jaimethepooh
11-21-2003, 05:23 PM
Bring Nature's Magic into Your Household
Make A Cheerful Yule Log
© 1987 by Scott Cunningham and David Harrington
Bring a little magic and Yuletide cheer to your home this coming holiday season by crafting your own Yule log.
Get your hands on a very large log that will continue to burn for three or more days. Decorate the log by whipping up melted paraffin with a hand beater until fluffy but spreadable. Use dabs of this on the log to secure fir and cedar boughs, pine cones, mistletoe, rosemary, holly or other festive greens. Set it ablaze and as the flames crackle and dance, enjoy a warm cup of cider next to your cozy hearth.
If you don't have a fireplace you can still enjoy the essence of a Yule log by making a Yule Candle.
Remember, the purpose of a Yule log is to bring nature's inherant magic into your household--it refreshes the home's energies and reminds us of the continuing growth and life of the Earth.
Buy the largest, fattest red candle you can find. With an ice pick, or similar tool, carve a figure of the blazing sun on the side of the candle, then place it on a holder or on a heat-proof tray. Ring its base with holly, pine, mistletoe, cedar, rosemary, bay, juniper, and other evergreen plants. Burn the candle on Yule evening. If you want it to burn all night, place it in a cauldron or a large bowl and ring the cauldron itself with the festive greens.
Either a Yule log or a Yule candle make a wonderful and very original hostess gift. Enjoy!
Make an Easy Yule Log Cake
© 1994 by Edain McCoy
Ingredients - Materials needed:
1 package commercial cake mix, preferably chocolate.
2 cans (24 oz.) pre-made frosting in a dark brown color.
Several tubes of cake decoration frosting in green, red, and white.
Jelly roll pan.
Waxed paper.
Several toothpicks.
How-To
Make an
Easy Yule
Log Cake
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease and line a jelly roll pan with waxed paper. Mix the cake according to package instructions and pour a thin layer--no more than 1/4-inch thick--into the prepared jelly roll pan.
Bake the cake until just under-done. If you can’t tell by looking, then use the knife test. When the knife emerges not quite clean from the center of the cake, and when a light touch does not bounce back easily, it needs to come out) Check the cake at 7 minutes, and then every 2 minutes after that. Do NOT overbake or the dough will be dry and hard to work with.
Remove the cake from the oven and let it cool slightly. Then remove the cake from the pan by lifting out the waxed paper. With the dark frosting, coat the top of the cake.
Carefully lift one end of the cake and begin gently rolling it up as if you were rolling up a map. When you are done, anchor the cake with toothpicks and let it cool for about 5 more minutes.
Cool the cake for 30 minutes, remove the toothpicks, then frost it with the dark brown frosting and make holly and mistletoe over the top. You can also use artificial greenery until it is time to eat the cake.
To finish, take a toothpick and etch lines into the frosting to resemble tree bark.
Make a Twelve Herb Yule Sachet
© 1989 by Scott Cunningham
Herbal sachets, or charms, consist of herbs and other materials tied-up in bits of cloth. Some sachets ward off certain energies or disease; others draw specific situations or powers to you.
Easy to make and pleasing to the nose, sachets are a distinctive and aromatic gift for the holidays.
Items needed:
7 parts Juniper
4 parts Cinnamon
4 parts Allspice
4 parts Ginger
4 parts Caraway
2 parts Nutmeg
2 parts Rosemary
2 parts Lemon peel
2 parts Orange peel
1 part Clove
1 part Bay
2 pinches Orris root
Tie up in a green or red cloth and give as a gift on Yule or Christmas.
Make A Cheerful Yule Log
© 1987 by Scott Cunningham and David Harrington
Bring a little magic and Yuletide cheer to your home this coming holiday season by crafting your own Yule log.
Get your hands on a very large log that will continue to burn for three or more days. Decorate the log by whipping up melted paraffin with a hand beater until fluffy but spreadable. Use dabs of this on the log to secure fir and cedar boughs, pine cones, mistletoe, rosemary, holly or other festive greens. Set it ablaze and as the flames crackle and dance, enjoy a warm cup of cider next to your cozy hearth.
If you don't have a fireplace you can still enjoy the essence of a Yule log by making a Yule Candle.
Remember, the purpose of a Yule log is to bring nature's inherant magic into your household--it refreshes the home's energies and reminds us of the continuing growth and life of the Earth.
Buy the largest, fattest red candle you can find. With an ice pick, or similar tool, carve a figure of the blazing sun on the side of the candle, then place it on a holder or on a heat-proof tray. Ring its base with holly, pine, mistletoe, cedar, rosemary, bay, juniper, and other evergreen plants. Burn the candle on Yule evening. If you want it to burn all night, place it in a cauldron or a large bowl and ring the cauldron itself with the festive greens.
Either a Yule log or a Yule candle make a wonderful and very original hostess gift. Enjoy!
Make an Easy Yule Log Cake
© 1994 by Edain McCoy
Ingredients - Materials needed:
1 package commercial cake mix, preferably chocolate.
2 cans (24 oz.) pre-made frosting in a dark brown color.
Several tubes of cake decoration frosting in green, red, and white.
Jelly roll pan.
Waxed paper.
Several toothpicks.
How-To
Make an
Easy Yule
Log Cake
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease and line a jelly roll pan with waxed paper. Mix the cake according to package instructions and pour a thin layer--no more than 1/4-inch thick--into the prepared jelly roll pan.
Bake the cake until just under-done. If you can’t tell by looking, then use the knife test. When the knife emerges not quite clean from the center of the cake, and when a light touch does not bounce back easily, it needs to come out) Check the cake at 7 minutes, and then every 2 minutes after that. Do NOT overbake or the dough will be dry and hard to work with.
Remove the cake from the oven and let it cool slightly. Then remove the cake from the pan by lifting out the waxed paper. With the dark frosting, coat the top of the cake.
Carefully lift one end of the cake and begin gently rolling it up as if you were rolling up a map. When you are done, anchor the cake with toothpicks and let it cool for about 5 more minutes.
Cool the cake for 30 minutes, remove the toothpicks, then frost it with the dark brown frosting and make holly and mistletoe over the top. You can also use artificial greenery until it is time to eat the cake.
To finish, take a toothpick and etch lines into the frosting to resemble tree bark.
Make a Twelve Herb Yule Sachet
© 1989 by Scott Cunningham
Herbal sachets, or charms, consist of herbs and other materials tied-up in bits of cloth. Some sachets ward off certain energies or disease; others draw specific situations or powers to you.
Easy to make and pleasing to the nose, sachets are a distinctive and aromatic gift for the holidays.
Items needed:
7 parts Juniper
4 parts Cinnamon
4 parts Allspice
4 parts Ginger
4 parts Caraway
2 parts Nutmeg
2 parts Rosemary
2 parts Lemon peel
2 parts Orange peel
1 part Clove
1 part Bay
2 pinches Orris root
Tie up in a green or red cloth and give as a gift on Yule or Christmas.