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2 quick things this weekend - January 11th
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2 quick things this weekend going on through the Dallas Episcopal Young Adult Community:

Greetings from Canterbury!!! A quick message for everyone who is back in the Dallas Area: We are having two things tomorrow (Jan. 11th) for those who can make it.

1. We will be gathering for DINNER tomorrow [Sunday] at 6:30pm at Campisis Pizza on
Mockingbird. Canterbury will be hosting, so free pizza.
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When Should You Sleep With Him - Penny Wren
Everything about being Single
Wow! Someone in the secular world speaks out about sex too soon in a relationship! This is an article in Glamour magazine, written by Penny Wren which I found on MSN Lifestyle. My favorite local author, and singles workshop headliner, Nina Atwood, is quoted in the article. I think the article is very well written; however, I am very conservative in the secular world because I do not believe in sex in a relationship until you have known the person for at least one year. I really believe you should wait until marriage. God was not trying to cheat of us out of a good, pleasurable time when he said wait, he was trying to take care of us emotionally, physcially and spiritually.

And now to Penny Wrens article:

Some experts say that jumping into bed too soon is the #1 relationship mistake women make now. Not to get all prudish, but it might be a good idea to wait a little—for better sex and stronger love.
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Kings Cake
Reviews
This is a Creole cake whose history is the history of the famous New Orleans carnivals celebrated in song and stories. The "King's Cake," or Gateau de Roi, is inseparably connected with the origin of our now world-famed carnival balls. In fact, they owe their origin to the old Creole custom of choosing a king and queen o­n King's Day, or Twelfth Night.
The Picayune's Creole Cook Book, Sesquicentennial Edition

  • 2 Pounds of the Best Flour
  • 12 Eggs
  • A Cupful of Sugar
  • A Pound of the Best Butter
  • 1/2 Ounce of Yeast
  • 1/2 Ounce of Salt
  • Candies to Decorate

Preparation

To make the Cake, take a pound and a half of the above-mentioned quality of flour, and put it in a wooden bread trough. Make a hole in the center of the flour, and put in a half ounce of yeast, dissolved in a little warm water.Add milk or tepid water to make the dough, using milk if you want it to be very rich and delicate, and water if you have not the milk. Knead and mix the flour with o­ne hand, while adding milk or water with the other. Make a dough that is neither too stiff or too soft, and when perfectly smooth set the dough to rise in a moderately warm place, covering with a cloth. Remember that if you use milk to make the dought it must be scalded, that is, must be heated to the boiling point, and then allowed to grow tepid.

Let the dough rise for five or six hours, and, when increased to twice its bulk, take it and add the reserved half pound of flour, into which you will have sifted the salt. Add six eggs, beaten very light with the sugar and butter, and mix all well together, kneading lightly with your hands, and adding more eggs if the dough is a little stiff.

Then knead the dough by turning it over o­n itself three times, and set to rise again for an hour or three-quarters of an hour. Cover with a cloth. At the end of this time take it up and work it again lightly, and then form into a great ring, leaving of course, a hole in the center. Pat gently and flatten a little. Have ready a baking pan, with a buttered sheet of paper in it, and set the central roll in the middle.

Cover the pan with a clean, stiff cloth, and set the Cake to rise for an hour longer. When well risen, set in an oven a few degrees cooler than that used for baking bread (360°); let bake for an hour and a half; if medium, an hour, and if very small, a half hour. Glace the Brioche lightly with a beaten egg, spread lightly over the top before placing in the oven. Decorate with dragees (French: a small candy), caramels, etc.


 
Merry Christmas
Inspirational Messages
 
Lessons and Carols Live from Kings College
Episcopal/Anglican stuff
Stephen Cleobury directs the choir for the annual Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols from King's College, Cambridge.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/playlive/bbc_radio_fourfm/
 
9:00AM CST
 
New Years Parties
No Category
Here's a list of where to find what's happening for New Years.

http://dallas.citysearch.com/roundup/39168/

http://www.yapclub.com/dfw/new-years-eve.aspx

http://www.clubzone.com/nye/index.asp?city=7

http://www.opentable.com/promo.aspx?m=20&pid=4

 
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