Comforting Things
I hope you had a pleasant and memorable (for all the right reasons) Thanksgiving.
I love when there’s an extra week of November between Thanksgiving and December.
You don’t have to hit the ground running after Thanksgiving.
It’s like a bonus week.
Comforting Things:
Do you have any comfort books or movies or foods that you can settle in with?
My comfort books are A Christmas Carol, and all of the picture books that were given to my kids when they were small. (I’m safeguarding them. One of these days, they’ll want them.)
Even though they’re “Christmas” books, their messages are timeless and universal: “Be kind to each other.”
I would add “especially now,” but really it should be “especially forever.”
I feel like everyone has a holiday movie that they always watch but that has very little to do with the holidays.
Mine is You’ve Got Mail.
Some people watch Die Hard. (Not me.)
I also try to watch Joyeux Noel, which is a Christmas movie. (It’s a true story about WWI “enemies.”)
And I always try to watch some Hallmark movies.
They make me think of my sister.
She used to watch them and because the plots were exactly the same, she could turn the sound off and watch the actors going about their shenanigans and make up dialogue.
That was entertaining.
As for comfort foods, this year I’m going to make a French hot chocolate, so rich you couldn’t possibly drink a whole mugful.
It’s a cross between chocolate pudding and those hot chocolate packets.
But much, much better.
This is serious stuff.
I first tasted this—not in Paris—at our local farmer’s market in Capitola.
Oh, by the way, I have a new freebie for you over there to the right.
Until next week,
~ Gail
French Hot Chocolate
(makes 3 or 4 demitasse cups)
Ingredients:
8 oz. good quality bittersweet chocolate (I like to use the Trader Joe’s giant chocolate bars)
1 c. whole milk
2/3 c. heavy cream
2 Tbsps. powdered/confectioner’s sugar
Optional:
2 tsps. espresso powder
A dash of cinnamon or a dash of red pepper flakes
Whipped cream
Directions:
• Chop chocolate into morsel-size pieces or grate it with a cheese grater. Set aside.
• Pour milk and heavy cream into a saucepan on low heat. You don’t want this to boil. So keep an eye on it.
• Add powdered sugar and stir to dissolve.
• If using espresso powder, add it now. Stir to dissolve.
• When milk just begins to bubble at the edges, add in the chocolate. Take pan off the heat. Stir until chocolate melts.
• If using cinnamon and/or red pepper flakes, add those now.
• Pour into small cups. Add a big dollop of whipped cream. Don’t be shy.
• Leave the washing up until you’ve finished enjoying your moment.
(If you want an even thicker hot chocolate, simply add more chocolate!)
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Gotta love that Hallmark Channel at Christmas!
Haha. It’s the best.
I read A Christmas Memory, by Truman Capote. It is charming and bittersweet, and I hope it makes up fpr the many, many silly things we watch every year (Love Actually, Elf, Christmas Vacation, – it gets worse!) And what a great twist on the Hallmark movies!
Hope to make that chocolate and really savor it. Thank you.
I’m ashamed to say I have not read A Christmas Memory. I want to go back to that Davis bookstore and get it! And didn’t the four of us go see Love Actually together? The one time we all went to see a movie together? Hope your Thanksgiving was sisterly-lovely and all went well!
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