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When the law was written on tablets of stone, there was a significant weakness. The weakness of the Old Covenant was not in the law. The weakness of the Old Covenant was the people’s hearts. They couldn’t keep the law because they lacked two basic ingredients. Both of them interestingly were mentioned in the Old Testament when God used His prophets to speak while under the Old Covenant of the coming New Covenant. First, as God said through Jeremiah, “I will put My law within them and on their heart I will write it” (Jer. 31:34). The writing of the law went from tablets of stone to tablets of human hearts (2 Cor. 3:3). And second, as God said through Ezekiel, “I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My statutes, and you will be careful to observe My ordinances” (Eze. 36:27). We by far have greater power to obey the law with the fullness of the Holy Spirit dwelling within us as God says, “causing” us to obey. So there should be a radical difference between us and Israel. It’s not in the God we serve. It’s not in the desire to obey Him. It’s not in the faith of a Messiah to take away our sins. It’s not in a law that is given from God to be obeyed. It’s not even in a delight in that law. The difference is simply this. The Old Covenant is characterized by people who were stiff-necked and rebellious (Dt. 9:6; 10:16; 31:27), whereas the New Covenant is characterized by people who have soft hearts and the ability to obey.
Randy Smith

Stirred Stove-top Custard: Vanilla

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Dairy, Grains, Eggs Pudding 6 Servings

INGREDIENTS

2 3/4 c Milk
1 c Heavy cream, or light
1 Vanilla bean, split lengthws
3/4 c Sugar
1/4 c Cornstarch
1 pn Salt
4 Egg yolks, room temp
2 T Unsalted butter, softened
2 t Vanilla extract

INSTRUCTIONS

This is pudding to many people, whether remembered as ultimate  comfort
fare or associated with the nursery table. It is what the  boxed mixes
try to emulat but can not match -- a stirred-from-scratch  homey
tradition. Although using cornstarch as the thickener yields a
smoother pudding, you may choose to substitute about twice as much
all-purpose flour. For an even smoother custard, cook the pudding in
the top of a double boiler set over simmering water.  In a heavy
saucepan, combine 2 cups of the milk, the cream, and  vanilla bean.
Place over medium-low heat and warm the mixture until  bubbles form
around the edges of the pan. Remove the vanilla bean and  scrape the
seeds into the milk mixture. Keep warm.  In the top pan of a double
boler or in a heavy saucepan, stir  together the sugar, cornstarch, and
salt. Stir in the remaining 3/4  cup milk and mix well. Add the egg
yolks and whisk to blend. Strain  the warm milk through a fine-mesh
sieve into a pitcher, then slowly  whisk it into the sugar mixture.
Place over simmering water or low  heat and cook, stirring or whisking
constantly, until thickened,  about 10 minutes; do not allow to boil.
Cover and cook about 8  minutes longer, whisking or stirring several
times. Then, while still  over the heat, beat with a hand-held mixer
set on medium speed or  with a wire whisk until very smooth, about 2
minutes.  Remove from the heat. Add the butter and vanilla extract and
stir  until the butter melts.  Spoon the custard into 6 individual
custard cups or other dessert  dishes or into a 2-quart casserole dish.
Cover with plastic wrap,  pressing it directly onto the surface of the
pudding. Set aside to  serve warm, or cool to room temperature and
refrigerate until  chilled, at least 2 hours or for as long as 24
hours.  Also see "VARIATIONS"  Source: James McNair's Custards, Mousses
& Puddings Posted to  MM-Recipes Digest V4 #049 by Linda Place
<placel@worldnet.att.net> on  Feb 17, 1997.

A Message from our Provider:

“You can fool yourself. You can never fool God”

Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 211
Calories From Fat: 54
Total Fat: 6.1g
Cholesterol: 19.1mg
Sodium: 102.4mg
Potassium: 160.4mg
Carbohydrates: 35.4g
Fiber: <1g
Sugar: 30.8g
Protein: 3.7g


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