I have always wanted to have one in my house and
put little pins or markers on it of the places we have been (1 color for my husband's travels, 1 for mine, 1 for us together, 1 of where we want to go next, and another one will be added once we have children into the mix).
Not exact matches
I made a thin layer of the dough on baking paper by pressing it and shaping it with my hands (rolling
pin just didn't work for me but I can imagine it would work if I
put another sheet of baking paper over the dough to avoid contact of the dough with the rolling
pin), then I cut it with pizza cutter into
little squares, made holes in each square with a fork and baked it * without any turning * for 30 minutes in the oven preheated to 170 degrees Celsius (350 F).
Put the croutons in a zip - top bag and bash them a few times with a rolling
pin or something with a
little heft to it.
I
put them in the freezer for a
little over an hour, and they rolled out nicely on waxed paper with my french rolling
pin.
Pin the X on the map: blindfold your
little scallywags and send them to walk the plank to
put their X on a map!
She cut the crust off of bread, rolled it with a rolling
pin to make it super flat,
put PB&J on the bread, rolled it up, and then cut it into
little «sushi rolls.»
The
pin was a
little difficult to get into the back wheels but other then that it was easy to
put together.
Instead of throwing away the
little plastic lids, tabs,
pins, levers, screws, and connectors that she used every day (all of which were clean and had not come into contact with patients), she
put them in her pocket and took them home.
You now have to type the picky
little PIN out when you want to use your first smart function or Samsung Pay each day, or every time you
put the watch on.
I am planning on adding a map to our boys» room (a
little bit is in my post for today), and it will be attached to poster board so we can
put push
pins in places we have been and small pics of people we are praying for around the world.