Happy Chinese New Year and Happy Birthday Ashley Girl!

Happy birthday to my beautiful oldest grandchild, Ashley. I love you from the bottom of my heart. 


February 19th marks the beginning of the Chinese New Year for 2015. It is the Year of the Ram; an animal known for it calmness, strength and vitality.

Throughout Asia, families have scrupulously cleaned their houses to get rid of the “dust” and troubles of the previous year and to start off the new with a fresh and positive beginning. On this day and for the next fifteen, families and friends will gather to wish one another good health, happiness and prosperity in the coming year. The children will receive red envelopes filled with money in even amounts; odd is for funerals. They will play games and if they are really lucky, a dragon will drop in for the festivities bringing, good luck and dignity to the celebration. 

One of the dishes enjoyed at Chinese New Year Feasts for over a thousand years is crunchy, yummy won ton. My recipe was published in the Salt Lake City Deseret News on February 18th, just in time for the party! 

WONTON WITH SAUCES
1 pound lean ground beef, turkey or chicken
3 green onions, sliced into ¼-inch pieces
2 raw eggs, beaten
1 handful raw bean sprouts, chopped (rinsed canned bean sprouts can be substituted if you can’t find fresh)
3 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce (Kimlan brand)
1 package won ton skins (available in the grocery store produce or deli section)
For the filling, brown the ground meat in a skillet. Remove from heat and add the green onions, eggs, bean sprouts and soy sauce.
Set aside filling. Lay out on dry surface a dozen won ton wrappers. Moisten the edges of two sides of each wrap with water, and place about 1 teaspoon of filling in center.
Fold in half diagonally to make a triangle and pinch the edges closed. Heat about 2 inches of vegetable oil in a skillet. Fry the won ton until light golden, turn and cook the other side, then drain on paper towels. Salt lightly. May be chilled, stored airtight and reheated in a 375-degree oven until sizzling. Serve hot with sweet and sour sauce, soy sauce or teriyaki sauce.

SWEET AND SOUR SAUCE
1 cup chicken broth
1½ cups pineapple juice
¾ cup vinegar
¼ cup ketchup
¼ cup brown sugar
1 tablespoon soy sauce
¼ cup cornstarch
Whisk ingredients together in a medium saucepan. Heat to boiling, stirring constantly until thickened. Serve hot or refrigerate and reheat before serving.

TERIYAKI SAUCE
1 cup light soy sauce (Kimlan brand)
¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons ketchup
2 tablespoons light corn syrup
2 or 3 drops hot sauce
¼ teaspoon garlic powder
Shake the ingredients together in a jar with a lid until combined. Refrigerate leftovers.


Thank you Deseret News for sharing these delicious recipes. 

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865622145/A-dish-to-help-celebrate-Chinese-New-Year.html?pg=all


Happy Valentine’s Day!

Please join Kim Power Stilson and me as we discuss creative ways to show your love on Valentine’s Day (and discover what to do with the grid below…)

Friday, February 13 at 1 p.m. Eastern/3 p.m. Mountain
BYU SiriusXM Radio 143 or listen online: 

http://www.byuradio.org/



Here are comfort food recipes with a somewhat healthy twist for you to love this Valentine’s Day


Italian Meatloaf    
     Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a mixing bowl stir together
1 lb. ground meat (beef, chicken, turkey or a combination)
1 cup Italian-style bread crumbs 
1 cup marinara sauce
2 eggs
1/3 cup Parmesan cheese, grated
1/2 cup bell pepper, chopped
1 carrot, shredded
2 TBSP dried minced onions
1/8 tsp pepper
      Form the mixture into a heart and place into a round cake pan of a loaf and place in a 8″ x 4″ bread pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 40 minutes, pour over 
1 cup marinara sauce 
      Return to oven and bake another 15 – 20 minutes until the meat is browned. Serve with spaghetti squash and salad.

Spaghetti Squash
     Cut a spaghetti squash in half, scoop out the seeds and place cut side down in a baking dish. Add about an inch of water and cover the dish with foil. Bake for 35 – 45 minutes with the meatloaf. Carefully scoop out the squash, serve with the meatloaf and added marinara sauce.



Add a loaf of crusty sourdough bread and this yummy green salad

Green Salad
      Toss together
2 green apples, cored and diced
¾ cup dried cranberries
½  head of Romaine lettuce, chopped
1 cup glazed nuts
1 wedge Gorgonzola cheese, crumbled
Light Lime salad dressing


Rich and Easy Fruity Cake
     Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Pour into a 9″ x 13″ baking dish
2 cans of fruit pie filling or crushed pineapple (cherry and/or berry)
     Sprinkle over the top
1 box yellow cake mix
1/2 cup chopped pecans or walnuts
      Melt and pour over the cake mix
3/4 cup butter
     Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour. Serve with ice cream or whipped cream.

       





Will these 36 questions bring you closer together? Dr. Arthur Aron says 45 minutes and these exercises will do the trick!

https://www.yahoo.com/health/can-36-questions-make-you-fall-in-love-with-107916682697.html


Here are a list of romantic movies to enjoy this Valentine’s Day:

http://www.pammcmurtry.com/search?q=romantic+movies

Join us for a Valentine’s broadcast!


Join host Kim Power Stilson and me for a chat about fun and healthy ideas for Valentine’s Day on Friday, February 13th at 3 pm Eastern/1 pm Mountain on BYU SiriusXM Radio 143!

www.byuradio.org

Check out my daughter Laurel and her family on the Tonight Show at 41 seconds! 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skKxMzAXpRM&feature=youtu.be


And  

13 Habits of Exceptionally Likeable People

http://www.forbes.com/sites/travisbradberry/2015/01/27/13-habits-of-exceptionally-likeable-people/2/

Valentine’s Day! See the List of Top Romance Movies

        

 Are you planning a romantic surprise for Valentine’s Day? 

    For maximum happiness, give a gift in your sweetheart’s love language. No sweetheart? Give yourself a gift in your love language!  http://familyshare.com/marriage/share-the-love-giving-the-right-kind-of-gift 
Light your creative flame with these:
Oh la la – breakfast in bed!
                   Strawberry crepes
               Heart-shaped baked bacon
               Fresh-squeezed style orange juice or fruit smoothie
Did you know that watching and discussing romantic movies together cuts divorce rates among newlyweds and has the same effect as spending time with another couple in love – why not try it out with your sweetheart? 
     

Wondering which romantic movies were peoples’ favorites, I  conducted an unscientific, biased survey to which about 250 kind and generous people responded. Here are results of the favorite G – PG 13 romance movies from the respondents. I am not endorsing these and have not even seen many of them, but for your romantic viewing pleasure here is the blooming crop. I’d love to know if investing 2 hours watching them does increase your happiness and makes you more open to loving. That is another survey.

Top voted movies receiving over ten votes each: 

While You Were Sleeping (19)
Somewhere in Time (18)
The Notebook (15)
Pride and Prejudice (13)
The Princess Bride (12)
Ever After (11)
You’ve Got Mail (11)
The Scarlet Pimpernel 
(didn’t have over 10 votes but the fans were wildly 
profuse in its praise)
All of the nominated movies; grab a tissue and box of chocolates girls and guys…
A Walk in the Clouds
A Walk to Remember
Always
An Affair to Remember
An American in Paris
Anne of Avonlea
The Beautician and the Beast
Beauty and the Beast
Bed of Roses
Casablanca
Charade
Charley
Cinderella
Circus World 
Clueless
The Cutting Edge
Dan in Real Life
Dances With Wolves
Dear John
Dr. Zhivago
Ella Enchanted
Emma
Enchanted
Ever After
Family Man
50 First Dates
French Kiss
Ghost
Ghost Town
The Glass Bottom Boat
Gone With The Wind
The Goodbye Girl
Grease
Heaven Can Wait
Hello Dolly
Hiding Out
Hitch
The Holiday
Hope Floats
Jane Austin
Just Like Heaven
Kate and Leopold
A Knight’s Tale
Labor Day
Lady Hawk
Lake House
Leap Year
Legally Blond
Letters to Juliette
Lorna Doone
Love and Basketball
Love Story
Maid in Manhattan
Maid of Honor
Mamma Mia
Man From Snowy River
Meet Joe Black
Message in a Bottle
Miracle on 34th Street
Miss Potter
Moulin Rouge
My Best Friend’s Wedding
My Big Fat Greek Wedding
My Fair Lady
Never Been Kissed
North and South (British)
The Notebook
Notting Hill
On Golden Pond
Only You
The Other Side of Heaven
Out of Africa
The Parent Trap (both versions)
Penelope
The Phantom of the Opera
The Philadelphia Story
Pretty in Pink
Pride and Prejudice
The Prince of Persia
The Princess Bride
The Princess Diaries
The Proposal
P.S. I Love You
Pure Country
Return to Me
Romancing the Stone
That Thing You Do 
The Runaway Bride
Sabrina
Safe Haven
The Scarlet Pimpernel
Sense and Sensibility
Serendipity
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers
Shadowlands
Sissi
Sleepless in Seattle
Somewhere in Time
Sweet Home Alabama
Superman
Ten Things I Hate About You
Titanic
The Tourist
The Vow
Two Weeks’ Notice
The Wedding Singer
West Side Story
What’s Up Doc?
While You Were Sleeping
White Christmas
Wives and Daughters
Your Foolish Heart

You’ve Got Mail

This Cinnamom Crunch Popcorn is a spicy, delicious treat to munch while you are enjoying your romantic movie marathon

 

Cinnamon Crunch Popcorn
    Preheat oven to 250 degrees, lightly butter a large roasting pan.


Pop in a microwave oven
4 bags extra butter microwave popcorn (should yield 16 C)

Remove unpopped kernels and place the popped corn in the buttered roasting pan. In a large saucepan combine

1/2 C butter 
1 C sugar
5 oz. cinnamon candies
1/4 C light corn syrup
1/2 tsp salt

Cook over medium high heat, stirring frequently until candies melt, about 5 minutes. Pour over popcorn, stir to coat. Bake for 45 minutes, stirring every 15 minutes. Let cool, store in an airtight container. You’re welcome.

Discover your family’s love stories – find out the loving history of your grandparents, parents, aunts and uncles; see if you can identify fun patterns and traditions.

 
Here are dozens of creative ways to show your love without spending a fortune: http://zenhabits.net/ways-to-be-romantic-on-the-cheap/

A little Valentine’s Day eye candy on Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/pammcmurtry/family-love-and-valentines-day/

                            Etsy Photo                          
                        
And last, but not least, check out these health benefits of falling and staying in love by Washington Post writer Rachel Saslow:
Love may make the world go ’round, but is it powerful enough to lower one’s blood pressure, reduce depression and speed the healing of an injury? With Valentine’s Day just around the corner, we set out to find the answer and discovered that science says yes.

Health benefits of falling and staying in love

 
“Our relationships help us cope with stress, so if we have someone we can turn to for emotional support or advice, that can buffer the negative effects of stress,” says Julianne Holt-Lunstad, an associate professor of psychology at Brigham Young University, who has been publishing studies for the past 10 years on social relationships and their influence on health and disease.

Most studies on the health benefits of love have focused on married couples. In 2007, after reviewing research on the health effects of matrimony, the Department of Health and Human Services issued a 68-page report that found that, in general, married people are happier, live longer, drink less and even have fewer doctor’s appointments than unmarried folks.
Of course, “we all know that not all marriages are happy,” Holt-Lunstad says. Very few of the thousands of marriage studies take the quality of the union into account; “I can think of maybe seven.”
So, Holt-Lunstad set out to see what kind of links there might be between love and health, and in 2008, she identified one, in a study published that year about marriage and blood pressure. She found that happily married people have lower blood pressure than unmarried people. But unhappily married people have higher blood pressure than both groups. So, when it comes to blood pressure, at least, you’re probably better off alone than in a troubled marriage.

Loving spouses tend to encourage preventive care, reinforce healthy behaviors such as exercise and flossing, and dissuade unhealthy ones, such as heavy drinking, according to many studies. Romantic relationships also can provide a sense of meaning and purpose in life that can translate to better self-care and less risk taking, Holt-Lunstad says. (There are also practical benefits to marriage that can improve one’s health but have nothing to do with love. For instance, married people are more likely to have health insurance and be financially stable, according to the HHS study.)
Arthur Aron, a social psychologist at Stony Brook University in New York, has dedicated his professional life to understanding the science of love. Specifically, Aron does brain scans with fMRI machines of people at various stages of the romantic journey: newly in love, in long-term relationships and recently rejected.

Like winning the lottery
Though most of his studies are small, involving only 15 to 20 people, Aron has consistently found that feelings of love trigger the brain’s dopamine-reward system. Dopamine is a powerful neurotransmitter that affects pleasure and motivation. It is activated in many people, for instance, by winning a lot of money or taking cocaine.
In a study released in the January 2011 issue of Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, Aron compared the brain scans of 17 people who had been married for an average of 21 years with data from his 2005 study of 17 people (10 women and 7 men, median age of 21) who were newly in love. Both groups had neural activation in the dopamine system but, interestingly, the brains of the newer lovebirds also lit up in areas associated with anxiety, obsession and tension.
“When you’ve just fallen in love and the person goes out of your sight for five minutes, you think, ‘Are they dead? Did they find someone else?’ ” Aron says.
Hugging and hand-holding, meanwhile, have been found to release the hormone oxytocin, which lowers the levels of stress hormones in the body, reducing blood pressure, improving mood and increasing tolerance for pain, according to research from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
If being in love makes you happy, it may also have another welcome health benefit: fewer colds. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh assessed 334 healthy volunteers, ages 18 to 54, for their emotional styles. Those who tended to experience positive emotions such as happy, pleased and relaxed were more resistant to the common cold than those who felt anxious, hostile or depressed. Since the study covered anyone with positive emotions, the results could apply to those in happy relationships – or anyone with a sunny outlook.

A healing effect
A happy marriage may also speed the rate that wounds heal, according to a 2005 study at Ohio State University. It found that a married couple’s 30-minute positive, supportive discussion sped up their bodies’ ability to recover from an injury by at least one day. Researchers Jan Kiecolt-Glaser and Ronald Glaser fit 42 married couples with small suction devices that created eight tiny blisters on their arms. On one visit after being subjecting to the blistering device, the researchers prompted the couple to talk about “an area of disagreement, something that inherently had an emotional element,” Kiecolt-Glaser says. On another visit, the couple had a loving discussion after the blistering. Those blisters healed a day sooner.

Just friends
For those who aren’t in love right now, all is not lost. Holt-Lunstad and colleagues found that strong connections to friends, family, neighbors or colleagues improve odds of survival by 50 percent. She examined data from 148 studies that followed 308,849 people an average of 71/2 years. Social connectedness proved as beneficial to survival as quitting smoking and exceeded the benefits of exercise.
Meanwhile, it’s worth noting that love gone wrong can have health consequences as well.
“Lots of the data on suicide and depression show that one of the major causes, especially among younger people, is rejection in love or unrequited love,” Aron says.
Divorce can damage one’s physical health so dramatically that the person never recovers. A 2009 study in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior found that divorced or widowed people have 20 percent more chronic health conditions, such as heart disease, diabetes and cancer, than married people. They also have 23 percent more mobility limitations, such as trouble walking up stairs. Remarriage offset this trend a bit, but not completely.
 Choose your love and love your choice, Happy Valentine’s Day! 

Happy New Year!

I love the potential and possibilities of the new year! 

As 2014 wound down, I witnessed my beloved daughter Heather marry her handsome prince Paul and welcomed him and his two children into our family. I also finished my BFA at the University of Utah in December. 


In 2015 I am back at work writing and creating and am looking forward to a trip to San Francisco in February to see Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei’s exhibition at Alcatraz. 

Here’s to 2015 – may it be our best year ever!


Sweets!

Merry Christmas to all of you Kim Power Stilson fans! Here are the three recipes for delicious holiday treats that we talked about on the show today; which was preempted by BYU’s football game and will air on Christmas Eve at 3 p.m. Eastern/ 1 p.m. Mountain and noon Pacific. Enjoy!  http://www.byuradio.org/episode/d49e3f84-80e7-4e1a-b2ed-27335ff1144a


McMurtry Shortbread 

These delicious shortbread cookies are hoping to be invited to your party. Cut into holiday shapes and dress up any way you like
Preheat oven to 325°.  Cream until soft
1C softened butter
            Add and blend until mixture is soft and fluffy
2/3 C powdered sugar
            Add
1 ½ tsp. vanilla extract
            Sift together dry ingredients and add to creamed mixture
2 C . all-purpose flour
¼ tsp. salt
¼ C cornstarch

Mix until dough is crumbly and just holds together.
Between two sheets of parchment or waxed paper, roll dough to 1/4 “ thickness. Cut cookies and place on ungreased baking sheets. Sprinkle with coarse sugar if desired.
Bake at 325° for 20 minutes, or until barely golden around the edges. Cool and frost if you wish, but these are wonderful plain.


Donna McDougall’s Mixed Nut Toffee

Place in a 11 x 17″ jelly roll pan
3 ¼ C coarsely chopped nuts; pecans, almonds, cashews
            Rub the inside of a large heavy saucepan with butter, then melt over low heat
1 1/2 C salted butter
            Add
1 1/2 C + 2 TBSP sugar
3 TBSP water
Cook over low heat until sugar is dissolved, avoid getting sugar on the sides of the pan while cooking. Wipe sides down with a wet pastry brush if necessary. When sugar is dissolved, turn heat to medium and continue cooking to 290° or hard crack stage, the syrup will be dark golden in color. Remove from heat, add
1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
            Pour over mixed nuts in baking pan. Immediately spread with
12 oz. milk chocolate, white or dark chocolate chips
            
Place an inverted 11″ x 17″ pan over the toffee mixture. Allow chocolate chips to melt for       about 5 minutes, then using a knife or spatula, spread the chocolate chips evenly over the surface of the toffee. Place in the freezer for a few minutes to quickly cool toffee. Break apart into chunks with  a knife. Store airtight

Peanut Butter Cup Cookies

            These are best baked in small paper baking cup liners and mini muffin pans. While cookies are baking, unwrap about 48 miniature peanut butter cups. Preheat oven to 375°. Cream together
1/2 C butter
1/2 C peanut butter
1/2 C sugar
1/2 C brown sugar
            Add
1 egg
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
            In another bowl, combine
1 1/4 C flour
3/4 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
            
Blend into creamed mixture. Using a 1 1/4″ cookie scoop, make balls and place in paper- lined mini muffin pans. Bake for 7 1/2 minutes, remove from heat. Press one mini peanut  butter cup in center of each cookie. Allow to cool. Makes 4 dozen cookies.




The Light of the World

Merry Christmas! 


This is a dry point etching called The Light of the World. 


And here’s the rest of the story. In a printmaking class at MiraCosta College, we had the assignment of making an etching on a zinc plate that showed a light source. I thought, hey this sounds like a Christmas card. The professor must have read my thoughts and said – no Christmas cards. Whatever; when do artists follow rules? So I started coming up with a concept for the piece. 


I love Christmas; I mean I LOVE Christmas. I love celebrating the birth of our Savior so I took some of my favorite elements of our celebrations; the manger scene is based on an ornament my family had when I was a little girl, the candle has a tartan ribbon (I have an unfortunate plaid addiction) and the holly is symbolic of good luck or fortune and was a favorite Christmas symbol from my childhood. My parents gave a theater party for my birthday and took my friends and me to see a live performance of A Christmas Carol at the local theater in Carlsbad. The holly was on the invitations my mom made. So here’s is an Anglophile’s rendition of favorite holiday traditions. The plate made several prints and then was retired. Zinc is soft and easy for beginners to work with, but doesn’t last very long. 


P.S. The teacher gave me an A on the project anyway and kept one for his collection which included etchings by Duchamps 😉 Sweet. 


May the true Light of the World illuminate your Christmas celebration and bring you joy at this time of celebration of Jesus’ birth and throughout the new year.


Don’t forget to tune in to BYU SiriusXM Radio 143 on Monday December 22 at 3:00 p.m. Eastern/1:00 p.m. Mountain and 12:00 Pacific for a great Christmas collage – I’ll be sharing the McMurtry shortbread cookie recipe! www.byuradio.org

A Christmas Miracle; the Power of Prayer

You might want to grab a kleenex for this one and enjoy the “happily ever after” ending. 
Her story began on August 26th, a few years back. Heather joined her brother, sister and parents in an adventure already in progress. So excited to join the fun, she raced through her baby years trying to catch up so she could play.  

Eager to join the conversation, her first sentence at 10 months was “pick up Edna;” giving herself an affectionate nickname that stuck. So life with Edna began. She was enthusiastic from the beginning; almost running before she could walk. Easter egg hunts, playing with her sister and brother, Christmas, trips to Disneyland brought her so much joy.  She didn’t talk a lot, but was processing, analyzing and synthesizing her world. She was at her best watering the garden with her dad and loved nothing more than a good long cuddle. 

She was a fun and affectionate child, a bit intense and difficult at times, but very tuned in to others’ thoughts and feelings.
Life became challenging when her parents divorced after recently having moved to a new town; the family didn’t know many people. She tried to fit in and made friends, but divorce makes  circumstances difficult, especially for children. Mom remarried, and found that blending a family can be a complex and messy business; little Edna didn’t thrive in the chaos. 

Still cute and positive she pushed on, swam, danced and finished high school then went to live with her beloved dad. She had great adventures, traveled, won an award for being a top bank teller, worked for ESPN, dated and ended up with Mr. Wrong time and time again. 

Eventually she became weary of the process and times were tough. She worked hard as a single mom to provide for her little Elyzza and finally decided that she was destined to be alone; a reality that was almost too hard to bear. She was emotionally and physically frazzled. And that is where the power of prayer took over and God’s great love for Heather was manifest. 
Heather had gone to the temple to make covenants with the Lord that had eternal significance. She had received a blessing telling her that her children were excited that she would be their mother – but with no qualified candidate for a husband; there didn’t seem to be any way for that blessing to be fulfilled. She spent a lot of time praying, serving others and hoping that through some miracle, God would lead her to a wonderful man.  

She waited and dated and when she had about given up, one of her friends told her about man who had recently lost his wife to cancer; he had two young children. Heather, with her good heart, asked them to let him know that if he wanted someone to do things with she would be happy to surf or climb rocks or snowboard with no expectations. 

Eventually he did want the company of another adult and the two single parents found they enjoyed each other’s company and that they shared so many interests. Their friendship blossomed into love and they decided they wanted to share their lives. Now blending families is a messy and complex business, but with with the power of love and prayer, they have bright hopes for the future and a life of happily ever after. 
On 12.13.14 Paul and Heather were married in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints San Diego Temple. 

This year, a wonderful man and a beautiful woman and three little children got a family for Christmas. And like other satisfying stories they all will live happily ever after like her brother and sister and their families. 


Here are some of our favorite blessings: 



Merry Christmas! 

Christmas Angels and Traditions


In case you missed the chat about 
Christmas angels and traditions 
on BYU SiriusXM Radio 143 here’s a link:
http://www.byuradio.org/episode/a40d0a21-9821-497f-b3e2-905f51998ef4/the-kim-power-stilson-show-christmas-angels 

And as always thank you Kim, it was a pleasure! 

Here are coloring pages you can print  
for your little angels: 



Have your child fill in their address on the envelope and write a note or draw a picture for Santa


Invite your child to design a book cover featuring their favorite Christmas story. 







Read more about


The science behind generosity: 

http://online.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887324009304579041231971683854

Why singing makes us happy: 

http://ideas.time.com/2013/08/16/singing-changes-your-brain/

The green factor of real vs. fake Christmas trees: 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/18/business/energy-environment/18tree.html?pagewanted=all