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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: christmas stories, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. In the Spotlight: Mimi's Adventures in Baking, by Alyssa Gangeri





SYNOPSIS

Embark on a baking adventure with Mimi where she will measure, mix, and bake her way to the perfect batch of gingerbread men. If Mimi can do it, so can you!

Mimi's Adventures in Baking Gingerbread Men is the third book in the Mimis Adventures in Baking series.









PURCHASE



THE AUTHOR

Picture
Alyssa’s Website / Twitter / Facebook

Chef Alyssa has been baking since she was a little girl in her grandmother's kitchen. Since graduating from the Culinary Institute of America she has worked for famous chefs and elite companies such as the Ritz Carlton, Tom Colicchio, Norman Van Aken and Gray Kunz. She currently is the Executive Chef at Riverwalk Bar and Grill on the Historic nook of New York City, Roosevelt Island. She also has a boutique custom cake company called AllyCakesNYC where she creates cakes to appease the imagination. Through her journey of baking she developed Mimi, her very own miniature version of herself.
  
As a child she loved baking and everything that came with it. As an adult and food lover she realized there was something missing when she frequented bookstores. A interactive children's cookbook. And we are not talking about a boring old cookbook for kids with lots and lots of recipes, and some pictures. Children these days have just as much interest in the kitchen as there parents do, but the ordinary cookbook is just not going to cut it. She created Mimi's Adventures in Baking  to give children and adults a way to get into the kitchen and allow the child to become the chef and the adult the assistant. With each book has one recipe and an interactive storyline the child can read, and at the end go into the kitchen and do what Mimi did!  And for the "non-baking" parent, these elite pastry chef recipes are tested and ready for even the most inexperienced baker! Impress other moms with Mimi's creations!
    
Mimi's Adventures in Baking 
will also teach children how to measure, mix and bake their way through the kitchen while also giving safety tips along the way. No more boring cookbooks! Now there is a fun, exciting and educational way to learn how to bake!

0 Comments on In the Spotlight: Mimi's Adventures in Baking, by Alyssa Gangeri as of 12/21/2015 11:53:00 AM
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2. The Greatest Story Ever Told by Tess Berry-Hart


“After nourishment, shelter and companionship, stories are the thing we need most in the world.” - Phillip Pullman

“And what do you do?” asks the polite professional lawyer in the group of polite professional people at my polite professional neighbour’s Christmas party.

“Me?  Oh, I'm a writer,” I answer, equally politely.

“Oh, really?”  A wave of heads turn in my direction, polite smiles become suddenly more interested.  “What kind of writing?  Journalism?  Novels?”

“Well, I write stories for children and young adults,” I begin confidently, but oops, I'm losing them already.  Smiles have taken on a glazed quality and I'm starting to be relegated to the category in their minds that houses lolloping bunnies, plucky hobbits and talking lions.  I follow up quickly with a couple of my adult plays and novels but I can see in their eyes that my status has already been set.  Children’s stories! – how quaint.

“But we all tell stories, don’t we,” I begin jovially, in what my husband would term my instructively-speaking-to-a-three-year-old tone.  “Our reality, our economy, our social structures are all governed by stories, aren’t they?”

Deep nods and a strained kind of silence greet this; though a couple of people look a little as if they’re trying to work out if I'm insulting them in some covert fashion.

“And whether you subscribe to the idea that there’s only seven stories in the world or not, it’s amazing how these stories get replayed over and over in media and advertising isn't it?  The small company who fights back from the edge of extinction.  The underdog who wins through on the X Factor.”

Oh dear, the mention of X Factor – the professional version of Godwin’s Law after which any proponent can lose her credibility.  And I haven’t even watched it in years!

A chorus of agreement, though with no discernible words, follows this, and mercifully our hostess comes to our rescue with a tray of mince pies.  People break up into twos and turn to each other with noticeable relief.  “Have you heard about X?”

I take refuge in a mince pie, and think.  Why should we be afraid of confronting our stories?  We adults absorb stories as voraciously as if we were children.  The middle-aged lawyer creates a story to the judge and jury about why they should believe his client’s version of events.  The saleswoman on my left creates stories that we will look better, feel happier and be more successful if we buy her product.  And don’t even get me started on the advertising director opposite.

Stories are all around us, shaping our world and our outlook – and let’s face it, stories are not all capitalist cynicism.  Good stories are centuries old, and they’re around for a reason.  We NEED the story that we can succeed in whatever we do against insurmountable odds.  We NEED the story that the bad guys will get punished and the good guys triumph.

Stories are acutely important for learning.  They are the models by which children see the world and learn from it.  Telling my son a story to deliver a message is ten times more effective that merely telling him the message.  When I see him playing, I can see that games are stories in action.  He’s already channelling the “rescuing hero” story, the “quest” story and the “overcoming the monster” stories all by himself.

Where does the power of story come from?  As psychologists Melanie C Green and Timothy C. Brock note in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, the mechanism of “transport” – using detail and emotional affect to involve the reader – is essential for a narrative.  Highly transported readers find fewer false notes in a story than less transported readers, they evaluate protagonists favourably and show many other similar story-consistent beliefs.  Interestingly, corresponding beliefs tend to be generally unaffected whether the reader knows a story is fact or fiction.  I can know that a cream will not make me look younger, but I’ll buy it anyway.

And we’re at a Christmas party after all.  Christmas is a great story.  Though I'm an avowed atheist, I love Christmas!  The human story of birth in humble adversity; the strong baddie that searches to kill the saviour of mankind, the call to adventure, the exiled and returning hero, the love that lays itself down for another; the elements are all there.  And beyond the advent of Christianity, I feel the pagan solstice of Yule as instinctively as one born in the Northern Hemisphere can; the affirmation of life in the midst of snow, the fire lit against the cold and darkness, the shadows on the wall of the cave that mystics interpret, making sense of the sun and the stars, winter and summer, life and death.

Along with other wonderful stories passed down from times immemorial –The Flood, the Apocalypse, the Exodus – the story means something to us because in a sense (whether you are a believer or not) stories ARE real.  Stories hold a deep psychological purpose, about our relationship to the universe and to Time. Stories give us hope, they give us meaning.  In my book, the greatest story ever told is that of life; that we exist, and we do.

Around me the conversation has moved on, and now they’re talking about the recovery. (Belief in the market’s one of the best stories around at the moment!)  I don’t have much to add to this so I gather my things together and start to slide unobtrusively towards the exit, when I feel a tap on my shoulder. It’s the polite lawyer.

“I thought it was interesting,” he says breathlessly, “what you said about stories back there. It really made me think.”

My heart warms to him.  “Why thank you,” I say.

“I've got to get my niece a Christmas present, and your book sounds ideal.  Would I be able to get a signed copy?”

0 Comments on The Greatest Story Ever Told by Tess Berry-Hart as of 12/15/2014 9:32:00 PM
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3. Christmas Comes Early



AUTHORS RELEASE SHORT STORY CHRISTMAS ANTHOLOGY FOR CHARITY

With help of authors across the country, Utah author Michael Young has compiled an anthology of short stories, each based on a different Christmas carol. All the proceeds from the anthology, SING WE NOW OF CHRISTMAS, will be donated to the National Down Syndrome Society, in honor of Michael’s two-year-old son, Bryson, who has Down Syndrome. The anthology is available in paperback and Amazon Kindle formats from Amazon.com.

Christmas carols capture the spirit of Christmas like nothing else, and Sing We Now of Christmas brings beloved carols to life like never before. 

Walk in the footsteps of good King Wenceslas.  Experience anew the bells on Christmas Day. Witness the journey of a soldier who lost his voice as he participates in the miracle of Silent Night.  Experience all this and more in these heartfelt, entertaining tales donated by a team of authors from across the country, teaming together for a good cause.

Covering twenty-five stories--one for every day through Christmas itself--this anthology is ready to become a new advent tradition for your family! 



CreateSpace eStore: https://www.createspace.com/3988322 (More money to charity this way)

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4. Christmas Stories


Hello, I hope everyone is having a happy holiday season. My mother, and the author of A Nice Place In The Sun, Ann Clemmons, is still resting due to illness, but she plans to return by the middle of next week.

I'm her son, Taylor McCrary, and I would like to thank you for leaving such nice comments. I copied, pasted, and printed some of them for her to read and she excitedly put on her reading glasses and smiled while reading each one.

Also, thank you for reading, In Case You Missed It, the archived posts I've recently published in her absence.

My Mom, Me and the rest of my family cannot thank you enough for your patience. So I posted one of my "snow" photographs, and two of her Christmas Stories to show our appreciation and hopefully keep you entertained until she returns.


The image above I took at 5:00am Wednesday morning during one of the first snow storms to visit the Deep South in a decade. The "winter storm" is still dominating our local news and radio stations.

Again, I hope ya'll are having a great holiday and thanks again for your patience and understanding- I can see that my Mom is right about bloggers, you're a nice and supportive bunch.

I'm going to post the complete post entitled, A Random Act Of Stupidity, and leave the link in the title for A Christmas Plum Pudding. Also, I wanted to add that my Mom is working on a humorous Christmas post for The Humor Bloggers, A Nice Place In The Sun, and one of our local magazines, so expect her back with a new post before Christmas.

Thank you again~

Taylor McCrary

A Random Act Of Stupidity


I'm lucky to have been a part of many acts of stupidity, cheap thrills, and immature pranks. Because in my day (like I'm so old) we entertained ourselves with the radio, movies, and imaginative energy-and we had enough energy to fuel a riverboat down the mighty Mississippi.

However, most of our random acts of stupidity happened around April Fools' Day or Halloween, whereas my dimwitted behavior occurred during the Christmas holidays. Also I think what I did was brought on more by a lack of impulse control and an empty pocketbook than the need for childish cheap thrills.

Besides, I'm not a good prankster, in fact, every year the same people fool me on April Fools' day. I hate it because I know what day it is, and I know the same people are making a plan, but I still fall for it every year! It's ridiculous.

For example, my son threw a fake lizard on me again this year while I was asleep, and I screamed so loud I'm afraid we may have lost a few shingles from the roof. But, so what, I may not be ready on April Fools day, and easily fooled over and over again, but I m great with a random act of making a fool of myself any time of the year.

This is what I did:

After my divorce, I was suddenly a young single parent with a small son, so Christmastime was stressful and I was always looking for a bargain.

One year while sitting with a friend and my son (who was a baby)
in a fast food restaurant, we started talking about Christmas.

I was telling my friend how I needed to budget my money carefully that Christmas when she came up with a proposition for me. She said, "What if you got on the table and sang whatever that song is you love right in the middle of the restaurant?"

We smiled at each other like children as we pondered the idea of her question. Then she said, "What do you think people would do?"

We were so young (although, I'll admit it's funny today) we decided there was only one way to find out. So guess what I did? You got it! For fifty dollars, I got on the table in a fast food restaurant, and sang the song, New York, New York! My son, who was 18 months old at the time, sang back up!

My friend didn't think I was going to do this of course, but I really wanted to get my son a particular gift for Christmas. I'm lucky I didn't end up in jail!


The toy was The Tilt-a-Whirl

Here is the link to A Christmas Plum Pudding

9 Comments on Christmas Stories, last added: 12/17/2008
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