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If you keep burning the candle at both ends, sooner or later you will indulge in more and more mean cynicism – and the line between cynicism and doubt is a very thin one. Of course, different individuals require different numbers of hours of sleep: moreover, some cope with a bit of tiredness better than others. Nevertheless, if you are among those who become nasty, cynical, or even full of doubt when you are missing your sleep, you are morally obligated to try to get the sleep you need. We are whole, complicated beings; our physical existence is tied to our spiritual well-being, to our mental outlook, to our relationships with others, including our relationship with God. Sometimes the godliest thing you can do in the universe is get a good night’s sleep – not pray all night, but sleep. I’m certainly not denying that there may be a place for praying all night; I’m merely insisting that in the normal course of things, spiritual discipline obligates you get the sleep your body needs.
D.A. Carson

Even when circumstances or theology vindicate [one's] side of the conflict, a man can still be a quarrelsome man. This may demonstrate itself in a lack of gentleness, a propensity to taking rigid positions when none are required, an inability to lose graciously, or simply an over-love of debate. Whatever the form it takes, quarrelsomeness is a serious impediment to effective service.
Michael Lawrence

Potatonik

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables, Eggs Jewish Jewish 3 Loafs

INGREDIENTS

1 c Warm water
1 1/2 pk Active dry yeast
1 1/2 c Bread or all-purpose flour
3/4 lb Potatoes, skin on
6 oz Yellow onions
1 sm Stale roll or 2 sl. bread
1/2 c Bread or all-purpose flour
1 1/2 ts Salt
Scant 1/2 ts baking powder
1/4 ts Ground black pepper
1/2 c Vegetable oil
1/2 c Beaten egg
Shortening for greasing pan

INSTRUCTIONS

SPONGE
DOUGH
SPONGE In a large bowl sprinkle the yeast over the warm water; stir to
dissolve. Add the flour and mix until smooth. Cover and set aside until it
puffs up (about 20-25 min.)
DOUGH Stir down the sponge. Scrub the potatoes, then grind or grate them
with the skins on. Add the ground potatoes and onion to the sponge and stir
until blended. Add the stale roll, flour, salt, baking powder, and ground
pepper; mix until incorporated. Add the oil and egg and mix well. Drop the
mixture out into 3 well greased 8 or 9 inch loaf pans. Each loaf should
wiegh about 15 oz. Leave room for expansion-the Potatonik will rise in the
oven.
BAKING Bake with steam in a preheated 360F oven until the crust is brown
and feels firm when gently pressed in the center with your fingertips
(about 1 hr.) Let cool on a wire rack covered with a cloth for 5 min. to
allow the loaves to steam. Invert and and tapout onto the rack. Serve warm.
Potatonik can be refrigerated for several days or frozen for 1-2 weeks.
Reheat at 325F until warm, or develops a hard crust if desired.
From "Secrets of a Jewish Baker" by George Greenstein
Posted to JEWISH-FOOD digest V96 #70
Date: Sun, 3 Nov 1996 19:45:39 +0000
From: mjoseph@en.com

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