Yummy Pizza

This summer/fall I have had the outside deck redone, landscaping and house painted.  In part of the deck out back I put in a pizza oven.  I quickly learned that making pizza takes practice and I needed the right tools.  Before I even made pizza I read that to make the “perfect” pizza crust you need to dissolve the non-expired yeast in water with a temperature between 110-115 degrees.  Let it foam for about five minutes before adding it to the flour mixture.  The first time using the pizza oven I learned that I needed to assemble the pizza directly on the paddle after the dough was rolled out.  I also learned that I needed corn meal to put under the dough and not flour.  Flour absorbs and  doesn’t allow the dough to slide off the paddle into the oven.  And, don’t assemble the pizza on the kitchen counter  and then try to put it on the paddle because it sticks to the counter, especially if you use flour and not corn meal underneath.  The second pizza we made turned out to be a cheese blob from the sticking so we cooked it in the oven inside because it was such a mess!

First time using the pizza oven. My dad and Karsten the master chefs!
First time using the pizza oven. My dad and Karsten the master chefs!
First pizza!
First pizza!

 

 

 

 

2nd pizza--stuck blob;(
2nd pizza–stuck blob;(

 

We got then pizza in the oven but the wooden peel (paddle) was too thick to get underneath the pizza to turn it or to get it out.  We had to use my short spatula and oven mitt from inside to try to get it out without burning ourselves.

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The other thing we learned very quickly is that the temperature gage on the outside of the pizza oven was not an accurate reading of the heat inside the oven.  The stone inside needs to be between 700-800 degrees to be hot enough to cook the pizza.  Once it reaches that point it only takes a couple minutes to cook the pizza.  The oven directions recommended getting a laser thermometer to check the temperature of the stone inside.

The fire is key to making a good pizza.  It’s taking practice to get the fire started.  The wood needs to be smaller logs and kindling because you start the fire in this metal cradle in the center of the pizza oven.  It takes about an hour for the fire to get up to about 700-800.  We have learned also that we need to watch and feed the fire otherwise it can go out.   Once it’s hot enough you push the cradle with the logs and fire over to the left side of the oven.  Clean off the stone inside with a wire brush with a long handle and it’s ready for the pizza.

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I’m slowly gathering the correct tools to have a successful pizza party!  I have since ordered a metal peel, which is thinner and easier to get under the pizza to turn it and take it out.  I still use the wooden one to assemble the pizza on and to put the pizza Into the outside oven, using corn meal underneath.  A laser thermometer now tells me what the inside temperature is of the pizza oven.

Using the metal peel
Using the metal peel
Yummy dessert pizza!
Yummy dessert pizza!
Corbin with his pizza!
Corbin with his pizza!

I still need to get longer oven mitts and pizza pans with no sides to cut the pizzas easier after they come out of the outside oven to add to my pizza tools.  A larger table outside would also be helpful to assemble the pizzas close to the fire instead of walking back and forth to my kitchen.

Having the right tools is essential in getting a job done right and efficiently.    How do I have the “right tools” to get through life?    God has given us everything we need  for life and godliness through knowing Christ and trusting in His promises.

“He gives us everything we need for life and for holy living. He gives it through His great power. As we come to know Him better, we learn that He called us to share His own shining-greatness and perfect life.”  2 Peter 1:3 NLV

Jesus calls people to trust him.  Faith is taking God at His word.   Jesus Christ died on the cross for our sins so we could have a relationship with him.  He gave his life to offer forgiveness and eternal life for me so I can surrender my life, my will, my desires to him.  Following Jesus is not a set of rules, a program or a religion, something we “do.”  A relationship with Jesus is key.  It is through that relationship we have with Jesus that we  have peace, love, truth, power, joy, wisdom, all living inside us, waiting to be unleashed by His Spirit.  That is not to say that we have accessed or experienced all that God has for us.  The process for accessing all the resources God has for us is through knowing Him better.  Just like our earthly friendships, we get to know one another better by spending time together.  We get to know God  better by reading His Word, talking to Him, worshipping Him, and trusting that He knows what’s best for me and doesn’t make mistakes.  As we grow in knowing God, we access experientially more and more of what God has already made available to us in Christ.

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Thank you Lord that You offer all we need for holy living through Your power.  May we access this wonderful tool.

On the journey,

Trish

Rain or shine, pizza rocks!
Karsten and Britton enduring the rain to give us yummy pizza!

 

A Wandering Widow

Four years ago today I became a widow.  I never dreamed that when I said “I do” 36 years ago to Neal that this would be my situation today.   But here is where God has me and so I move forward.  After Neal died I was the only younger widow I knew.  Since then God has placed 5 other widows in my path closer to my age.  So, we wander through life together.  Oh the adventures we have!  I just finished another week of wandering, this time in the Pigeon Forge/Smokey Mountains area with one of my newer widow friends.  What a beautiful area with all the mountains.  Our condo was off the beaten path, set on the edge of the Smokey Mountains.

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Mr friend, Joyce, and I enjoyed the arts and crafts trail in Gatlinburg, visiting working artisan shops.  Lunch at a quaint tea room was a yummy treat.  And of course, what is a trip to the hill country without buying a pair of cowboy boots!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A couple of the days we hiked some trails at the Smokey Mountain National Park.  Some of the paths were wide and easy to walk along.  I didn’t have to keep my eyes on the path and could enjoy the scenery.

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Other times, the paths were rocky or full of tree roots making it difficult to take my eyes off the path.  Every so often I had to pause to look around so I wouldn’t miss the beauty along the way.

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When life is easy we look around and things look great.  It’s easy to see the blessings.  But when difficulties come we focus on our circumstance.  If we don’t pause and look around we will miss the blessings and there are always blessings to be found.  Sometimes we have to look a little harder to find them!

At the Sate Park there are signs marking the different hikes.  Joyce and I would look at the map and try to determine which ones would match our ability and time.  Without knowing exactly what the trail was like, we had to take a guess which one to try.

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Even though most of the trails were marked we still didn’t  know what was up ahead or what to expect.  Once in a while an unmarked trail would appear off to the side.

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Some of the trails we could definitely tell were closed because the Park had signs stating  the condition or there was a road block.  Occasionally, there would be a large boulder blocking a dangerous section helping to keep you on the trail.

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So it is with life, we don’t know what is up ahead.  If we could know, I’m not sure I would want to know!  “Trish, in 2008 an employee will embezzle from the dental office.  Then in 2009 you will have breast cancer followed by your husband in 2010 having non-hodgkins lymphoma.  But his treatment won’t work so you will spend much time at The University of Chicago while Neal receives a stem cell transplant.  But hold on because that won’t be successful and he will die…….”

The the journey of life takes us many different directions.  It would be great if life was easy but we all know that doesn’t happen.  Your story is filled with ups and downs.  Andy Rooney, CBS News person    best known from “60 Minutes”, said, “Everyone wants to live on top of the mountain, but all the happiness and growth occurs while you’re climbing it.”  Those mountain top experiences encourage us but the valleys, the low hard times mature us.

Life goes on.  I say that my widow friends and I “wander.”   To wander means to move or go to different places without having a particular purpose  or direction; to follow a path with many turns; or to go away from a path or course.  I use the word in the sense of moving through life as an adventure taking twists and turns I would have never dreamed (like going to a dude ranch last summer?).  Except I know that God does have a particular purpose and direction in my life.  I don’t always know what that is but I trust that He is leading me on the right path.

“Show me the right path, O Lord, point out the road for. Me to follow.  Lead me by your truth and teach me, for you are the God who saves me.  All day long I put my hope in you.”  Psalm 25:4-5

On the journey,

Trish