This week’s carnival of education is online at the Columbus Education Association.
This week’s carnival of education is online at the Columbus Education Association.
The first teachers’ potluck carnival of 2008 is online, hosted by meeyauw.
Hungry? Go visit the latest teacher potluck carnival! Lots of great recipes to take a much needed break from teaching.
Yet another carnival! This month’s history carnival is hosted by Aardvarcheology, a great archeology blog from Sweden. Go visit the carnival’s neat chronological collection of historical posts, and don’t forget to visit the aardvarcheology blog itself.
Go visit the Halloween edition of the Teacher Potluck Carnival, the best carnival in blogosphere! I missed this month’s deadline, but if you feel like preparing something nice after a long day of teaching, this is the place to go to!
Make sure to visit this week’s Carnival of education in Halloween-style, composed and compiled by What’s it like on the inside. A great read and lots of interesting links!
I loved today’s Google image.
The carnival of education (#141) is hosted by the Education Wonks. And I remembered to submit a post before the deadline, for a change. Yay!
This month’s teachers’ potluck carnival is on over at Ms. Whatsit. Go, visit and be satisfied!
This morning at 8:00 AM I was already in the kitchen to cook for the last days of Sukkot. We will have six guests, and because of the laws of the holiday all the cooking has to be finished by 6:50 PM tonight. So I just popped a potato kugel into the oven, after taking out the apple pie and sweet noodle kugel. It’s the first time I tried the potato recipe, so I don’t know yet what it will turn out to be like.
Traditional potato kugel
6 medium potatoes
1 onion
3 eggs, beaten
1/2 cup all purpose flour
1,5 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
4 tbsp oil
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Peel potatoes and place in a large bowl of cold water. Peel onion. Grate on small holes of grater into a clean bowl. Add eggs to potato-onion mixture. Stir in remaining ingredients and mix well with fork.
Place in greased 9×9 inch baking pan. Bake for at least 1 hour or until light brown and crisp. For variation, grate a small head of cauliflower or 2 grated medium carrots.
The August Teachers’ Potluck carnival is on! Go check it out. It reminds us that not all we teachers do is teach.