Help need x-mas prsent ideas?!
Answers: okay I have two kids 3 and 5 and we live in FL and there grandparents live in NY every year we have been making a calender with there pictures on it but I want something else from the kids. Please give me ideas!!! I will choose a best answer and thanks for those who help me out.
have the kids make something! If you don't have personal access to clay and a kiln- there are usually places now that do "ceramics" where you and your family go in and select items and then glaze them- the place fires them and then you pick them up in about a week.
If you like sending 'photos' you could get a photo blanket made. Or a puzzle, mugs, ect. They also sell frames and keychains that store photos. They tend to be pricey, but they play the pictures in a slideshow. Pick your best, favorites, and import them into the frame!
Since they're just about old enough, they could make a handmade Christmas card. You can include current pictures, like your annual Christmas one(if you do one of those), and just mail it off!
You could take some pictures, or artwork done by the kids, already finished or made specially, have them laminated, and made into place mats.
Use your video camera to record a little play, skit, game, family outing, or just your kids saying hi, and send them the tape or DVD. Maybe even your kids, and family singing a Christmas Carol, decorating the tree, ect.
(If I think of anymore, I'll add them later.)
Good luck!
maybe instead of a calender, have them make a little scrapbook...you can small ones that are like 4 x 6 or 8 x 8 and only have like a dozen pages in them...
Dresdner Stollen
To make two 13-inch loaves
?-cup seedless raisins
?-cup dried currants
1-cup mixed candied citrus peel
?- cup candied angelica, cut into ?-inch dice
?-cup candied cherries, cut in half
?-cup rum
?-cup lukewarm water (110o to 115o)
2-packages or cakes of dry or compressed yeast
?-cup plus a pinch of sugar
5 ?-cups plus 2 tablespoons all purpose flour
1-cup milk
? -teaspoon salt
? -teaspoon almond extract
?-teaspoon finely grated fresh lemon peel
2 eggs at room temperature
? -cup unsalted butter cut into ?-inch bits and softened
8-tablespoons melted unsalted butter
1-cup blanched slivered almonds
? cup confectioner’s sugar, sifted
Combine the raisins, currants, candied citrus peel, angelica and cherries in a bowl. Pour rum over them, tossing the fruit about to coat the pieces evenly. Soak at least 1 hour.
.
Pour the lukewarm water into a small bowl and sprinkle it with the years and a pinch of sugar. Let the mixture stand for 2 or 3 minutes, then stir to dissolve the yeast completely. Set the bowl in a warm, draft free place (such as a turned off oven) for about 5 minutes or until the mixture almost doubles in volume.
Meanwhile drain the fruit, reserving the rum, and carefully pat the pieces completely dry with paper towels. Place the fruit in a bowl, sprinkle it with 2 tablespoons of flour, and turn it about with a spoon until the flour is completely absorbed. Set aside.
In a heavy 1 ? - to 2- quart saucepan, combine the milk, ?-cup of the sugar and the salt. Heat to lukewarm (110o to 115o), stirring constantly until the sugar dissolves. Off the heat, stir in the reserved rum, the almond extract and the fresh lemon peel, and finally the yeast mixture.
Place the 5 cups of flour in a large bowl and with a fork stir in the yeast mixture, a cup at a time. Beat the eggs until frothy and stir them into the dough then beat in the bits of softened butter. Gather the dough into a ball and place it on a board sprinkled with the remaining ?-cup of flour. Knead the dough, by pushing it down with the heels of your hands, pressing it forward and folding it back on itself. Continue the kneading for about 15 minutes, or until all the flour is incorporated and the dough is smooth and elastic. Flour your hands lightly from time to time. Now press the fruit and almonds into the dough, 1/3 cup or so at a time, but do not knead or handle it too much or the dough will discolor. Coat a deep bowl with 1 teaspoon of melted butter and drop in the dough. Brush the top of the dough with another 2 teaspoons of melted butter, drape a towel over the bowl and set it in a warm place for 2 hours, or until the dough doubles in bulk.
Punch the dough down and divide it into two equal pieces. Let them rest for 10 minutes, then roll the pieces out into strips about 12 inches long, 8 inches wide and ?-inch thick. Brush each strip with 2 tablespoons of the remaining butter and sprinkle each with 2 tablespoons of the remaining sugar. Fold each strip lengthwise in the following fashion: bring one long end over the center of the strip and press the edge down lightly. Then fold the other long side across it, overlapping the seam down the center by about 1 inch. Press the edge gently to keep it in place. With lightly floured hands, taper the ends of the loaf slightly and pat the sides gently together to mound it in the center. The finished loaf should be about 3 ? to 4 inches wide and 13 inches long.
With a pastry brush, and 1 tablespoon of melted butter, coat the bottom of an 11 by 17 inch jellyroll pan. Place the loaves on the pan and brush them with the remaining 2 tablespoons of melted butter. Set the loaves aside in a warm draft free place for about 1 hour or until doubled in bulk. Preheat the oven to 375o. Then bake the bread in the middle of the oven for 45 minutes or until golden brown and crusty. Transfer the loaves to wire racks to cool completely. Just before serving, sprinkle the loaves with the sifted confectioner’s sugar.
I frost mine with thin butter cream frosting.
This ships well.
take your kids to like sears or something and have a holiday themed photo shoot where they wear santa hats, etc, put your favorite ones in a nice frame, or you can put them on a mug or a shirt, or a key chain, etc