YourWeb.Info Shopping Mallicon
[........This Space For Rent........]
Directory
Apparel
Auto
Business & Career
Casinos
Communications
Computers
Educational
Entertainment
Family
Financial
Fitness
Food & Beverages
Flowers & Gifts
Games & Toys
Health & Beauty
Home & Garden
Hobbies
Office Products
Para Sciences
Romance Corner
Security
Social Services
Specialty Stores
Travel
Web Site Tools
Submit
Search Engines
Clearance

YourWeb
YourWeb.Info Mailing List

ODDS & ENDS
Valentine
Avon - Say I Love You with Lingerie this Valentine's Day!

The Men's Guide to buying Valentine Lingerie, only at Bare Necessities

Personalized Valentine's Day Gifts from Personal Creations

Valentine's Day Floral Arrangements from GiftBaskets

Valentine's Day gifts for under $25 at drugstore

Mrs Fields Now Shipping Fresh Baked Treats For Valentine’s Day

Save up to 70% off Retail Prices on Personalized Valentine's Day Gifts! Limoges Jewelry

Make her Valentine's Day Special With Flowers from 1-800-FLOWERS

Hickory Farms Valentine's Day Gifts

15% off Pfaelzer Brothers Valentine's Day Gifts!

Happy Valentine's Day Print Cotton Loungeshirt at JustMySize

15% off Valentine’s Day gifts at Mission Orchards!

15% off Almond Plaza Valentine's Day Gifts!
Special Savings for Valentine's Day only at Overstock

Valentine's Day Oneliners
Knock, Knock!
Who's there?
Olive.
Olive who?
Olive you!

What did the bat say to his girlfriend?

"You're fun to hang around with."
Did you hear about the nearsighted porcupine?

He fell in love with a pincushion!

Welcome to YourWeb.Info Shopping Mall!

Origins of Valentines

As early as the fourth century B.C., the Romans engaged in an annual young man's rite of passage to the god Lupercus. The names of teenage women were placed in a box and drawn at random by adolescent men. Thus, a man was assigned a woman companion, for their mutual entertainment and pleasure (often sexual), for the duration of a year, after which another lottery was staged.

Determined to put an end to this 800-year-old practice, the early church fathers sought a "lovers" saint to replace the deity Lupercus. They found a likely candidate in Valentine, a bishop who had been martyred some 200 years earlier.

Traditionally, mid-February was a time for Romans to meet and court prospective mates. Young men offered women they admired and wished to court handwritten greetings of affection on February 14. The cards acquired St. Valentine's name.

As Christianity spread, so did the Valentine's Day card. The earliest one was sent in 1415 by Charles, Duke of Orleans, to his wife while he was a prisoner in the Tower of London. It is now in the British Museum.

The first American publisher of Valentines was printer and artist Esther Howland. Her elaborate lace cards of the 1870s cost from five to ten dollars, with some selling for as much as thirty-five dollars. Since that time, the Valentine card business has flourished. Except for Christmas, Americans exchange more cards on Valentine's Day than at any other time of the year.

Excerpted from "Panati's Extraordinary Origins of Everyday things," Charles Panati, Harper & Row, NY 1987 pp 50-52.

VALENTINE'S DAY RECIPES

Here are some tried and true recipes that will add some romance to your Valentine's Day. After all, nothing says LOVING like something from the oven!

Chocolate Covered Strawberries with Champagne

Even the non-cook will love this recipe.

  • Purchase your favorite Champagne and chill.
  • Buy fresh strawberries that have their stems intact. Wash, dry and refrigerate the strawberries. Cold strawberries will cause the chocolate to harden and there will be less dripping.)
  • Chocolate dip: Buy a jar or Nutella, European chocolate hazelnut spread (available in specialty and grocery stores in Atlanta as well as Harry's.) Place 1 cup of Nutella in a double boiler or fondue pot. Add 1 to 2 tablespoons of heavy cream. Heat over low heat! Add more heavy cream as needed until the consistency of heavy cream. Serve your Valentine.

Hearts-Filled-With-Love Cookies

Fill these favorites with raspberry or strawberry jelly.

    Sift together:

      2 1/2 c flour
      1 teaspoon baking powder
      1/2 teaspoon salt

    Cream together:

      1 cup shortening
      1 cup sugar

    Stir in:

      1 well beaten egg
      2 tablespoons Pet Milk
      1 1/2 teaspoon vanilla

    Chill overnight before using. Roll-out dough and cut with a heart cookie cutter. Each cookie needs a top and bottom. Bake at 350 degrees for 8-10 minutes.

    When cool, assemble cookies. Place a teaspoon of jelly on the bottom of a cookie, then cover with another cookie. (The tops of the cookies should be facing outward on both top and bottom.) Sprinkle with 4X Confectioner's Sugar.

Chocolate Surprise

Blend together:

    1 1/2 cup plain flour
    1 1/2 stick margarine
    1 1/2 cup chopped nuts

Press into 9" x 13" pan. Bake for 15 minutes at 350 degrees. Cool

Cream together:

    1 cup powdered sugar
    1, 8 oz package of cream cheese

Fold in 9 oz. defrosted Cool Whip. Spread onto the cooled pastry layer.

Mix well:

    1 large box of chocolate INSTANT pudding
    Add 3 1/2 cups milk

Spread on top of the second layer.

Spread a 9 oz. container of defrosted Cool Whip on top of the third layer and refrigerate.

Splendid Raspberry Spinach Salad

2 tablespoons Raspberry Vinegar
2 tablespoons Raspberry Jam
1/3 Cup Vegetable Oil
8 Cups Spinach, rinsed, stemmed and torn into pieces.
3/4 Cup coarsely chopped Macadamia nuts or toasted almond slices
1 Cup Fresh Raspberries
3 Kiwis, peeled and sliced

Dressing: Combine vinegar and jam in blender or small bowl. Add oil in thin stream, blending well.

Toss spinach with 1/2 of the nuts, 1/2 of the raspberries, 1/2 of the kiwi's and the dressing. top with the remaining ingredients (nuts, raspberries and kiwis.) Serve immediately.



Valentine's Day Cake

Cream together:

    1/2 Cup of Crisco
    1 1/2 Cups Sugar

Add 2 eggs - Beat Well

Sift 3 Times:

    2 Cups flour
    1 tablespoon Cocoa
    1 Teaspoon Salt

Fold In:

    1 Teaspoon Baking Soda dissolved in
    1 tablespoon Vinegar - Quickly

Use 2, 9" Layer Pans that have been greased and floured.

Bake at 350 degrees for 30-35 minutes

Filling and Icing

Cook on low flame to pudding stage:

    1 Cup Milk
    1/4 Cup Flour
    Dash of salt

Cream:

    1/2 Cup Crisco
    1 Stick Margarine
    1 Cup Granulated Sugar
    2 Teaspoons Vanilla

Add to pudding and beat well. Spead between layers and on top and sides. Sprinkle with coconut.

Victorian Gingerbread Valentines

In Victorian times lovers declared their affections via words, songs, pictures and foods. One such food was gingerbread "life cakes" in the shape of hearts.

    2 1/2 cups unsifted flour
    2 teaspoons cinnamon
    1 1/2 teaspoons ginger
    1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
    1/4 teaspoon salt
    1/2 cup margarine
    1/2 cup packed dark brown sugar
    1/3 cup dark corn syrup
    1 large egg

In large bowl, sift together flour, cinnamon, ginger, cloves and salt.

Blend together margarine and brown sugar until smooth. Add corn syrup and egg; beat well. Add dry ingredients, about one-third at a time, mixing until smooth after each addition. Chill dough one hour.

Roll out half of dough on lightly floured surface to one-quarter-inch thickness. (Reserve other half for decoratins or for a second batch of cookies.) Using hear-shaped cookie cutter, press out cookie shapes or use knife to cut around a pattern. Place hearts on cookie sheet. Decorate as desired. Bake at 350 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes until golden. Remove and place on wire racks to cool. Store in covered container.

Makes about eight 4 1/2 inch cookies.


Valentine Food For Thought

Cabbage always has a heart; Green beans string along.
You're such a cute tomato, Will you peas to me belong?
You've been the apple of my eye, You know how much I care;
So lettuce get together, We'd make a perfect pear.

Now, something's sure to turnip to prove you can't be beet;
So, if you carrot all for me let's let our tulips meet.
Don't squash my hopes and dreams now, Bee my honey, dear;
Or tears will fill potato's eyes, While sweet corn lends an ear.

I'll cauliflower shop and say, Your dreams are parsley mine.
I'll work and share my celery, So be my valentine.

Jeanne Losey


YOURWEB.INFO SHOPPING MALL
Are you looking for a certain product or merchant? Can't find either one? Contact us and we will try our best to find it for you!
Thank You for supporting YourWeb.Info!

Merchant of The Month
YourWeb.Info Shopping Mall

Google
WWW YourWeb.Info
Home | Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions | Directory | About | Tips | Free
maintained by YourWeb.Info © 2001 - present.
All Rights Reserved. All other trademarks and trade names are the property of their respective owners.