Fresh Orange Loaf



Source: Purity Cookbook
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INGREDIENTS:
1 whole orange
1/2 cup orange juice
1 egg
2 tablespoons oil
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups flour
2 1/3 cups sugar
2 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup raisins or 6 whole prunes chopped

METHOD:
Quarter orange and place pieces in food processor bowl. Chop fine. Add liquid ingredients, then dry ingredients. Place raisins or prunes on top. Pulse to mix. Pour into greased loaf pan. Bake at 350 F for 60 minutes.

Total Recipe Contains: 3543 Calories; 35g Fat (9% calories from fat); 38g Protein; 793g Carbohydrate; 181mg Cholesterol; 2685mg Sodium



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"Canadian Maggie Turner writes and publishes poetry, photography, and a personal journal online. Her work reflects the current way of life in Canada, embracing Canada's past, present, future in a unique portrayal everyday life. Maggie's voice is one many writers artists, actively depicting rich diversity culture.

Photography: "a term which comes from the Greek words photos (light) and graphos (drawing). A photograph is made with a camera by exposing film to light in order to create a negative. The negative is then used in the darkroom to print a photograph (positive) onto light-sensitive paper.
Source: University of Arizona Glossary

Poetry: "a form of speech or writing that harmonizes the music of its language with its subject. To read a great poem is to bring out the perfect marriage of its sound and thought in a silent or voiced performance. At least from the time of Aristotle's Poetics, drama was conceived of as a species of poetry."
Source: Creative Studios

Journal: " "Though a journal may be many things - a treasury, a storehouse, a jewelry box, a laboratory, a drafting board, a collector's cabinet, a snapshot album, a history, a travelogue..., a letter to oneself - it has some definable characteristics. It is a record, an entry-book, kept regularly, though not necessarily daily.... Some (entries) will be nearly illegible, written in the dark in the middle of the night.... Not only is it a record for oneself, but of oneself. Every memorable journal, any successful journal, is honest. Nothing sham, phony, false...." (Dorothy Lambert from Ken Macrorie's book, Writing to be Read )
A journal is a way to keep track of your thoughts about what you read... as well as what you did on any given day."
Source: Journal Writing

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