I have mentioned these wonderful Liturgical Teas before that Alice at Cottage Blessings has created and shared... we did one at Candlemas as a luncheon, and on Good Friday we did the second Lenten tea as our dinner menu. It is kind of snack-y and meatless and sweetless, so it works well as a Good Friday meal, heavy enough to be the main meal of the day yet not over-indulgent. You can see the link for all the scripture references and explanations.
The King's Crown, referencing Pilate questioning Jesus if he was a King. I made ours with a mixture of cream cheese, sour cream, and taco seasoning as the base layer, then a layer of refried beans mixed with cilantro, followed by a tomato layer, and then topped with cheddar and Monterey jack cheeses. The tortilla chips form the points for the crown. Yummy!!
This is purple (boysenberry) fruit leather. It represents the purple cloak they put on Jesus when they were mocking him.
These look weird, and that is because they are made with our chickens' brown eggs rather than with white ones. They are Golgotha Eggs, for the "place of the skull" where Jesus was crucified. They would be much more representative of skulls if they were white, I realized after the fact!
The muffins were a simple recipe so as not to be like a treat: basic whole wheat muffins from the LLL cookbook. They have cloves and cinnamon in them, and a couple tablespoons of honey. I cut the tops off and hollowed them out to represent the tomb. Then the girls placed a bit of food in the tomb when we read about Jesus being laid in the tomb and covered it with the "stone," the muffin lid.
These tortillas are for Jesus's seamless garment topped with mozerella cubes for the dice, standing for when the soldiers cast lots to see who would win the garment.
We also had grape tomatoes (100 halves, from 50 tomatoes) to represent the centurion, and we had balsamic vinegar for the vinegar offered to Christ on the cross.
Chris read from our children's Bible as Caroline and Cecilia tried to identify the foods that stood for certain events. After dinner, we prayed the Stations of the Cross from this CD (it's still on sale!) as a family.
You are amazing. You do so much with your kids. Great way to tie in religion and make it fun. Maybe we will make hot cross buns with something different for the icing. They look cute. I hope I can do better next year. I never even made the ressurection eggs I was going to make.
ReplyDeleteYou did such a great job with this! I love it! :-)
ReplyDeleteI keep meaning to send you a link to my cousin's blog - she has chickens and blogs about them - very funny! http://thechickendance.wordpress.com/ Happy Easter!
ReplyDeleteBeth, you are amazing too, to homeschool while caring for five kids age 5 and under! I wouldn't be able to do this much if Cecilia was still a baby or younger toddler... I will have to remind myself of that in the future if there are other babies in store for me! I just hope I will be able to keep up w/ homeschooling next year... I know Kindergarten isn't a big deal, but as each year goes by, I know it will be a little more intense! As children get older, they should be able to be more helpful around the house and ease the burden for us moms, I hope.
ReplyDeleteI will check out the chicken blog, Kris - thanks!
ReplyDeleteI loved seeing the pictures of your tea!
ReplyDeleteMy children love this tea, and were so happy that they were well enough to participate on Good Friday once again. I haven't had a chance to post pictures, but I will soon. :)
These teas are so neat. We've yet to do one...I'm hoping next year for more gumption, hehe.I like the king's crown, especially...really looks like a crown, and yummy!
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