Showing posts with label gingerbread. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gingerbread. Show all posts

Thursday, October 18, 2012

A sweet treat (at a gingerbread workshop)

(NOTE: This story was written for the Winston-Salem Journal in 2007.)

SWEET TIMES: WORKSHOP ATTRACTING FAMILIES

Gingerbread covered with icing, candy

  • By Tom Gillispie, SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL

CLEMMONS -- The children found a sweet situation last week during a gingerbread-decorating workshop at the Holy Family Catholic Church.

A trio of 3-year-olds -- Avinash Sabbagh and his cousins, twins Rebekah and Jordan Sabbagh Robaiotti -- worked Nov. 20 on eating candy and putting pieces to a gingerbread house.

Helping were Caleb Sabbagh, 4, and David Sabbagh, 13, as well as two of the children's mothers, sisters Michelle Sabbagh and Elizabeth Sabbagh Robaiotti.
David is the son of another Sabbagh sister, Carol.

Michelle Sabbagh said she went to the gingerbread workshop last year with Avinash. She said that the Sabbaghs, all from Winston-Salem, enjoy the workshops. "We get to be creative," she said. "And their grandmother (Judy Sabbagh) is in the hospital. This will go to her."
Across the room, Larry duPont worked intently, putting icing on the roof of a gingerbread house, as his wife, Veronica, and son, Hayden, 8, watched.
Then Veronica and Hayden helped him add the candy.
Nearby, the duPonts' daughter, Erica, 16, and her date, Jason Cibelli, 17, put icing and candy on a gingerbread Christmas tree, and there was giggling as some of the icing and candy failed to reach the tree.
"Dad's big on projects," Erica duPont said as she looked over and watched Larry work under Hayden's supervision.
"Dad has a pattern going," Veronica duPont said as she watched duPont, an officer for the Winston-Salem Police Department.
Veronica duPont said that the duPonts, who live in Advance, saw an advertisement for the gingerbread workshop and thought it would be fun.
"We did get to do it last year, and we made sure we did it this year," she said. "It's something we can do as a family."
Veronica said she was glad that the workshop's director, Lettitia Iruela, had built the houses and trees in advance.
Erica and Jason were using everything from Tootsie Rolls, Whoppers and Skittles to Twizzlers, gumballs and Starbursts to decorate their sweet tree.
Erica duPont said she likes the Christmas tree better than the gingerbread house.
"It's fun, very entertaining," she said as she added more candy to the tree.
Other people worked on various gingerbread items, including gingerbread men.
Iruela, who runs the workshops, appeared to be relaxed and watched others work. She said she got hooked on making gingerbread Christmas goodies when she was in college.
She has done the workshops with Girl Scout troops -- this is the fourth year at the Catholic Church. She also conducts workshops at two churches in Winston-Salem.
Why do it?
"Just look around at the kids," she said, sweeping a hand toward the children. "That's what I get out of doing it."
She started the workshops at the church as a way to make money for the church's building fund.
Iruella said she was up until 3 in the morning the night before, baking gingerbread and constructing houses and trees.
"This is probably the most behind I've been on baking," she said. "I'll work 200 to 400 hours over four months, me and my husband (Carlos). That counts buying candy, baking, bagging candy, putting the houses together, and I will decorate houses for this weekend."
Gingerbread lovers and others can attend two more gingerbread workshops this year at the Holy Family Catholic Church, on Saturday and Sunday.
Iruella said that 18 people decorated gingerbread on Nov. 20, but she said she expects 40 to 50 people at the other two workshops.
Iruella said that most people don't eat the houses, and some people might keep them two years before they begin to fall apart.
Erica duPont was asked how long the gingerbread tree will last.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Links to TG's stories online

Back Up to Speed

When the Winston Cup Museum opened in May 2005, owner/founder Will Spencer said he wasn’t looking to make money.

“I wanted to give something back to the city of Winston-Salem as well as preserve the 33-year history of Winston Cup racing because it had such a positive impact on me and my business,” says Spencer, a Forsyth County native. 

Read more: http://m.journalnow.com/winstonsalemmonthly/back-up-to-speed/article_74694e8c-c153-11e5-b247-23f2362878ea.html?mode=jqm 

Hot dogs, heavy on the history

The joint was hopping at Pulliam’s hot-dog stand on a Saturday this summer. Cars and trucks were parked at all angles around the building with white-and-dark green vertical stripes.
People sat eating and drinking on the steps or on stumps under a tree, or in their cars. Some just stood eating under some shade.
Read more:
http://www.journalnow.com/spark/features/hot-dogs-heavy-on-the-history/article_538bd5e4-7db1-11e5-9a21-e738c797cd64.html

Claim to Fame

Though it exists in great obscurity, the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County High School Sports Hall of Fame is a place where excellence resides—and a place that’s worth a closer look. The hall opened in 1983 to celebrate standouts at the local high-school level, including players, coaches, administrators, even officials.

Read more:

http://www.journalnow.com/winstonsalemmonthly/claim-to-fame/article_92091c98-4c04-11e5-985b-6b6150e80a73.html

Training Ground

Basketball star Chris Paul says he had long been thinking of opening a top-notch basketball/athletics facility in Winston-Salem. Earlier this summer, he did just that.

Read more:

http://www.journalnow.com/winstonsalemmonthly/training-ground/article_e91cbf2a-7f72-11e5-ab1c-c7a3b009346b.html

Beyond the X's and O's

When people think of coaches, Knute Rockne comes to mind. The great Notre Dame football coach was full of rah, pumping his players up for the big game. But in 35 years of writing about high-school and college sports, coaches have often said that there’s a lot more to coaching than rah rah and X’s and O’s.

Read more:

http://www.journalnow.com/winstonsalemmonthly/beyond-x-s-and-o-s/article_8ca28962-9cee-11e4-9caa-1b0852d4cc56.html

Holiday Hoop-La

By the time I first covered a Frank Spencer Holiday Classic game for the Winston-Salem Journal in 2000, the tournament had gone through numerous changes.

Read more:

http://www.journalnow.com/winstonsalemmonthly/holiday-hoop-la/article_7884e2b8-6f67-11e4-81ea-03c46e56a1ee.html

Follow the Leaders

I wrote profiles of four Forsyth County high-school football coaches: Mike Springston of Walkertown, Josh McGee of Reagan, Laymarr Marshall of Mount Tabor and Todd Willert of East Forsyth.


Read more: http://www.journalnow.com/winstonsalemmonthly/playmakers/article_745f5cd6-40ba-11e3-8ffe-001a4bcf6878.html


Learning on the go


Cameron Hughes was working at a Terry Labonte auto dealership, but he wanted more.
He wanted a career in motorsports; he just had to figure out how to get it.

The King of the Ring

Tim Brown knows he came off as a villain in the TV show "Madhouse," but that was the plan. It looked like Brown and the Myers brothers, Burt and Jason, hated each other. But Brown says he’s actually friends with most of the drivers. He even does work on many of their cars.


Read more: http://www.journalnow.com/winstonsalemmonthly/playmakers/article_f69ab4ba-c3bb-11e2-9f23-0019bb30f31a.html


The Legend of CP3


This spring marks 10 years since Chris Paul graduated from West Forsyth High School. Since then, “CP3″ has become a household name and a bona fide basketball icon. 


Read more: http://www.winstonsalemmonthly.com/2013/05/01/the-legend-of-cp3/


Harris and Singer weird, experimental and organic


Stand-up funny men Jarrod Harris and Ryan Singer won’t say which one’s the star of “The Organic Comedy Tour.”


“I think we both shine equally,” said Harris, who will join Singer in a show Saturday at High Rock Outfitters in Lexington.


Read more: http://www.journalnow.com/relishnow/article_8253f9f4-65ba-11e2-a4b8-0019bb30f31a.html


'40-City Adventure' for Haley Dreis and Jacob Caudle

The musical adventure begins when Haley Dreis and Caleb Caudle appear Friday at The Garage. The appearance opens a '40-city adventure'-Dreis' words-of the Southeast, Northeast and Midwest this spring. Caudle, whose parents live in Germanton, said the 40-city adventure will grow as they go along.
The two of them will be driving alone in Dreis' Volvo.
Read more: http://winstonsalemjournal.nc.newsmemory.com/pda.php?date=20130228&eid=0&sid=3&aid=365

Winston-Salem Guide: The numbers game


See, I’d heard of Gallup polls for politics and even Kinsey’s polls for sex. (I don’t care about Gallup, but, sadly, Kinsey never contacted me.) But I’d never heard of Scarborough.
According to its website, “Scarborough Research™ measures the lifestyles, shopping patterns, media behaviors, and demographics of American consumers locally, regionally, and nationally.”

Read online: http://wscityguide.com/the-numbers-game/


In the rough: Clubs try promotions, amenities to draw golfers, families


Head golf professionals and general managers at golf courses or country clubs are going round and round, trying to overcome their problems. Fewer people are playing golf, and fewer rounds of golf are being played than a few years ago.


Read more: http://www.bizjournals.com/triad/stories/2006/05/01/focus1.html

SWEET TIMES: WORKSHOP ATTRACTING FAMILIES

CLEMMONS -- The children found a sweet situation last week during a gingerbread-decorating workshop at the Holy Family Catholic Church.

Read more: http://www2.journalnow.com/news/2007/nov/29/gingerbread-covered-with-icing-candy-ar-100215/

NASCAR legends: Benny Parsons

You can tell a lot about Benny Parsons from what happened in late 1973. Parsons was trying to win the Winston Cup title, but he got caught in a wreck on lap 13 of the championship-deciding race at Rockingham.

Focus on: Jazman Richardson

Jazman Richardson's greatest "weakness" would be a strength for many.

"Right now her weakness is that she's constantly pushing herself a little bit harder to get better," said Derrick Speas, the track coach at Winston-Salem Prep.


NASCAR story: Drivers and their fans

Mark Martin hopped out of his hauler into the trap. His face dropped; he didn't realize he was going to have to battle his way to his race car, which was sitting 50 feet away in the garage area of North Carolina Speedway in Rockingham.


Intrigue continues in Ellington-Marlin racing case

The intrigue continues in the Hoss Ellington-Sterling Marlin case. Will Marlin leave? Will he stay?

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