
Today’s lesson will be APPLE TURNOVERS!! YUM!!

Let’s get started!
Step 1
preheat the oven to 475*
Step 2
Open THIS box and remove the turnovers from the package and bake as directed. (These cannot be improved upon without much fanfare and mess! I know, I’ve tried!)

Step 3
When the turnovers have finished baking and are cooling, prepare a simple drizzle icing. I use powdered sugar (start with a cup and experiment) and a teaspoon of water at a time–mixing well before adding more water. (If you use too much water, the icing will just run off the turnovers and be wasted.) If the icing does get too runny, add a little more powdered sugar. When you get the consistency you desire, drizzle it over the turnovers. Enjoy!
Variations:



“Work smarter, not harder.”
Scrooge McDuck

BON APPETIT!!
***I will be away for a few days and Filly will be in and out. See you soon!***
We were at a high of 88 when I was out shopping – needless to say, with no A/C, that was sticky! But it plummeted when the wind came up – gusts to 30-35 mph – and it is now 60. We’ve got a string of cold days with highs in the 50’s and a low one night of 34! Brrrrrr….schizophrenic weather, for sure! When the wind dies, I’ll put my jimmy-rigged Oriole feeder back out and see how they do with it.
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EXCERPT: “Children and students attending daycare, K-12 programs and college in Louisiana, at least for now, will not be required to get the COVID-19 vaccine, Gov. John Bel Edwards announced Wednesday. The announcement reversed an earlier decision by the governor’s administration and the Louisiana Health Department (LHD) requiring students to be fully vaccinated beginning in the 2022-23 school year.
Edwards said he based the decision on the fact that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not fully approved the vaccines for people under age 16. The governor said his administration will continue to recommend all children age 5 and over get the vaccine, a recommendation the LHD endorsed Wednesday in a news release.
In their statements, the governor and the LHD implied COVID-19 vaccines for people over age 16 are fully approved. However, while the FDA did grant full licensing to Pfizer’s Comirnaty and Moderna’s Spikevax COVID-19 vaccines — for people 16 and older and 18 and older, respectively — those vaccines are not available in the U.S.”
https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/louisiana-students-vaccine-mandate/
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EXCERPT: “As researchers seek answers to why in recent months more than 500 previously healthy children worldwide have developed sudden-onset, severe hepatitis, two leading hypotheses have emerged linking the outbreak to adenovirus and coronavirus.
In a May 18 update, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said it is investigating 180 cases of hepatitis in children, up 71 from the 109 cases the agency reported on May 5. The cases occurred in 36 states and territories over the past seven months. The CDC reported on May 5 that 90% of the children were hospitalized, and 5 deaths were under investigation. According to the May 18 update, no deaths were reported since February, and the proportion of patients requiring liver transplants decreased since May 5 from 15% to 9%.
The U.S. now has as many cases as the U.K., which on May 12 updated its numbers to 176 cases. As of May 3, 11 U.K. children had received liver transplants, and there were no deaths. On May 11, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control reported a total of 449 probable cases of sudden and severe hepatitis in children in 27 nations, but with the updated numbers from the U.S. and the U.K., the total number is now 533.
The highest numbers of cases per country so far are in: the U.S. (180), the U.K. (176), Italy (35), Spain (22), Brazil (16), Indonesia (15), Israel (12), Sweden (9), Argentina (8), Japan (7) and Canada (7).
Hepatitis is the medical term for inflammation of the liver. It typically is caused by one of several known viruses, medications or exposure to certain chemicals, according to Healthline. However, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported these common causes were ruled out in the hepatitis cases, which is what makes the cases so unusual.”
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Mild hepatitis is fairly common in children, Whittaker said. But this outbreak is different. Doctors are seeing previously healthy children with liver injury severe enough to require transplants. Typically, the U.K. might have eight to 10 liver transplants in a year. This year, there were 11 transplants in three months, Whitaker said.
Possible causes: Adenovirus? Link to COVID-19?
The growing number of cases has spurred an international race to identify the cause, with doctors and researchers from global health agencies, including in the U.S., the U.K., Israel, Italy and Japan, sharing data and hypotheses.
According to the WHO, the common viruses that can cause acute viral hepatitis (hepatitis viruses A, B, C, D and E) were not detected in any of the cases, nor does international travel appear to be a factor.”
More: https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/hepatitis-outbreak-kids/
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Hey, is anyone interested in the story about me meeting Prince and future King Fahad of Saudi Arabia?
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Good night! Hanging up my spurs!
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