Freshwater

Located in the wilds of Wyoming, the name Freshwater was chosen as a Western analogy to Christ. Just as He is the Living Water, and we must have Him to have eternal life, any desert dweller knows the importance of fresh water to life, both for self, and the nourishment of crops or livestock. By taking nourishment in God and His word, we strengthen our own relationship with Him, our faith, and the quality and abundance of our fruitfulness.

Our keystone verse is from Jeremiah, Chapter 17, Verse 8: "For he shall be as a tree planted by the waters, and that spreadeth out her roots by the river, and shall not see whenSave heat cometh, but her leaf shall be green; and shall not be careful in the year of drought, neither shall cease from yielding fruit."

The fruit that we speak of is mentioned in Galatians 5:22
"22But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, 23Meekness, temperance: against such there is no law."

And the heat could be anything we experience that might test our faith in God; trials and tribulations, relationships, anything that focuses our love and attention anywhere but on Him...

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Peanut Butter Cookies from Dot's Kitchen

 Last week I shared a new to me recipe from my great-grandmother's kitchen. This week I'd like to introduce you to Dot's Peanut Butter Cookies.





Peanut Butter Cookies from the Kitchen of Marie Reyer

Cream ½ cup peanut butter, ¼ cup of butter, 1 cup of sugar

Add one egg

About 1½ cup of flour and ½ teaspoon of soda

Break off small amount

Roll between fingers put in pan press with fork tines.


You might notice that there's some information missing from the recipe, namely time and temperature. The current theory is since these were probably originally baked in a wood or coal oven, there was no temperature dial, and they were done when they looked done. I went with 350 degrees and they needed about 16 minutes to be completely cooked. 

I have to tell you also, I was missing an ingredient. I usually set out all of my ingredients before I get started, so I don't get halfway through and realize I'm without something integral, but I was so excited to make these, and I absolutely knew I had it all...cue the realization that the peanut butter jar in the cupboard was completely empty. After we ran around for awhile rounding up some peanut butter, I was finally able to get started.

These were really super crumbly when I followed the directions, so I added two eggs (one at a time), along with 2 TB pb – and it was still pretty crumbly. I looked up some suggestions for making them again, and they included using more butter, and/or brown sugar instead of white.

They were crumbly, and they did fall apart pretty easily, but they were so very good. The flavor was wonderful, and they were soft and melt-in-your-mouth good.











This is the third time I've retyped this addition because I keep forgetting to update it before I get distracted. 

First batch 2021 - I tweaked some stuff but forgot to write it down, and I made peanut butter bars by just flattening the dough into the pan and cutting squares after it baked.

Second batch 2021 - I forgot to crosshatch the first pan but remembered on the second. I doubled the recipe and tweaked a little.

Cream 1 cup plus about 1/4 cup peanut butter

1/2 cup of butter AND 

1/2 cup of margarine

1 cup of granulated sugar AND

1 cup of brown sugar

Add three eggs

Mix dry ingredients separately and add to wet - 

3 cups flour

1 teaspoon soda

Roll between fingers put in pan press with fork tines.

Bake at 350 degrees for 10-12 minutes

The first batch went 12 and they were turning brown on the bottom.

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