Thursday, December 02, 2010

Advent Calendar : Holiday Foods

Did your family or ancestors serve traditional dishes for the holidays? Was there one dish that was unusual?


For the most part, our family had the traditional dishes at Christmas.  One dish I remember was the jello that my grandmother made.  I remember that it was lime jello with some type of nuts and whipped cream.  I will have to see if mom still knows what that recipe was.  


One thing that Grandma Wright's Christmas was known for was the red punch.  Always served in big punch bowl with Santa mugs.


Grandma LeMaster always cooked big meals - mashed potatoes, noodles, probably ham, deviled eggs as well, I can't really remember.


Dad just remembers having big meals for the holidays.  


Mom remembers going to Grandma Wright's as soon as her dad came home from working at the Post Office.  She can't remember what they ate, but it was probably ham.  Then they went to Anderson to Grandpa Lambertson's and Helen's house where she had party food.


Mom said her mom always had Christmas punch.  At first, it was red punch but when they realized that it made all the grandchildren have 'red' mouths for pictures she switched to a green punch, which mom still serves every year as a tradition.  My niece Lauren asks for it at every holiday.

Christmas Punch
Makes 36 servings 

2 cups sugar                                    6 cups water
3 packages lemon-lime koolaide         2 liters lemon-lime soda
3 cups pineapple-grapefruit juice*       1 quart lime sherbet
1/3 cup lemon juice
About 2 hours before serving, stir half of the lime sherbet in punch bowl to soften.  Mix sugar, koolaide, juices and water together in large pitcher.  Stir until sugar is dissolved.  (This could be done ahead of time and chilled).  Blend into the sherbet that is in the punch bowl.  Scoop remaining sherbet on top.  Carefully pour in 7-Up or any lemon-lime carbonated beverage.

*If pineapple-grapefruit juice is not available, mix 1 1/2 cups of pineapple juice and 1 1/2 cups of grapefruit juice.
** Freeze 7-Up ice cubes with drained marschino cherries in the middle for color.





Wednesday, December 01, 2010

Analyzing Blogger Stats


The information provided by Blogger's Stats over this past month has been pretty interesting to analyze.


My most popular post this month was my review of the Flip-Pal scanner.  Not surprisingly, this scanner has become my favorite new genealogy toy.  I'm sure that this post has been one of the more popular because of my posting a link on Twitter.  Using Twitter to post about blog posts has increased some traffic to the blog.


It would also appear that by using the widget for "Popular Posts" has allowed some of those posts to have even more page views.  In other words, the popular posts end up becoming more popular.


Some of the search terms and links that have caused people to land at my blog are pretty interesting as well:




Most of the referrals have come from Google, but Facebook and Geneabloggers are well represented.


One of the more interesting search terms was "suicide daughter married james dwiggins"!  Why didn't this person contact me?  This sounds like a great mystery.  I'm not aware of any suicides involving the Dwiggins family in my research.  Two searchers were looking for "Dr. Chew Salamonia Indiana" - my ancestor.  Who were you?  You didn't leave any comments.  


I'm glad that I've added this feature to my blog, and I've turned off my own tracking, so in the future this will be even more accurate.  I'm glad to see that links to my Facebook profile and occasional tweets have also brought visitors to check out my blog.

Wordless Wednesday: Ord W. LeMaster family





Ord W. LeMaster, Ruth P. (Haley) LeMaster, Paul, Idola, Juanita, Weldon

Wordless Wednesday – a great way to share your old family photos! Create a post with the main focus being a photograph or image. Some posters also include attribute information as to the source of the image (date, location, owner, etc.). Wordless Wednesday is one of the longest running “memes” in the blogosphere and is an ongoing series at GeneaBloggers.