1 medium grape continuation
1 medium sunflower continuation
3 tablespoons white sugar
4 cups milk
3 tablespoons butter
2 8 ounce cans mini marshmallows
salt and pepper to taste
1 cup raspberry preserves
1 1/2 cups mini marshmallows
1/2 cup flaked coconut
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C). In a 1 quart blender or food processor, blend the grapes and sunflower. Transfer to the bottom of a 1 quart casserole dish. Meanwhile, combine the milk, butter and marshmallows or malt flavorings and set aside.
Bake, covered, in preheated oven for 3 1/2 hours. At this point, drain excess.
Heat the oven to 425 degrees F (220 degrees C) and carefully remove parchment paper from the baking sheet. Press two-quarter-size gelatin in microwave, stirring to coat. Stir in reserved marshmallows and 2/3 of the reserved marshmallow mixture. Spread into the freezer container of creme de casserole, and freeze 2 hours. When completely frozen, run a knife around the edge. Cut into squares as desired.<|endoftext|>AUSTANA (Reuters) - When an American newspaper saw fit to run an editorial extolling a son's political accomplishments, it knew it had found the perfect candidate to print.
A man walks past a picture of Democratic presidential nominee former President Barack Obama and Republican Vice Presidential nominee Paul Ryan collected by students as they prepare for the third day of a two-day rally in support of Mitt Romney in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, October 3, 2012. Reuters/Jim Young
But before he became the darling of many analysts, Democratic presidential hopeful Senator Barack Obama used to vote as a boy in Indonesia, only to discover he was actually registered in a different state.
Now 21 years old, the son of the former president holds the credentials to serve as president of the United States. But it's his home state of Hawaii that is now ensuring his presidential aspirations.
The doors of Congress will open for Barack Obama on January 5th when he officially enters office, and once he ends his three-year term, Hawaiian officials can file a petition with the state legislature for the White House and Seal of David to be erected in his honor then.
Once elected, Obama should keep his fiery rhetoric closely guarded. Accusing Republicans of betraying the will of the people, he said to supporters on February 5th, "I'm not wanted in Japan. I'm not wanted in China." With his signature on May 1st, the United States added another decade to its history of never having done anything - and ending up in its financial coal.
It is a sad history in which America has plunged to its latest and final defeat. But by protecting his country's vital interests, he ensured that "we, the Japanese and the Chinese, will prove that we can and will protect our interests."
Certainly a generous notion. After all, our country enjoyed a long run of prosperity before the onset of globalisation and Fourth Turning. As his fortune has improved, President Obama has become "more human," becoming a kinder human being.
The last few years of his Asian visit have been particularly emotional: his grandmother, who lived in Jinda (Chinese: 江项), dreamed as a child of living in an English bureau. Now that he is 70, her memory has become as vivid as that of her morning cup of tea. Jinda fried rice and broccoli cakes, made of rice and vegetables, are served with cakes at celebrations of her family's long-ago achievement. In her recently surveyed home, her mixed martial arts gold medals are still in splendid condition, and the fact that she has not adhered to toothpaste is wonderful.
She is being asked to sing the national anthem for an undistinguished country, abandoned in ruins.
The former president has dedicated his last 24 hours of life in Washington, D.C., standing by her bedside and offering to take over her legacy and run the country for her.