Things to buy at your favorite market.

Pkg of fresh chicken breast
One can Campbell cream of chicken soup
Pkg of linguine (pasta noodles) from the store cooler case One half gallon College Inn chicken broth 50 percent low sodium

Butter sides and bottom of large casserole, wash chicken pieces and place accross the bottom in one layer.

Add one cup of chicken broth, sprinkle with meat tenderizer, thyme, dill weed, garlic salt and parsley.

Bake covered at 325 for 2 hrs. Remove from oven and allow to cool to room temperature.

Separate the linguine in long strips on a cutting surface and cut 1 and 1/2 inch pieces. Sprinkle 2 tablespoons flour over linguine pieces and shake to mix through.

When chicken has cooled enough to handle, cut into small pieces ready to add to the noodles.

In a large kettle, pour the remaining chicken broth, the drippings from the roasted chicken and bring to a full rolling boil. Add the linguine noodles a little at a time while stirring constantly.

Boil until tender and add Campbell’s cream of chicken soup and bring to boil.

Add the cut up chicken and bring to a full rolling boil stirring constantly with flat end wooden spoon before removing from burner.

I serve this over mashed red potatoes with the skin left on and add salt, butter and sour cream. Save the hot water you drain from the potatoes and add some back in to give your potatoes a good consistency. I like to add a little parsley to the potatoes for a smidgen of color added to the color of the red potato skin.

With this dinner my granddaughter Sarah likes buttered peas, my granddaughter Evin likes the cherry jello salad and my daughter Pamela likes coconut cream pie.

HOW DOES THIS SOUND TO YOU? So….who’s counting calories already!!!!!!!!!!!!!

FLO ❤️


My daughter Meredythe Wedding gave me her recipe for making these delicious salmon cakes. And………she gave me several pint glass jars of her home canned salmon the her husband Joey had caught while on a fishing exposition in the icy waters off Alaska. She added a teaspoon of vinegar and a teaspoon of ketchup plus water to each pint of salmon before canning.

Here is her recipe

  • One pint salmon
  • 12 soda crackers
  • 1 egg
  • 3 shakes of garlic powder
  • Mix together using a fork to keep little pieces if the salmon in the mix
  • Press into cakes and fry in butter

My version when I make them:

  • I add of lemon juice (I use a few drops of lemon from the lemon plastic container of concentrated lemon juice)
  • Make it 14 soda crackers ( mine are saltines)
  • Add a tiny pinch of each of the following herbs
  • Dill weed
  • Thyme
  • Rosemary

Form cakes and fry to light golden in skillet with a quarter stick of butter on low heat. Here is a picture of my salmon cakes as soon as I removed them from the skillet of butter.

SAVOR THE DELICIOUS FLAVOR!!!!!!

FRF ♥


Back in the 50’s and 60’s while on my dairy farm I would attend meetings given by Mrs Diehl who ran the Union county Extention office in  Marysville Ohio.

At a pre-Christmas meeting for the entire county a lady brought orange cookies with orange icing and gave out a printed copy of her recipe. I have over the years some how misplaced that copy but my daughter Meredythe had written it down and gave to me.

Recipe

  • 1 cup shortening (part butter)
  • 1 and 1/2 cup sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/3 cup frozen orange juice (thawed)
  • 4 cups flour
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon soda (rounded)
  • 1teaspoon baking powder (rounded)
  • 1 cup buttermilk (can be made with I tablespoon vinegar and finish filling cup with milk)

Cream sugar and shortening, add eggs one at a time and cream, add orange juice and mix. Mix flour, salt, soda and baking powder and add alternately with buttermilk adding flour mix first and last.

On greased cookie sheet place tablespoons of cookie dough and bake in 350 degree oven until just barely done. Do not over bake. When I remove them from the oven I can just barely see my thumb print in the center of the cookie. I ice them while still warm.

Orange icing

  • 2 cups confectioners sugar
  • 1 tablespoon soft butter
  • Add frozen orange juice (thawed) to spreadable consistency.

As I have done over the years I did revise this recipe from the original given me. I have now given you my secrets to how I make these (loved by everyone) orange cookies.

It has become a family favorite and often made for Christmas by some of my family. You have to be careful to get them out of the oven at the right time (like seconds before they are quite done) and ice them soon while still warm. When I was making them at my daughter Susie’s home in Lawrenceville Georgia, her step-son Scott was there and as I baked the cookies, he iced them. It almost needs two people.

Actually, he was having fun icing them. Whenever I made cookies or cupcakes, I always allowed my children and grandchildren to eat them while they were fresh from the oven and warm and he loved that little tasty favor.

When I was growing up, my mother would come to the home by my dad’s stone quarry where I lived with brothers and sisters and she would make a big batch of bread dough into several loaves of bread. I watched this procedure in amazement as the bread would rise to well above the baking pans before she placed them in the oven to bake and then enjoy that wonderful yeast aroma that filled the kitchen and beyond.

But the best part of all was after those beautiful loaves of bread were taken out of the oven, removed from the pans the golden tops of each loaf buttered and glistening. Because……..we were not allowed to cut them unto they were cold made me want more than ever to eat a ‘heel’ of that warm bread spread with butter. YUM!!!

I would always get a good scolding for my reckless actions. But that never stopped me. Those times are some of my best memories of growing up. I wanted my children and grandchildren to have some of those same wonderful childhood memories.

AND………THEY DO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

So when you bake these delicious orange cookies give your children and grandchildren the enjoyment of building good MEMORIES THAT LAST A LIFETIME!!!!!!!!!!!

FRF ♥


I usually buy the half SUGARDALE HAM. Slice off any of the hide remaining.

I start by mixing brown sugar, ground cloves with mustard to make a thick paste and cover the ham with a nice coating.

Then drain 2 cans of sliced pineapple and using tooth picks, secure them to the ham over the brown sugar coating.

Pour the pineapple juice In the bottom of the roaster, cover, place in the oven and bake three hours at 300 degrees. Continue reading


This is the easiest of all. Buy Duncan Hines devilsfood cake and Duncan Hines milk chocolate icing. Make according to the directions on the box with these changes:

Add one half cup firmly packed light brown sugar, 2 tablespoons imitation vanilla and blend in one melted Hershey chocolate bar or two rounded tablespoons Hershey chocolate ice cream topping. Bake in a greased, dusted with dry cocoa nine by thirteen baking pan.

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