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Mutual communion is the soul of all true friendship; and a familiar converse with a friend hath the greatest sweetness in it…[so] besides the common tribute of daily worship you owe to [God], take occasion to come into His presence on purpose to have communion with Him. This is truly friendly, for friendship is most maintained and kept up by visits; and these, the more free and less occasioned by urgent business, or solemnity…. The more friendly they are… We used to check our friends with this upbraiding. “You still [always] come when you have some business, but when will you come to see me?' ...When you come into His presence, be telling Him still how well you love Him; labor to abound in expressions of that kind, than which…there is nothing more taking with the heart of any friend.
J.I. Packer

Sin aims always at the utmost; every time it rises up to tempt or entice, might it have its own course, it would go out the utmost sin in that kind. Every unclean thought or glance would be adultery if it could; every covetous desire would be oppression, every thought of unbelief would be atheism, might it grow to its head.
John Owen

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Grains, Dairy Breads 2 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 c White cornmeal
1 c Whole wheat flour
1/2 c All-bran cereal
1 t Cinnamon
1/2 t Ginger
3/4 t Salt
1 1/2 t Baking soda
1/2 c Walnuts, chopped
1/2 c Dates, chopped
2/3 c Powdered skim milk
1 1/2 c Buttermilk
1/2 c Honey
1/2 Orange, unpeeled
1 c Rhubarb, chopped
Margarine, to grease cans
2 37 oz empty cans

INSTRUCTIONS

Mix together in a bowl all the dry ingredients including dates and
walnuts (leave out only the buttermilk, honey, orange half and
rhubarb). Put the buttermilk and the honey in the blender. Wash an
orange, cut off any price or brand marks and cut it in half. Cut the
orange half into chunks and add it to the blender, being sure that  you
have removed all the seeds. Run the blender until the orange  chunks
are chopped into little bits. Now add the buttermilk mixture,  along
with the rhubarb chunks, to the dry ingredients and mix well.  Pour
immediately into greased cans, filling each can no more than
two-thirds full. Cover the filled cans with aluminum foil, and secure
the foil with a rubber bands. Place them in a large pot, on some kind
of a rack so they are not touching the bottom of the pot. Pour in hot
water until the bottom 2 inches of the cans are covered. Bring to a
boil and keep the water boiling gently for about 1 1/2 hours. The pot
should be covered and there should be a little steam escaping at all
times. Check the pot occasionally to make sure that there is enough
water left. At the end of 1 1/2 hours, check with a skewer, right
through the foil. If it does not come out clean, cook for another  half
hour and recheck. When the loaves are done, take the "hot" cans  out of
the pot. When you are ready to serve, uncover a mold, shake  the loaf
out onto a breadboard and slice it. Serve warm with butter  or cream
cheese.  From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at
www.synapse.com/~gemini

A Message from our Provider:

“Hurting? No one understands like Jesus”

Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 1347
Calories From Fat: 258
Total Fat: 30.5g
Cholesterol: 35.5mg
Sodium: 2353.5mg
Potassium: 1272.3mg
Carbohydrates: 244.5g
Fiber: 14.8g
Sugar: 114.4g
Protein: 36.7g


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