We Love God!

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

Many of the pulpiteers of the past fifty years acted as though the first and last object of their calling was the salvation of souls, everything being made to bend to that aim. In consequence, the feeding of the sheep, the maintaining of a Scriptural discipline in the church, and the inculcation of practical piety, was crowded out; and only too often all sorts of worldly devices and fleshly methods were employed under the plea that the end justified the means; and thus the churches were filled with unregenerate members. In reality, such men defeated their own aim. The hard heart must be ploughed and harrowed before it can be receptive to the gospel seed. Doctrinal instruction must be given on the character of God, the requirements of his Law, the nature and heinousness of sin, if a foundation is to be laid for true evangelism. It is useless to preach Christ unto souls until they see and feel their desperate need of him.
A.W. Pink

When Paul says, “If the dead are not raised, let us eat and drink,” he does not mean, “Let’s all become lechers.” He means, there is a normal, simple, comfortable, ordinary life of human delights that we may enjoy with no troubling thoughts of heaven or hell or sin or holiness or God – if there is no resurrection from the dead. And what stunned me about this train of thought is that many professing Christians seem to aim at just this, and call it Christianity. Paul did not see his relation to Christ as the key to maximizing his physical comforts and pleasures in this life. No, Paul’s relation to Christ was a call to choose suffering – a suffering that was beyond what would make atheism “meaningful” or “beautiful” or “heroic.” It was a suffering that would have been utterly foolish and pitiable to choose if there is no resurrection into the joyful presence of Christ… Judge for yourself. How many Christians do you know who could say, “The lifestyle I have chosen as a Christian would be utterly foolish and pitiable if there is no resurrection?”
John Piper

Jim’s Fail Gai (Turkey) Jook

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Grains, Meats Chinese Chinese, Soups & sto, Breakfast 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 Turkey carcass
1 c Short-grain rice; Japanese OR
1 c Long-grain rice; Chinese
4 qt Stock; turkey OR
Water; to cover
Orange peel; dried OR
Tangerine peel; optional
Turkey dark meat; OR white, slivered
Salt and pepper; to taste
Green onions; chopped
Cilantro
Preserved ginger; Chinese red
Cha gua; preserved tea melon
1 ds Sesame oil
1 ds Soy sauce

INSTRUCTIONS

The following is how to make Chinese Porridge out of your turkey carcass.
This is called "Jook" or, more specifically, "Fall Gai (turkey) Jook." If
you want to make other flavors using beef, pork, chicken, fish, duck, etc.,
the technique remains the same - only the base stock changes. After carving
the bird and having essentially stripped it of all edible meat, put the
carcass and all the parts into a large stock kettle and cover them with
fresh cold water, bring to a boil and turn it down and simmer for a minimum
of 4 hours (we let it simmer overnight). Take the bones and parts out, skim
the solids off the top and add about 1 cup of rice (Japanese short grain or
Chinese long grain work equally well) for every 4 quarts of stock. Simmer
this for another 4+ hours. What you should end up with is a porridge-like
soup with the consistency of a thin oatmeal or a medium thickened soup.
Simply add water to thin if it's too thick; simmer longer with lid off if
too thin. If you have dried orange or tangerine peel, add a few pieces when
you add the uncooked rice (for flavoring, not to be eaten). Season with
salt and pepper to taste. Use some of your turkey leftover and sliver it or
shred some and add - not a lot - just to put a little meat into the soup.
Serve with fresh chopped green onions and cilantro on top of each bowl. If
you have access to Chinese red preserved ginger and Chinese preserved
vegetable called "Cha Gua" (preserved tea melon in heavy syrup), chop
finely and add these to the garnish. A dash of sesame oil and soy sauce are
also good additions to the bowl. This is a standard breakfast item in
China. It is served in restaurants primarily in the mornings (often found
in specialty places or dim sum places) or very very late at night for late
night snack (Sew Yea). Enjoy! Jim Quon
Recipe by: Jim Quon
Posted to TNT - Prodigy's Recipe Exchange Newsletter  by
MarySpero@prodigy.com (MS MARY E SPERO) on Dec 29, 1997

A Message from our Provider:

“Awesome: you don’t know the meaning of the word until you meet Jesus”

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?