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Thursday, February 12, 2026

Ripley Family Ancestors of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget

Ripley Family Ancestors of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget 

Ruth and Florence Paget are related to the Ripley family through their ancestor Phoebe Ann Throop. 

G1 refers to Generation 1 and so on. 

Mother Lines 

G1 – Florence Paget 

G2 – Ruth Pennington (Married Name: Paget) 

G3 – Beatrice May Sawle (Married Name: Pennington) 

G4 – Daisy May Bardsley (Married Name: Sawle) 

G5 – Etta Pearl Carpenter (Married Name: Bardsley) 

G6 – Phoebe Ann Throop (Married Name: Carpenter) 

G7 – Joseph Allen Throop 

-son of Calvin Throop and Anna Ripley 

G8 – Anna Ripley 

-father and mother unknown at this time 

Born: 1784 in Litchfield, Connecticut, US 

Died: August 18, 1856 in Grenville, Canada West 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Brundage Ancestors of Ruth and Florence Paget by Ruth Paget

Brundage (Also known as Brunderage) Ancestors of Ruth and Florence Paget 

Ruth and Florence Paget are related to the Brundages through their ancestor Phoebe Ann Throop. G1 below refers to Generation 1 and so on. 

Mother Lines 

G1 – Florence Paget

G2 – Ruth Pennington (Married Name: Paget) 

G3 – Beatrice May Sawle (Married Name: Pennington) 

G4 – Daisy May Bardsley (Married Name: Sawle) 

G5 – Etta Pearl Carpenter (Married Name: Bardsley) 

G6 – Phoebe Ann Throop (Married Name: Carpenter) 

G7 – Elizabeth Brundage (Married Name: Throop) 

-daughter of Abraham Brundage and Mrs Abraham Brundage 

Born: September 10, 1821 in Preston, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada 

(Lived in New York in 1870 according to Family Search Organization) 

G8 – Abraham Brundage 

Born: 1796 in Canada 

Marriage in Preston, Greenville, Canada to Mrs Abraham Brundage 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Colonial Pudding Cap Pattern for New Walkers reposted by Ruth Paget

Colonial Pudding Cap Pattern for New Walkers Information reposted by Ruth Paget

I first saw a colonial pudding cap at the colonial France’s Land House in Virginia Beach, Virginia.  The blog below gives a pattern for one and its history:

https://crazyconcordchicks.blogspot.com/2012/01/mrs-hancocks-pudding-cap-pattern.html?m=1

The following blog shows puddings caps on historical portraits:

https://sharonlathanauthor.com/pudding-caps/#:~:text=1780),%2C%20velvet%2C%20and%20so%20on.

Pudding caps look like they would a child’s head warm as well as protecting them from falls.

Happy Sewing!

Last-Minute Ticket Sales for Pro-Am Golf Tournament at Pebble Brach, California on sale posted by Ruth Paget

There are still some last-minute tickets available for the Pro-Am Golf Tournament at Pebble Beach, California on February 12, 13, 14, and 15, 2026:

Ticket details and information are available at the link below:

https://www.attpbgolf.com/spectators/tickets/

Posted by Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Vienna Coffee Society Gsmr

Monday, February 9, 2026

Rodeo 2026 Tickets go on sale 2-12-2026 reposted by Ruth Paget

The Monterey Herald announced that Salinas Rodeo tickets will go on sale on Thursday, February 12, 2026 at 10 am.  This year’s concert will be headlined by Grammy winner Miranda Lambert.

Ticket information is on the Monterey Herald site below:

https://www.montereyherald.com/2026/02/09/miranda-lambert-to-headline-kick-off-concert-at-salinas-rodeo/

Reposted by Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Vienna Coffee Game

A link to Ruth Paget’s Vienna Coffee Game follows:

https://ruthpaget.blogspot.com/2021/07/vienna-coffee-games-created-by-ruth.html?m=1

French Baguette Bread Hors d'oeuvres Recipes by Ruth Paget

French Baguette Bread Hors d’oeuvres Recipes by Ruth Paget 

One of the reasons the French seem so adamant about eating their white bread baguettes is that they can easily turn them into rounds for toast, topping, and microwaving into hors d’oeuvres or dinners depending on how many hors d’oeuvres are eaten. 

Baguettes from a bakery are pretty reasonably price, but if you make your own even for weekend consumption on a regular basis, the savings can be tremendous without sparing flavor or texture. If you are interested in seeing how baguettes can be made at home, I have provided the following link to my daughter Florence Paget’s forays in the kitchen.  The recipe makes 2 to 3 baguettes:

Traditional French Baguette Recipe with Photos and Videos

The seven recipes below require you to cut 12 round slices from one baguette that are about ½-inch wide. Then, the baguette slices are grilled or toasted to make a solid base for your hors d’oeuvres. 

*Baguette slice with melted gruyère cheese rectangle sprinkled with crushed Calabrian red peppercorns. It takes about 45 seconds to 1 minute to melt the cheese in the microwave. You can butter the toast first, if you would like.  

*Baguette slice with melted goat cheese slice studded with halves of black Niçoise olive. It takes about 1 minute to microwave to melt goat cheese. You can drizzle on olive oil on the toast first, if you would like. 

*Baguette slice with shrimp-mayonnaise spread made with Japanese mayonnaise or homemade mayonnaise (1/2 cup) and ¾ to 1 cup cooked shrimp without their shells. Place the mayonnaise and shrimp in a blender and mix to a paste. Spread shrimp paste on baguette rounds and sprinkle with Calabrian crushed red pepper. 

*Baguette slice spread with sour cream with a slice of smoked salmon on top and garnished wit dill. Whipped cream cheese can also be used as a spread. 

*Baguette slice spread with tapenade – a mixture of pitted black olives, capers, crushed garlic, lemon juice, olive oil, and parsley. My family does not like tapenade, but this spread is a popular one and is often served with melted goat cheese on top. 

*Baguette slice with a cream cheese and walnut spread that is made by blending the two main ingredients in a blender.  Other nuts can also be used in a spread this way.

*Baguette slice with a cream cheese and black olive spread that is made by blending the two main ingredients in a blender. 

Suggested Beverages: San Pellegrino Sparkling Water, white wines like pinot grigio (pinot gris), sauvignon blanc, and dry Riesling, hard cider like Henry Hot Spurs, and lager beers like Peroni Nastro Azzuro (Official sponsor of the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics). 

Suggested Side Salads: Grated carrot salad, lentil salad, and organic greens 

Bon Appétit! 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of Teff: The Global Flour Game

Sunday, February 8, 2026

Making Traditional French Baguette Online Exhibit with Florence Paget by RuthbPaget

Making French Traditional Baguette Bread Online Exhibit with Florence Paget by Ruth Paget 

In 1993, the French government decreed that bread that is sold as French traditional baguettes can only contain 4 ingredients in its Décret Pain (93 – 1074): wheat flour, water, salt, and yeast. 

My daughter Florence Paget wanted to bake baguettes as a family heritage project, so we bought organic ingredients and she set to work on the following recipe, which I recorded in step-by-step photos and videos below. 

Traditional French Baguette Bread Recipe 

3 ¼ cup flour 

1 ¼ cup warm water 

2 ¼ teaspoons yeast (1 package active dry yeast) 

2 teaspoons sea salt 

Oven temperature: 480 degrees Fahrenheit 

Baking time: 20 minutes 




Florence first sprinkled yeast on the warm water and mixed it up till it was cloudy and beginning to slightly bubble. 

Florence placed all the flour in a mixing bowl and all the water and blended the dough with a mixer while it was liquid. As the water was absorbed by the flour, she then mixed the dough with her hands. This is a sticky operation. 

At this point, she made the dough into a ball and covered it and placed it in a cool oven to rise. The time for rising will vary depending on the temperature in the room. Dough rising can take between 1 and 2 hours. 

After 2 hours, Florence set out her bread baking pan on the stove and pulled the risen dough out from the oven. Florence turned on the oven to preheat to 480 degrees Fahrenheit and placed a pan of water on the lower rack of the oven that would steam the bread as it cooked to make a crunchy crust. Next, she floured the kitchen counter for kneading the risen dough. (Note: We have a well-seasoned pizza stone in our oven which also helps keep the oven warm when baking other items.) 

As you can see from the photo, the dough has doubled in size. Florence carefully peeled the ball of dough out onto the floured counter to avoid crushing air bubbles in the dough. She gently kneaded the dough a few times before shaping it into long loaves by cutting the dough in half, shaping it into a rectangle, and rolling up the rectangles into loaves. Do a minimum of dough handling to avoid popping air bubbles. 

Florence stretched the dough loaves out and placed them in the baking dish. She then scored them with a knife into diagonal shapes on one loaf and down the center of the bread on the other. She then covered the loaves to let them rise again. 

When the stove had preheated and the dough loaves had risen, it was time for them to go in the oven on the rack above the steaming water in the pan on the lower rack. 

The bread should be done baking in 20 minutes. It should have the characteristic round patterned bottom as seen in the photo. The thick crust on the bread keeps it fresher for an extra day it seems when you bake baguettes at home. 

The photos and videos below will walk through the baguette baking process that Florence Paget used:






































 













Note: French baguette bread hors d’oeuvres serving suggestion follows:


Note: When baguettes become a day old and rather hard, cut them into thick rectangles and use them for dunking in soup.

Note: When baguettes are a day old and become hard, they can be cut into chunks and placed in a food processor to make bread crumbs.  You can add the bread crumbs to pasta or on top of casseroles.

Note: Of course, cubes of day old baguette are used in fondue.  See my blog below for details: 


Bon Appétit!

Photos, Videos, and Text By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of Teff: The Global Flour Game