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A Christian comes to contentment, not so much by way of addition, as by way of subtraction. That is his way of contentment, and it is a way that the world has no skill in. I open it thus: not so much by adding to what he would have, or to what he has, not by adding more to his condition; but rather by subtracting from his desires, so as to make his desires and his circumstances even and equal… [A] heart that has no grace, and is not instructed in this mystery of contentment, knows of no way to get contentment, but to have his possessions raised up to his desires; but the Christian has another way to contentment, that is, he can bring his desires down to his possessions, and so he attains his contentment.
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Rosca De Reyes (King’s Round Loaf)

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Dairy, Eggs Bread 12 Servings

INGREDIENTS

4 c Sifted flour
1/2 pk Yeast
1/4 c Lukewarm water
1/4 c Butter
1/4 c Sugar
1 ts Salt
1/4 c Milk
5 Eggs
1 tb Orange blossom water
1 oz Candied citron; chopped
1 Candied orange peel; chopped
1 Lemon rind; grated

INSTRUCTIONS

From: Thomas Fenske <tfdpress@acpub.duke.edu>
Date: Wed, 5 Jan 1994 10:46:28 -0500 (EST)
ROSCA DE REYES (King's Round Loaf -- Exclusively for January 6): This is
from "Good Food From Mexico" by Ruth Mulvey & Luisa Maria Alvarez,
copyright 1950. I take no credit, I just happened to have the cookbook
handy and I remembered it had a big section on Fiesta and Special-Occasion
Dishes.
Place one-third of the flour in a mound on a board and make a depression in
the center.  Dissolve yeast in lukewarm water and pour into center of
mound, mixing it a little at a time with the flour. Knead, then form into a
ball. Make two incisions forming a cross on the top of the ball and place
in a floured bowl. Cover with napkin and let stand in a warm place until it
is twice its original size.
Mix butter, sugar and salt with milk and cook over moderate heat for about
two minutes.  Pour half of the mixture into a depression made in a mound of
the other two-thirds of the flour.  Add two eggs and the orange blossom
water. Mix thoroughly with the flour and when lukewarm, add the dough which
has fermented. Knead well, adding the rest of the milk mixture and two more
eggs. When the dough is smooth, add citron, orange peel and lemon rind.
Place in a greased pan, cover with napkin and allow it to stand twenty-four
hours.
Shape dough into a large circle with a hole in the center, place on a
greased baking pan and allow to stand until it has swelled almost to twice
its original size. Moisten the tope with a brush dipped in remaining egg,
sprinkle with sugar and dot with small pieces of additional citron.  Bake
at 400F for thirty minutes or longer. Yield: one very large ring or twelve
to fifteen servings.
REC.FOOD.RECIPES ARCHIVES
From rec.food.cooking archives.  Downloaded from Glen's MM Recipe Archive,
http://www.erols.com/hosey.

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