We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

As we carry out our responsibilities on our jobs, here are some questions we would do well to ask ourselves: 1. Do I regularly thank God for my job – whether it is a president of a Fortune 500 company or a garbage collector? 2. Do I properly respect those at work in authority over me, even those whose religious, political or moral convictions are different from mine? 3. Do I work heartily in whatever vocation I am placed – knowing that my service is to the Lord? 4. Do I work hard even when the boss is not watching? 5. Do I strive to have as good a reputation with my coworkers as I have with my fellow church members? 6. Do I work as efficiently as possible as to make my company profitable? 7. Do I refrain from cutting any moral corners on the job? 8. Do I make suggestions on how to improve job performance and morale? 9. Do I refrain from conversations in which the boss or supervisor is criticized? 10. Do I refrain from taking small items from my employee – paper clips, copy paper, pencils, etc. – even though “everyone else does it?” 11. Do I make personal copies on the company copier? 12. Do I use the company Internet connection for my personal use? 13. Do I fudge on my expense account or time card? 14. Am I the same person on the job as I am when away from the job? 15. Do I encourage employer respect, rather than helping create employee dissatisfaction? 16. Are my work habits sloppy, or do I attempt to always produce work of excellence? 17. Am I on time, or am I often tardy at work? 17. Do I misuse sick leave or personal leave days? 19. Do I abuse workers’ compensation benefits? Do I remind myself regularly that my job performance and general attitude can bring either glory, or dishonor, to my Lord? 20. Do I use company time to witness to my lost co-workers, or do I wait until break time or lunch time? 21. Do I remind myself regularly that my job performance and general attitude can bring either glory, or dishonor, to my Lord?
Curtis Thomas

Chocolate Ruffle Cake Pt1

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Eggs Fusion 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

3 tb Hot clarified unsalted butter
1 ts Pure vanilla extract (optional)
1/3 c Plus
1 tb Sifted all-purpose flour
1/3 c Plus
1 tb Sifted unsweetened cocoa powder, preferably Dutch-processed
4 lg Eggs
2/3 c Sugar
1 lb Bittersweet or semisweet chocolate, finely chopped, for ruffles
1/3 c Water
1/3 c Sugar
1/4 c Eau-de-vie de framboise or white rum (up to 1/3)
3 c Creme fraiche, homemade or store-bought
2 ts Pure vanilla extract
2 tb Sugar (up to 3)
5 oz Semisweet or bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped
3 tb Boiling water
2 Containers (5-ounce) of fresh raspberries
3 oz Bittersweet or semisweet chocolate, finely chopped, for the wrap

INSTRUCTIONS

CAKE
SYRUP
FILLING
This is from the Julia Child's new series and book, Baking with Julia, and
was done by Alice Medrich and is in her own words. It's long and detailed,
but it has every step and tip you'll need to make the cake.
Ruffle Cake Equipment
:* 8-inch round cake pan, at least 2-inches high
:* 8-inch round cake pan with removable bottom or 8-inch springform pan
:* untreated heavy-duty jelly-roll pans
:* rubber spatula, offset spatula, and flexible 8-inch metal icing spatula
:* decorating turntable, lazy Susan, or inverted round cake pan
:* ridged plastic shelf liner, freezer paper, or 055 Mylar
:* parchment paper and waxed paper
A majestic cake and one of many parts: a dark chocolate genoise moistened
with an intoxicatingly aromatic framboise syrup, a filling of satiny creme
fraiche and brilliantly red raspberries, a wrapper of dark chocolate, and a
profusion of magnificent chocolate rufffles.  The technique for making
ruffles does take some practice, but fortunately, the mistakes are not only
edible, they're usually usable -- irregularly shaped pieces still produce a
knock-out confection. And the chocolate wrapper or ribbon is also eminently
doable -- it is made by a method that reproduces the quality of tempering
without the fuss. Professionals use acetate or Mylar as the form on which
to shape the wrapper, but a trip to the hardware store will turn up ridged
plastic shelf liners, the perfect material for the job.
Each part of the cake can be made ahead, so that you only have to assemble
to finish on the day the cake is to be served.  And don't pass up the
opportunity to make this cake if you haven't the time to tackle the
ruffles. You can pile the cake high with fresh raspberries, irregularly
shaped pieces of chocolate, or chocolate shards, and it will still be
great.  Think of this cake as a format rather than a precise,
can't-vary-a-thing formula: Substitute another kind of cake for the
genoise, use whipped cream instead of creme fraiche, or omit the soaking
syrup - the basic idea is yours to embellish.
The Cake: Position a rack in the lower third of the oven or just below the
center of the oven and preheat the oven to 350F.  Fit the bottom of an
8-inch round cake pan, one at least 2 inches high, with parchment paper and
set aside.
Pour the clarified butter into a 1-quart bowl and stir in the vanilla
extract, if you're using it.  The butter must be hot when added to the
batter, so either keep the bowl in a skillet of hot water or reheat at the
last minute.
Although the flour and cocoa were sifted before they were measured, they
need to be triple-sifted together.  Sift or sieve the flour and cocoa
together.  Sift or sieve the flour and cocoa together 3 times, then set
sifter on a plate or piece of waxed paper and return the dry ingredients to
the sifter. Keep close at hand.
(CONT in part 2)
Posted to EAT-L Digest 20 October 96
Date:    Mon, 21 Oct 1996 10:30:07 -0400
From:    Rosebud <janetm@ONLINE1.MAGNUS1.COM>

A Message from our Provider:

“Jesus holds the secret of answered prayer”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?