach Walnut Salad with Miso Lime Dressing

 





Easy dressing to use over your spinach salad.  Something different with the use of miso paste.   No oil or vinegar used.  Lime juice is the acid used.  Any sweetener can be used.  Two thumbs up from my picky taster, my husband/

Spinach Walnut Salad with Miso Lime Dressing


2 tbsp maple syrup

2 tbsp miso paste

Juice from 2 limes'

1/4 cup chopped walnuts

4 loosely measured cups spinach leaves

1/4 onion sliced thinly


Distribute the spinach and onions on two to four dishes and set aside.

Heat the maple syrup, miso paste, and lime juice in a pan till homogenous.  Then add the nuts and mix.

Pour mixture over spinach and onions.


Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Pray Share and Chat Sister Barbara Johnston, CSJ Memorial

This Pray Share and Chat session is dedicated to the memory of Sister Barbara Johnston CSJ.  



The Big Yes

haiku the big yes - YouTube


First Reading

The Annunciation  -  Luke  1:26-38

Annunciation

In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent by God to a town in Galilee called Nazareth, to a virgin engaged to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David. The virgin's name was Mary. And he came to her and said, "Greetings, favoured one! The Lord is with you." But she was much perplexed by his words and pondered what sort of greeting this might be. The angel said to her, "Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favour with God. And now, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you will name him Jesus. He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his ancestor David.  He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end."  Mary said to the angel, "How can this be, since I am a virgin?"  The angel said to her, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore  the child to be born will be holy; he will be called Son of God. And now, your relative Elizabeth in her old age has also conceived a son; and this is the sixth month for her who was said to be barren. For nothing will be impossible with God." Then Mary said, "Here am I, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word." Then the angel departed from her.

 

Song Magnificat

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6_iixWJo-7k





Second Reading

1 Peter 8-11

Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins. Show hospitality to one another without grumbling. 10 As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God's varied grace: 11 whoever speaks, as one who speaks oracles of God; whoever serves, as one who serves by the strength that God supplies—in order that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ. To him belong glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen. 

Song The Beatitudes

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=9kkjmXnIWow




Sister Barbara Johnston and the Associates of the Sisters of St. Joseph, Baden.



Sister Barbara Johnston was one of the members of the Sisters of St. Joseph that have offered unselfish service and dedication to make the Baden Associate group flourish. She became a co-director together with Sr.  Lynn Miller of the CSJA board from 2003-2010. 


She also was part of the orientation committee with associates like Natalie Foley and Mary Cay Burke-Hamill.  One would see her in every orientation meeting with her ubiquitous camera and stand patiently recording the presentations.  


While working in different positions in the parishes in Masontown and New Castle, her relationships with some of the parishioners inspired them to become associates.  They are Linda Rohol, Linda Patrick, Eleanor Krueger, Patti Daugherty and Judy Movic. 
At one time she gave a huge gathering of associates at her beautiful home in New Castle.  It was a wonderful event marked with her hospitality and organizational skills.  
She delighted in every event that happens to the associates.  I will never forget how tearful she was when she rejoiced on the publication of the Associate Cookbook in 2008.  I was surprised and touched how open she was in showing her joy.  
In 2006 she gave a retreat together with two associates, Dotty Kocur-Boccilli and Christine Hoffman on the Maxims: The Pearl of Great Price.


I could not find the handout of her beautiful talk on this topic.  If I remember correctly, she likened the maxims to the pearls that develop inside the oyster shells.  The pearl or nacre is actually produced in layers by the oyster as a protection from any irritant that enters the oyster. 
The Maxims are like the pearls in our formation as associates   They help us by building strength within us.  
Another metaphor using pearls is how when light strikes the pearls some of them are reflected while others are absorbed.  The combination of the different wavelengths results in their beautiful iridiscent finish.  
We are like the pearls.  We are reflections of our "perfectly imperfect selves" that are formed with the help of the Maxims and persons who care like Sister Barbara. Thank you, Sister Barbara.  Pray for us up there which is referred to in one of the parables as the Pearl of Great Price. You have been an iridescent presence in our lives 
TESTIMONIES
Song You by kathy sherman




Prayer

Let us pray the Trinity Prayer that was used during the retreat and read by Chris.
Consecration to the Two Trinities by Jean-Pierre Médaille, SJ, as found in the Maxims of Perfection.
Consecrate yourself often to the holy and uncreated Trinity of God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. To the created one of Jesus, Mary and Joseph, and to all the saints of heaven. Together with this consecration make the following firm protestations : 
 Declare firmly in honor of God the Father that you will practice what, according to your knowledge, is the more perfect; what you believe corresponds to his greater glory and to the greater contentment of his sovereign Majesty. 
 Declare firmly in honor of God the Son, that you will try to imitate his total self-emptying and totally empty yourself of self. 
 Declare firmly in honor of God the Holy Spirit, that you will free your heart from the love of every created being in order to fill it with the pure and perfect love of God and to do everything in the constant practice of this holy love. 
 Declare firmly in honor of the Savior Jesus that you will put aside your old self so that you can put on the new, namely Christ Jesus himself, living, insofar as you can, by his life and in the perfect imitation of his virtues. 
 Declare firmly in honor of the Blessed Virgin who was full of grace and used that grace so well that, in imitation of her, you will be perfectly faithful to every grace of the Holy Spirit.
 Declare firmly in honor of the glorious St. Joseph, that you will serve and love Jesus and Mary wholeheartedly as he served and loved them, and that when you serve the neighbor, you will do so in Joseph's spirit of humility, gentleness and charity. 
 Finally, in honor of the angels and saints, declare firmly that you will try to model yourself on the example of their holy life and never do anything that contradicts the seeking after the great virtue. In particular declare firmly that, like them, you will have a tender, strong and constant affection for - peace and intimate union with God, - cordial charity towards and forbearance of the neighbor, - humility profound and totally emptied of self, - the simplicity, gentleness and moderation of the Gospel, - childlike obedience that does not line up its arguments in advance, - poverty perfectly stripped, - mortification discreet and generous, - above all, very innocent purity of heart which is the foundation for all these beautiful virtues. 
Conclude these devout protestations with a Veni Creator in order to ask the Holy Spirit for grace to keep them exactly and to take advantage of them in such a way that, having lived on earth as the saints did, you may share in their glory forever and ever. Amen. God be blessed.
Song

Monday, February 14, 2022

Lolo (Grandpa) is into it finally

 




Has time now to play 

cards, build stuff with grandkids. The 

joy retirement brings.



Wednesday, February 9, 2022

From Predator to Savior

 

Story goes one summer in the seventies, Dr. Baldomero Olivera was watching predatory cone snails prance around in his aquarium at his summer home in the Philippines when he had an aha moment.  When Toto saw those Conus snails a light bulb lit up and he came up with a new research topic to pursue in his lab in the Philippines.  How exactly does the venom work on its prey when the harpoon like part of the snails stick out and squirt them out?  What in this venom paralyze the tiny fishes and even fellow snails that give the predator snail time to eat them up, even leisurely at times? 

Baldomero “Toto” Olivera (U. Utah, HHMI) 1: Cone Snail Venom Peptides: Venom complexity - YouTube

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5Ubr-sgUGw

See how it stings. At 13:43


Toto, as he is popularly known, splits his time between the University of Utah and the University of the Philippines, Padre Faura during his career as a biochemist. This curiosity of his is no surprise.  Biochemistry is his passion.  After Dr. Olivera graduated from the University of the Philippines with a BS in Chemistry he switched his interest from molecules and atoms to bioplymers particularly DNA.  He went on to obtain his PhD in Biochemistry at Caltech and did his postdoc in Biochemistry at Stanford.  

After that summer, he went back to the University of Utah where he was a Professor of Biochemistry and continued his new project, The Study of the Conus Magus, a type of predatory cone snails.  He was a resourceful mentor giving opportunities to young students interested to do research in his lab.  He decided to give a student straight from high school, J. Michael McIntosh, a labor intensive summer project.  The incoming freshman was to isolate the key component(s) that is responsible for the lethal property of the venom.  Mcintosh turned out to be a stellar budding scientist. He not only isolated the component(s), which turned out to be a mixture of polypeptides, but he also characterized the structure of an important one now known as ziconotide. 



Ziconotide is a polypeptide consisting of 25 amino acids strung together like beads, not long but very powerful.  

 H-Cys-Lys-Gly-Lys-Gly-Ala-Lys-Cys-Ser-Arg-Leu-Met-Tyr-Asp-Cys-Cys-Thr-Gly-Ser-Cys-Arg-Ser-Gly-Lys-Cys-NH2

Olivera's group got involved in molecular neuroscience using the Conus venom components as a vehicle to investigate the function of individual ion channels and receptors. With the Ziconotide isolated on hand, Olivera, started to delve into the mechanism behind its action.  He found that it is a calcium channel blocker in the nerves transmitting cells. Without the calcium ion the transmitters fail to relay the pain message or signal to the brain.




When Toto and collaborators were working early on Ziconotide, they did not have a definite therapeutic use for it and did not file a patent.  They published the structure of this polypeptide which gave another group the idea to synthesize it in the lab with chemicals.  This group filed a patent and distributed it as a new pain killer.  It is 1000 times more potent than morphine and not addictive and has no withdrawal symptoms.  It does not cross the blood brain barrier and cannot be taken orally but need to be injected into the spine.   

Olivera studied several polypeptides from conus venoms and submitted them for human clinical trials.  In 2005, Ziconotide (now known as Prialt) was approved for the treatment of intractable pain.

Curiosity they say kills a cat.  But if it originates in a brilliant mind like Toto Olivera it kills the pain of hundreds of patients for whom opioids like morphine fail to relieve.  From venomous snails to pain killers.  Predator to savior.  Who knew.



Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Paula's Prayer Meeting 2/9/2022

 

THE SUMMONS (Will you come and follow Me) - YouTube



Ordinary Time

             “I have called you by name, you are mine.”

 “Holy, holy, holy are you, O God; the whole earth is full of your glory.”

 By the grace of God, I am what I am, and God’s grace toward me was not in vain.

  Whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.

 


Come, Follow Me!

 

 Happy Birthday song - YouTube  Linda Biel's bday.  Happy birthday!!

 


Monday, February 7, 2022

Thursday, February 3, 2022

Out of the frustration

anger, nerves, fatigue

I felt His presence. Not just Faith

Felt in my heart, soul.

A gift. Been doing things

Sheer got to. To have this is

comforting. Like a balm

for busyness frayed nerves 

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

pray share chat 2/2/2022 beloved

 Focus is on the Beloved meditation by Richard Rohr

1.  meditation


https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6ODPb-AjTUg


2.  Song

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=aPt53L6JkxQ



3, Narrative 

Richard Rohr's Daily Meditation

From the Center for Action and Contemplation

Week Forty-Three: Original Goodness

Beginning as “Beloved”

 And a voice came out of the heavens: “You are my beloved Son. In you I am well pleased.” —Mark 1:11


In a homily on the Feast of Jesus’ Baptism, Fr. Richard Rohr describes the powerful nature of being named a beloved child of God.


We can’t start a spiritual journey on a negative foundation. If we just seek God out of fear or guilt or shame (which is often the legacy of original sin), we won’t go very far. If we start negative, we stay negative. We have to begin positive—by a wonderful experience, by something that’s larger than life, by something that dips us into the depths of our own being. That’s what the word baptism means, “to be dipped into.”


Jesus is thirty years old when his baptism happens. According to Mark’s Gospel, he hasn’t said a single thing up to now. Until we know we’re a beloved son or beloved daughter or even just beloved, we don’t have anything to say. We’re so filled with self-doubt that we have no good news for the world. In his baptism, Jesus was dipped in the unifying mystery of life and death and love. That’s where it all begins—even for him! The unique Son of God had to hear it with his own ears and then he couldn’t be stopped. Then he has plenty to say for the next three years, because he has finally found his own soul, his own identity, and his own life’s purpose.


After fourteen years as a chaplain in the Albuquerque jails, I am convinced that the reason people make great mistakes is because they have never heard what Jesus heard on the day of his baptism. They never heard another human voice, much less a voice from heaven, say to them, “You are a beloved son. You are a beloved daughter and in you I am well pleased.” If we’ve never had anyone believe in us, take delight in us, affirm us, call us beloved, we don’t have anywhere to begin. There’s nothing exciting and wonderful to start with, so we spend our whole lives trying to say those words to ourselves: “I’m okay, I’m wonderful, I’m great.” But we don’t really believe it. The word has to come from someone greater than us. That’s really a parent’s primary job—to communicate to their child that they are a beloved, eternally-existing child of God. Our jails are filled to over-flowing with people who never heard this foundational message—and sadly, so is much of our world.


The only purpose of the gospel, and even religion, is to communicate that one and eternal truth. Once we have that straight, nothing can stop us and no one can take it away from us, because it is given only, always, and everywhere by God—for those who will accept it freely. My only job and any preacher’s job is to try to replicate and resound that eternal message of God that initiates everything good on this earth—You are beloved children of God!


 Adapted from Richard Rohr, “You Must Start with Something Positive,” homily, January 11, 2015.

4.  Prayer

https://prayer.knowing-jesus.com/Prayers-for-Love#1157



5.  Meditation 

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=AnopJVEEW_M



6. Song

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=q117T7-XD_k