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Pharisaical discipline often happens with the child inconveniences or embarrasses the parent. It’s then inconsistent and enacted as retribution in a form of revenge. That’s not discipline, but punishment. Christian parenting rather sees disobedience as an affront to the lordship of Christ and thus a danger for the child. Discipline then is an opportunity to correct a child, have them associate pain with sin and bring him or her closer to Christ for grace. Discipline when done this way is not a form of revenge, but rather a form of love.
Randy Smith

Cholent

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(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Grains, Meats Jewish Jewish 15 -20 servin

INGREDIENTS

12 oz Mixed dried beans
4 oz Barley; (dry weight)
3 md Potatoes; (up to 4)
1 lb Meat
1 tb Salt
1 ts Curry powder
1 ts Cumin
1/2 tb Paprika
1/2 c Oil

INSTRUCTIONS

Peel and dice pototoes into 1/2inch chunks, place in pot. Add 2 quarts
water, all spices and oil. Use less oil if meat is fatty. Bring to boil.
Add beans, meat. Simmer. Allow most of the water to be aborbed by the beans
and then add more water (app 2 quarts) and the barley. Simmer, adding water
as needed. Total time on stove is 2 hours or so. Since its Thursday night
when I do this, I place this in the fridge, and then in the oven on Friday
night, until lunchtime on Saturday, but the cholent is edible after the
first 2-3 hours of cooking (and excellent on friday night). For variety,
add 3-4 hot dogs, cut up, and kishke (use a half a kishke, unsliced).
Another variation is to add 1 cup tomatoe sauce. This can easily be made
parve with parve hot dogs, parve kishke, no meat. Also, since you are
cooking it one day ahead, you can season it to taste; you can use less salt
and oil if desired. The amount of beans and barley is flexible too, just
add enough water to simmer it. If putting it in the oven Friday afternoon,
add 1 cup more water at that point.
Posted to JEWISH-FOOD digest Volume 98 #002 by Gad Malamed
<malamed@pipeline.com> on Jan 02, 1998

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