Considering that
we invited all fifty-or-so students for good food and fellowship, we were a bit
overwhelmed by the planning of such an event (even knowing that not all would
be able to attend). But hey, we learned
how to cook for thirty people easily at World Hunger Relief, right?
So, we borrowed chairs,
large numbers of plates, and some huge pots for cooking. And we had help from Edward's wife on
planning how much food to get as well as Paul's expertise from having been a
chef at PTC. Paul directed the cooking
of the various dishes - beans, potatoes, pilau, and cabbage.
Anthony chopped
lots and lots of onions, tomatoes, and meat.
I cooked a massive
amount of pilau and baked three cakes.
When our friends
arrived, everyone enjoyed catching up with each other and with us. Many of them had not seen each other in years
because they live all over the country. We
had a great time going around and having each person share what they have been
doing since we left Uganda in 2010.
We prayed and sang
together and even played a game of Bible pictionary. There were some pretty funny drawings and
lots of laughter.
It was great to
catch up with our friends and to discover that many of them are living
relatively close to Soroti. We received
many invitations back to their homes and villages, probably more than we have
time for. But as much as possible, we
hope that we will get to continue to minister alongside these very special
people.
Oh, by the way, we prepared way more than enough food! We wanted to make sure no one went away hungry and planned for more than the twenty who RSVP'd in case more showed up. However, it ended up only being only about twenty-five of us total. In the end, we invited all the neighbors to come and take home most of the leftovers. So we probably fed sixty to one hundred people with our meal, which made us think of Jesus' parable about the wedding feast where the host had to invite in all the people off the streets to come for the celebration!
Very cool, Sara. I love these pictures too. You have such a wonderful home and it looks like a terrific celebration.
ReplyDeleteIs that a mango tree I see you sitting under? If so, you are extremely fortunate. Mangoes are just wonderful fruit and to have them fresh is really a great blessing. I just love your compound.
Bill
Hi Sara --
ReplyDeleteThanks for the wonderful commentary!
Your outdoor "kitchen" looks beautiful, and it seems handy to just dump vegetable peels on the ground -- do the goats eat the onion peels? And why are your goats tied up?
-- Sharon
Sharon, no the goats don't like onion peels. We raked all of those vegetable peelings up after we finished chopping and put them in the compost pile. And we have to tie up the goats so they don't destroy my garden. One of them escaped the other day and completely ate all the plants of two kinds of beans I had in the garden....
ReplyDeleteBill, yes we have a nice big mango tree in our yard. I think I need to come up with a use for massive quantities of mangoes. Mangosauce?
Sara,
ReplyDeleteWhere are your rocket stoves???
;)
What beautiful pictures of beautiful people. Cute hedgehog. I hope he recovers!
ReplyDeleteYui, I don't think I could cook 50 cups of rice over one of those tiny things!
ReplyDeleteYep, same kind of ground cooking method they use in LIB :)
ReplyDelete