CYP

…and an invitation to bake….!

The children would like to invite anyone coming to the Redland Christmas Party on December 13 to make stained glass gingerbread biscuits beforehand and bring the end result along to the party to share (virtually, sadly). We hope the stained glass in the biscuits will represent the theme of Light which we have been looking at this Autumn term in children’s meeting, from Amnesty International’s candle to Bonfire Night and Diwali.

We will be using this recipe:

Gingerbread stained glass biscuits

Ingredients

  • 175g dark soft brown sugar 85g golden syrup
  • 100g unsalted butter
  • 2-3 tsp ground ginger
  • 350g plain flour, plus extra to dust 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • 1 large egg, lightly beaten
  • clear fruit-flavoured boiled sweets (don’t use anything with a soft centre)
  • white icing, to decorate

You will need

  • star or snowflake cutters

Method

  1. Heat the sugar, golden syrup and butter in a pan until melted. Mix the ginger and flour in a large bowl and make a well in the centre. Add the bicarbonate of soda to the melted mixture and stir – it will fizz a little – then pour into the flour mixture with the egg. Stir to combine. The mix will be soft but will firm up as it cools.
  2. Scoop the mixture into a box or fridge bag and chill for at least 1 hr until firm enough to roll out. The dough can be kept in the fridge for up to a week or frozen for three months.
  3. Heat oven to 190C/170C fan/gas 5. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and cut in half. Briefly knead the first piece, then roll it on a lightly floured surface to 2mm thick. Cut into shapes with snowflake or star cutters about 12cm across, then transfer to
  4. lined baking sheets, leaving a little room for them to spread. Cut a window out of each biscuit using another cutter about about 6cm across, then add a sweet to the centre.
  5. If the sweets are large, chop them up first – you’ll have to judge by the size of the hole. (Don’t be tempted to add too much or it will spill over the edge.) If you plan to hang the biscuits, make a small hole in the top of each one using the end of a piping nozzle (the hole will close up a little so make sure it’s big enough). Repeat with remaining dough.
  6. Bake in batches for 5-6 mins or until they darken slightly and the sweets have melted. If the holes have closed up, remake them while the biscuits are warm. Leave to cool and harden up completely before moving them. Don’t forget to bake the parts you’ve cut out, too! You can decorate the biscuits further by using white piped icing, if you like.

submitted by Cato Pedder

…and an invitation to bake….! Read More »

A meeting for children 0 – 5 years old

Redland Quaker meeting offers a weekly creche group (0-5yrs) that meets on Zoom through a breakout group during Meeting for Worship.

It usually lasts about 15 minutes, and has included:

  • short yoga sessions
  • listening and moving to music
  • making autumn leaf rubbings
  • reading stories together
  • scavenger hunts in our homes.

If you are interested in taking part, please contact Anna Cordle or the elders on the day (e.g by zoom chat) for entry details.

A meeting for children 0 – 5 years old Read More »

Redland Teen Meeting

In October Redland Teen Meeting met to talk about ‘Change: making it possible!’. We collectively created a poem about change which took us on a journey through how change is hopeful, exciting, full of possibility… and at the same time scary and hard and takes perseverance. Individually we thought extensively about all the changes we want make – from personal to political – and then focussed in on one each and thought step by step why we’re passionate about this change and how we can support take steps towards it. Whether we were talking about changes in isolation and loneliness or deforestation, we agreed unanimously that making changes requires love and courage.

Teen Meeting continues to meet on the 2nd Sunday of the month, either on Zoom (as we have since April) or in person (as we hope to very soon, maybe at Claverham Meeting House). If you know any young people who would like to join us, please put them in touch.

Kirsty Philbrick
Youth Development Worker
Quaker Life

Redland Teen Meeting Read More »

Living as a Quaker 2019

A BYM event at the Sustainability Centre in Hampshire – report by Rafa

I went on Living as a Quaker 2019 in a Sustainability Centre. The aim is to keep everything sustainable. It’s in the middle of nowhere. They have 55 acres – huge. There were 9 other young people, four of which I already knew – all from the Bristol area.
The centre runs lots of activities which we could do. For example den building, they didn’t tell us how long we had, they just said they’re a lot of logs here, but then after roughly 20 mins they announced that we had 5 minutes left, we didn’t get any help, we made one pillar with forked logs, laying two against each other, and that held the rest up. We also made an arch you could crawl underneath, out of sand bags, vertical, built over a tyre. We had to squeeze them really close together. And then pull the tyre out. And we had it so that 2 people could stand on it. It was impressive and it showed really good teamwork. We also made sustainable smoothies, pressing the apples by hand… It was all really fun.

And we went looking for dormice, which are very rare, there are not very many of them. You can tell what animal has eaten the hazelnuts by the way it has been chewed.

Of course we played lots of games, chaos tag was really fun, and it was a good way to get to know other people.

Later on in the weekend we learned about how to explain about Quakers to other people. We had a questioner and a quaker. I was a questioner, and Jethro, one of the adults, was the quaker. By asking him questions I learned a lot about Quakerism. Before then there was lots I didn’t know, about the history and other things. I also heard about testimonies, which are important things for Quakers, for eample we used ‘PIES’ – peace, integrity, equality and simplicity, and more recently sustainability has become really important, which is connected to simplicity.

And we also had multiple meetings for worship in different places. Some of them in the dark, there were owls and there were so many different kinds of birds.

It was really fun, and I got to know some new people really well. I was sharing a room with Daniel who I didn’t know before, which was good, because I already knew the people from Bristol well. Our youth worker from Bristol teamed up with the one from Sheffield, so the other young people were mostly from near there.

They are organising something similar in March that I would really like to go to and I heard about an event that lasts a whole week long with lots of activities.

It barely rained at all. The food was all really good. The beds weren’t all that comfortable so I didn’t get so much sleep but overall it was amazing and I enjoyed it a lot so would like to go on more trips like it and encourage any other kids to come as well because they will enjoy it so much!

Rafa Allport

Living as a Quaker 2019 Read More »