fbpx

Rainy Days and Pies Never Get Me Down

[additional-authors]
October 14, 2009

Rain in Lala Land is almost nonexistent, so when it rained yesterday for the first time in forever, it was like a miracle.  I expected manna to fall from the sky next or Noah in his Ark turning the corner outside my living room window.  My son was so excited as he watched the rain fall outside.  I half expected him to forget what rain was since I can’t remember the last time he saw it, except maybe on a Barney video.

I then did what any good mother would do and donned my son in his coat and rain boots that he squeezed into from last year and had only wore once or twice, and sent him out in the rain…to splash in the puddles of course.

After a run around in the rain, we made a pumpkin pie.  Baking cookies is overrated.  (And besides, I had to test out my pumpkin pie before Thanksgiving, and will probably have to “test it out” a few more times by Thanksgiving, too.)  We had it for lunch…not the whole thing.

At the end of the day, my son told me that he had so much fun today.  I don’t know if that was because I let him eat pie for lunch or what, but whatever the reason, it was a great day.  And I realized that playgrounds and theme parks may be lots of fun, but sometimes eating pie for lunch and splashing in the rain can be just as fun but without the overpriced souvenirs.

No Bake Pumpkin Pie recipe (revised from this month’s version in Good Housekeeping Magazine)
Ingredients:
1 6 oz. graham cracker crust
2 packages vanilla pudding
1 cup cold milk (or soy milk substitute)
1 cup canned pumpkin
1 tsp cinnamon
½ tsp nutmeg
1 ½ cups whipped topping
chocolate or caramel syrup to top
1 spray can of whipped cream

Instructions:
Drizzle chocolate syrup into pie shell.
Beat pudding mixes, milk, pumpkin, and spices until blended.
Stir in whipped topping.
Pour into crust.
Spray whipped cream on top of pumpkin mixture.
Drizzle chocolate or caramel syrup over the whipped cream.
Refrigerate and serve.

Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.

Editor's Picks

Latest Articles

‘Spiritual, but Not Religious’

Those who seek spirituality will ultimately find it, in part, among other people. The more circles of connection that emanate into the world, the more wholeness we will share, together.

A Tale of Two American Mordecais

With the biblical tale read on the holiday of Purim twice – once in the evening, once the next morning – it’s occasion to remember a pair of heroic American Mordecais, one by that first name and one with that last.

On Fighting Antisemitism and the American Dream

We should challenge ourselves to be more identifiable as Jews, more confident and more positive, to dedicate ourselves with greater passion to our heritage and ancient mission: to be a holy nation that respects all human beings.

Preserving Jewish Tradition in the Digital Age

While AI offers many benefits, its implementation in Jewish tradition raises important questions. How can we ensure that digital representations of sacred texts retain their authenticity?

The Fiddler’s Algorithm

In a culture saturated with choices, swipes and infinite optionality, they’re craving something more human. Fewer options, more intention. Less performance, more presence.

Mamdani Meets His Match

His election has unexpectedly thrust Menin, who sought her office on a platform of affordable housing, healthcare costs and small business support, into the position of America’s largest city’s Zionist-in-Chief.

Never Again Means Now

Democracies falter not only when leaders overreach but when citizens assume that overreach is temporary, justified or someone else’s problem.

Does AI Future Belong to Curiosity?

I’ve had a lifelong love affair with curiosity. In its quiet, humble way, curiosity can lead to the most wonderful human relationships.

PEN, Penn and Poo

The marketplace of ideas has ceased to be fully stocked because all ideas are no longer welcome. So much for Jews controlling Hollywood, mass media and book publishing.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.