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tstew
10-31-2008, 09:57 PM
I told him that I would beat him to posting this since he has a bit of a drive and I could just come to my office.:tease

He is pretty much the level, straight up, good guy I expected him to be. I also got to meet his two daughters.

Thankfully, however, PO was not in attendance. :whistle

Sherri
10-31-2008, 10:08 PM
I told him that I would beat him to posting this since he has a bit of a drive and I could just come to my office.:tease

He is pretty much the level, straight up, good guy I expected him to be. I also got to meet his two daughters.

Thankfully, however, PO was not in attendance. :whistleI haven't seen him since Bible college, and that was a few years ago.

tstew
10-31-2008, 10:09 PM
He told me all about JCM

:evilglee

Sherri
10-31-2008, 10:12 PM
He told me all about JCM

:evilglee:reaction

Actually, I was one of the goodie-two-shoes, most of the time. Eddie on the other hand..............well, he was 18. What can I say?

tstew
10-31-2008, 10:15 PM
:reaction

Actually, I was one of the goodie-two-shoes, most of the time. Eddie on the other hand..............well, he was 18. What can I say?

:ursofunny

James had himself playing the role of the tightrope walking, straight laced, model student....okay maybe not so much :)

It's been my experience that the ones who are more balanced and able to relax a bit and be a kid turn out to be the more stable and balanced in ministry...while some of the others tend to burn out.

Sherri
10-31-2008, 10:20 PM
When I started seriously dating Eddie, several of my friends and even teachers tried to talk me out of it. LOL! Little did they know he would turn out to be a great man of God. I knew it was in him, it was just hidden down there pretty deep at the time.:ursofunny

By the way, I just read a book by pioneer AG missionaries to Liberia, who went in the 1920's. It was fascinating - one miracle after another. It was all in the Southeast part of the country; not sure which part you were in, but I thought of you when they talked about their customs and food. My MIL still calls the food "chop".

tstew
10-31-2008, 10:26 PM
When I started seriously dating Eddie, several of my friends and even teachers tried to talk me out of it. LOL! Little did they know he would turn out to be a great man of God. I knew it was in him, it was just hidden down there pretty deep at the time.:ursofunny

By the way, I just read a book by pioneer AG missionaries to Liberia, who went in the 1920's. It was fascinating - one miracle after another. It was all in the Southeast part of the country; not sure which part you were in, but I thought of you when they talked about their customs and food. My MIL still calls the food "chop".

That's funny. I just reconnected with a guy whose parents were missionaries in Liberia for another organization. He happens to live near me, and we're going to get together for some chop. There are a few West African restaurants in Houston, but they are Ghanain and Nigerian, so the food is a little different. I prefer Liberian food, so I generally make that myself.

Maybe I'll get a chance to meet you all some day.

Sherri
10-31-2008, 10:31 PM
That's funny. I just reconnected with a guy whose parents were missionaries in Liberia for another organization. He happens to live near me, and we're going to get together for some chop. There are a few West African restaurants in Houston, but they are Ghanain and Nigerian, so the food is a little different. I prefer Liberian food, so I generally make that myself.

Maybe I'll get a chance to meet you all some day.I actually ordered two huge containers of Palm Oil on the internet last year and gave them to my MIL for her birthday. She was thrilled! There's nothing like Country Chop made with Palm Oil. She makes it SO good! I have tried a few times with regular oil and tomato paste, but it lacks something without the palm oil. I use oil, onions, collard greens, red pepper, and salmon. Then we eat it with rice and bananas. It's one of those things that Eddie would NEVER in a million years try if I just made it and he hadn't grown up eating it! It looks awful.

Strangely enough, in Costa Rica, we drove by a huge palm oil plant that was West Africa Palm Oil. They imported the trees years ago to Costa Rica, and they produce more W. African Palm Oil than they do in West Africa!

tstew
10-31-2008, 10:34 PM
I actually ordered two huge containers of Palm Oil on the internet last year and gave them to my MIL for her birthday. She was thrilled! There's nothing like Country Chop made with Palm Oil. She makes it SO good! I have tried a few times with regular oil and tomato paste, but it lacks something without the palm oil. I use oil, onions, collard greens, red pepper, and salmon. Then we eat it with rice and bananas. It's one of those things that Eddie would NEVER in a million years try if I just made it and he hadn't grown up eating it! It looks awful.

Strangely enough, in Costa Rica, we drove by a huge palm oil plant that was West Africa Palm Oil. They imported the trees years ago to Costa Rica, and they produce more W. African Palm Oil than they do in West Africa!

Houston has a fairly large West African population. You can actually buy Palm oil and even Palm Butter (it is a concentrate in a can and is basically identical to what you make over there) in several general grocery stores here.

There is even a West African supermarket where you can buy pretty much anything you need. I may have to put together a little care package...

Sherri
10-31-2008, 10:39 PM
Houston has a fairly large West African population. You can actually buy Palm oil and even Palm Butter (it is a concentrate in a can and is basically identical to what you make over there) in several general grocery stores here.

There is even a West African supermarket where you can buy pretty much anything you need. I may have to put together a little care package...
I'm salivating already. I love all the food I've ever had from Africa - Liberian, Nigerian, and Kenyan so far. But I would love to try it all! There's an African grocery store in Nashville that I've driven by a few times, but I'm going to stop one of these days.

The only thing I've eaten in Africa that I hated was "Wheatabix", which is actually made in England I think. It's these little cereal rectangles that dissolve into nothing. They are SO gross! I just saw them here in the grocery store the other day and I thought, "they are following me!!!!"