I have those same polka dot bowls which are in
this picture in the middle: http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-jqkvm5N20Oo/T7pt5RYer-I/AAAAAAAAGQw/Sqc-37CNSGE/s1600/EDOCCLG2.jpg It seems like you have done the crumble in them so are they oven safe?
Maybe not everyone's cup of tea, but something worth trying at least once, especially if when it comes to cakes all you can
picture in your head are the usual suspects like lemon, orange and apple ones.
When I hear «sweet and sour chicken» it conjures up
a picture in my head of deep fried chicken chunks served with a neon orange sauce from many a Chinese restaurant.
I have a very clear
picture in my head of Matron sitting there guarding them to make sure nobody had more than one!
One thing I've learned is that once kids enter
the picture in your social circle, it becomes a whole lot harder to throw a traditional dinner party.
I must say I look forward to viewing
his picture in every post as much as (or even slight more than) the recipe itself.
Now if your like myself, whenever I see
a picture in a magazine of the «perfect» pork tenderloin, rack of lamb, or roast along with a trillion different ingredients, I am immediately skeptical as to how it can actually look that «perfect» and yet taste even better.
I tried to get fancy and made mine into pyramids, like
the picture in the book, but they slumped in the oven so they wound up more nugget - like after all.
Peaches are LONG gone, but I saw
this picture in some old iPhone photos and thought I would post the recipe, since (A) It's one of our favorite go - to desserts, and (B) I wanted a galette.
Every picture in my blog roll is full of pumpkin spice cakes and fruit hand pies and donuts.
When I saw the top
picture in my feed I thought, hmm that looks good.
As soon as I saw
the picture in the book that accompanies the recipe for Dorie's Philadelphia Blueberry - Corn Tart, I knew it would make adorable little tartlets.
I am loving every single
picture in this post, Hayley!
Janelle requested the recipe after I posted
the picture in one of my What's for Dinner posts last week.
See the third
picture in the post for a photo of the potatoes with and without the skin.
A very nice article and quality
picture in the article.
Presumably
the picture in the Pastorals reflects church life in Asia Minor and Crete during the last third of the first century.
You may recall
a picture in a Sunday - school book showing Jesus bent under the weight of a heavy cross.
Bishop Callistus (217 - 22), of whom his rival Hippolytus paints a highly colored
picture in his Philosophoumena, seems to have argued for the plentitude of episcopal (or was it papal?)
We must
picture in our mind that we are dimly in heaven, and, through faith, draw in our imagination the image of heavenly things....
The consistent
picture in the Gospels is thoroughly relational: forgiving, unconditionally accepting and loving, sensitive, receptive, responsive, thus enabling others» response to the possibility of a newness of life God offers in each moment, and acting it out through table fellowship with sinners, the rejects, the despised, the oppressed, the marginalized of his day.
In such silence we can imaginatively summon the other's presence, can
picture him in characteristic motion, can assess what we have just heard or seen in the light of what the other has already revealed of himself.
This is also
a picture in which we see, every one of us if we are truly sincere, the mirror - image of ourselves.
We find such
a picture in the tenth - century Irish Vision of Adamnan, in a curious scene that captures the sociability of the beatific vision.
I attempted a previous
picture in Martin Luther, a Biographical Study, written primarily for specialists in history and theology.
Henceforth, nature and the world are
a picture in which whatever is, is set up as a fixed system, an object «that is set up by man, who represents and sets forth.»
«I think people
picture me in nature fighting against the elements, and for about one month a year that definitely is me, but I've also lived in New York City for the last five years and it's something that I really love.
All religions are like
a picture in a frame, the frame is not the teaching but is to make the picture beautiful.
Regarding the very first
picture in this article, do you agree that if that women lost several hundred pounds she might feel just a little better?
In this fashion, the stark
picture in Matthew and Mark is transformed: the tragedy is already a victory, before the resurrection, and John in particular wants us to believe that Jesus never quite relinquished control.
yeah - shocking for sure (in retrospect i probably shouldnt have posted about such a thing) from what i can recall it was just for the weekend or duration of his trip (it was a long time ago - details fuzzy)-- he just had
her picture in the brochure to show everybody.
Each of these verses has a bigger
picture in mind but all you can see is the smallest dot of the matrix.
Seeing the bigger
picture in our faith might show us we need to move away from our comfortable Christianity and serve and love in a bigger and more meaningful way.
Though what Jesus now says paints
a picture in words, it is not a parable or even a story.
You can also download the images, and use them as your profile
picture in social media to help us raise awareness.
But we get a much better
picture in James 2:1.
Archaeologists worked out the basics of pottery dating by the 1920s, for example, and Carbon 14 dating entered
the picture in 1933.
He has brought a remnant of humans through many thousands of years of the spiritual and physical danger of sin, finally stepping into
the picture in human flesh to break the power of sin.
I do nt want to believe that John tried to repaint
the picture in any form whatsoever, In the 19th verse of chapter one, he was directed to write what he sees and in verse 18 and 19 of the last chapter there was a warning against adding or removing from the book.
It also looks a lot like the scenery
I picture in my imagination when I read Terry Pratchett's stories about Granny Weatherwax.
It is, as the Jewish and Christian traditions have always insisted, concerned with «right relations,» relations with God, neighbor and self, but now the context has broadened to include what has dropped out of
the picture in the past few hundred years — the oppressed neighbors, the other creatures and the earth that supports us all.
Continue to
picture yourself in a very relaxed state in this tranquil place for two or three minutes.
Now
picture yourself in pleasant, natural surroundings — wherever feels comfortable for you.
Especially helpful are illustrations that
picture in a positive light people who have been caricatured negatively.
Its so individual and obviously God has
the picture in completeness that we don't.
For us, then, the faith in God enters
the picture in a special way.
The bible is like a jigsaw puzzle without a picture to work from; when you finish the puzzle you see the whole
picture in detail.
Most of us, when we think of Jesus, have this Sunday school
picture in our mind.
While this does have the disadvantages of ethnocentrism, it did introduce the notion of the Big
Picture in personal terms.
But unclear details on the edge of
the picture in no way affect the clear central image.