Showing posts with label birthdays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birthdays. Show all posts

June 10, 2016

Birthday party perfect 1950s Pink Coconut Snowball Cupcakes


It's hard to believe that nearly a year has passed since I last sat down to debate what I might like to serve when my next birthday rolled around (which I did by taking a look at 15 of my favourite desserts ever).

With my 32nd rounding the bend in precisely one month's time, I've already begun planning my birthday menu and though, as usual, the dessert choice is nowhere near finalized yet (more often than not, that happens at about 11:45 pm on July 9th), a quick peek through my collection of saved vintage recipe ads turn up a real charmer of a mid-century take on coconut snowball cupcakes.



{Looking very, very much like the marshmallow cream filled chocolate snack cakes that are Sno Balls, these adorable pink coconut topped cupcakes would be an ideal choice for any birthday celebration. Vintage recipe image source.}


I love chocolate, I love coconut (and as discussed in this post, it's always a safe choice when feeding my family), and I absolutely love anything pink, plus these darling little cupcakes just seem to have a fun, festive air about them.

They're also a snap to whip up, which means less time spent with the oven on during July - which is always a good thing! I like, too, that they'd be a breeze to put a gluten-free cake mix to work in and that, if so desired, one could certainly leave the coconut untinted.

You could also add in some chocolate chips or pieces and make these double chocolate snowball cupcakes. A favourite extract - say orange, mint, lemon, almond, or coffee - could also be used to jazz them up further, as could adding some festive candies or slices/pieces of fresh fruit on top of the pretty pink coconut.

If one goes in for birthday candles (and I definitely do!), it's always fun when serving cupcakes at a celebratory meal to top each one with enough candles to collectively equal the person's age - or conversely, just select a couple of cupcakes and stick a number shaped candle atop both.

And if you wanted to take this recipe in an especially elegant direction, you could forgo the coconut and instead coat each little cake in a layer of fondant or almond paste and then adorn them with candied (edible) flower petals, grapes or citrus peel. They might not look quite as "snowballish" any longer, but I assure that they'd still be every bit as scrumptious.

I've still got a month to decide on what I'll be making for this year's birthday, and you know, I'm starting to think - in the name of serious scientific taste testing, naturally - that I might just have to road test these cutie pies (err, cakes) before then.

One has to be sure, after all, that they're going to adore their birthday dessert and it's always better to veer on the side of (completely delicious) caution in these kinds of instances. :D

April 15, 2016

Seven of the best gifts that blogging can give you


In just two days time, on Sunday April 17th, this blog will turn seven years old. Can you believe that? Sometimes it boggles even my mind, and I've been the one powering the ship, if you will, that whole time!

I was in my mid-twenties when Chronically Vintage kicked off, now I'm less than three months away from my 32nd birthday.

Time tends to move more quickly the older you get. I can remember adults, especially those in their mid to later years telling me that when I was little, and though I readily believed them, it wasn't until I started to experience such myself, that I fully understood just what they meant and how incredibly precious each and every day that we're given on this planet is.

In last year's blogiversary post, I feel like I said a lot of what I had to say until in terms of looking back on CV's life and every word that I wrote then still applies, so I don't feel pulled to pen a similar entry here today.
 
Actually, for a long time (months) in advance, I wasn't sure what I was going to write in order to mark this exciting blogging milestone. I knew that I didn't want to rush into a topic or simply say "It's my blog's birthday! Yay!" (though I do very much feel excited + happy like in that way).

I pondered a lot of possible topics and even wrestled with some deep emotions regarding certain things that I debated writing about, but when this week approached and I meditated on the topic one more time, my mind kept returning to what a blessing blogging can be in our lives and how very, very much this continual act has enriched and enhanced my world over the last seven years.

I know that I am by no means alone in benefitting and feeling bettered by the act of blogging, especially after a person has been plugging away at it for several years. Blogging, though common in the sense that countless people do it, is a unique experience.

More intimate than many (traditional) websites, yet perhaps less "in your face" than social media can be, blogging deserves its rightful slice of the web and though I know many have moved on from it in recent years, the longer some of us remain here, the more devoted than ever I sense that a lot of people are to their sites and being active members in the blogging community as a whole.

There is no shortage to the number of positive things that can arise from blogging and the handful presented here today are just the tip of the iceberg. These seven things are ones that I have personally experienced, often on a daily basis, throughout my blog's life, and which I'm sure many of you will be able to instantly relate to as well.


Seven of the best gifts that
blogging can give you 



1. Blogging helps you to get to know and understand yourself better: I am often astounded by how much this point rings true for me in my own life. I've always been an extremely introspective person who is open to growth, change and self-realization, but it isn't wasn't until I started presenting elements of my life, my work, my passions, and my own past online, that I hit upon many important discoveries about who I am - while also becoming more self-confident through the act of sharing more about myself with all of you.


2. Blogging gives you the chance to help others, as well as to benefit greatly from your peers: This is, hands down, one of my favourite elements of blogging. Whether it's presenting my own knowledge in a post, replying to questions, running the Vintage Secret Santa gift exchange come the holiday season, brainstorming ideas with an online friend, or learning from others, blogging instantly gives you a built-in community and a vital support system that, arguably, is even more important for those of us who are the sole (or very nearly so) vintage enthusiast in our own town.

There is no limit to the ways that you can give and help others when you blog, and in turn that you can benefit from the interactions that you have with your fellow blogging community members.


3. Blogging helps you to filter and grow your thoughts in a really positive way: If I had a dollar for every "ah-ha" or light bulb moment I've had thanks to blogging, I could whittle down my vintage wishlist mighty quickly. I've said it before, but I'll say it again because it really does ring so true for me: creativity - including blog post writing - begets creativity and the far from running out of post ideas, the longer I keep writing, the more seem to come my way. As you hone your attention on a given topic (be it vintage or otherwise), you often become more driven and focused both in terms of how you blog, as well as how you carry out other areas of your life.


4. Blogging makes you a better, more focused writer: Just as blogging can help give us incredible new thoughts and to filter out others that may not have to do with our online work, so too does it help us to hone our abilities and talents as a writer.

I've always loved writing and can't fathom not doing it in one form or another, and I’m sincerely grateful for the ways in which this digital art has helped me to grow as a writer (no matter what context I'm creating in). I don't just mean, of course, that we might make less typos, but rather that it - like practising anything often enough - we become more skilled and confident, which so often translates into posts that are more positively received and a higher quality blog over all.


5. Blogging can help you create incredible friendships: It's true. In this day and age, when so many of our interactions are via things like Facebook and FaceTime, not actually face-to-face in person, the innate need to bond with others that we can relate to is stronger than ever before, and while there will always be difference between online and offline friendships, there are a great many similarities between the two as well.

Blogging can lead to a wide array of friendships, some of which may, ultimately result in bonds that last for the rest of your life. As well, for those who may be highly shy, introverted, deal with anxiety and/or depression, chronic illness, or a myriad of other things that can cause real world social interaction to be a challenge (at least some of the time), blogging is a beautiful way to form the connections with others that we crave, and genuinely need, while still being comfort in our own homes.


6. Blogging teaches you better time management skills: I had a revelation of sorts last year when I decided to dedicate days both to just replying to emails as well as to miscellaneous "this and that tasks. Both have proved to be hugely beneficial and successful in terms of helping me to management my time, just as having a blog schedule had already done for years.

Blogging, when carried out with any degree of regularity, can take up a huge amount of time and whether your site is a hobby, your career, or anywhere in between, we can all benefit from from the constructive ways in which blogging helps us to map out and plan how we're going to spend our time - both on and off-line.


7. Blogging is always there for you: Granted, it might not snuggle up in your lap like a beloved pet or ask you how your day was when you get home like a family member or roommate may, but because our sites are digital worlds that we've created for ourselves, they are there for us 24/7 and are, in many respects, a constant companion.

Just stop and ponder, for example, how much time you've spent thinking about your blog? I promise you that there are many people in your life, even some that you love and care about dearly, that you've not devoted anywhere near as much time to over the years.

The relationship that that we have with our blog is, likewise, often akin to those with a human being or pet, too. There are highs and lows, points of frustration, great joys, new experiences, new challenges, and the need to continually (if only subconsciously) recommit ourselves to being a part of that union day in and day out.



{The act of blogging itself can be a gift that keeps on giving and one that I feel especially lucky, on the eve of my site's birthday, to have been able to learn from, teach others about, and be inspired by for so many wonderful years now. Vintage photo source.}



♥ ♥ ♥


Seven is a number that I like a great deal. I was born in the seventh month of the year and my first name has seven letters, so those two points alone help me to feel a kinship with this digit. Much as I have felt since the get-go that 2016 will be, when all is said and done, a positive year, so too do I sense that Chronically Vintage's next year of life will also be a great one – and all the more so because this will be its seventh.

I like to look ahead, to imagine where this blog will go (and sometimes, even, just for the sake of it, to picture what my life would be like if I didn't blog here any longer), but at the same time, the older I get, the more I try to live in the moment as much as possible, too.

For time is, as those grownups told me all those years ago, fleeting and life far, far too short. I feel called, if you will, to embrace the here and now (in so much as it relates to a life lived amongst the pages of the past through my passion for history and vintage) and to never lose sight of the blessings, like those detailed here today, that blogging has given me.

On the cusp of this site's seventh birthday, I ask you, my dear friends, how has blogging enriched your own life and what gifts would you add to this list?

April 2, 2016

Playing along with the I ♥ Spring Tag



Today is not only the first Saturday of April, but it just happens to be my darling mother's birthday as well. As such, it's especially jubilant day for me and not a time for long or overly serious blog posts in the slightest!

The sun is shining, the birds are (quite literally) singing right outside my window, the first gleeful hits of green are returning to the landscape and the world feels both alive and abuzz and with excitement and joy right now.

Back in 2013, I started seeing a fun little blog and YouTube video tag about spring appear on various sites (including Miss Budget Beauty) and tucked it away on my "to write a post about" list at the time.

Jump ahead three years, and today, on this blissful day, it seemed like the ideal time had come to answer the twelve quick questions in the I ♥ Spring Tag, before starting a fabulous day of birthday celebrations for my mom.



Playing along with the I Spring Tag









1. Favourite spring nail polish? Tough call!!! I really let the pastel adoring side of my wardrobe run wild and free in the spring, very much including with my nail polish picks, so it's tricky to narrow things down to just one favourite. That said, I do return year after year to Essie's Lilacism. It's such a cheery, sweet shade of purple that suits this season to a tee.






2. Must have spring lip colour?: Although I think it's been discontinued for a while, I still have the better part of a tube (that is holding up great), so I'm opting for one of the only coral shades that has ever looked good on me (coral face makeup + pink undertones in my skin are rarely a winning combo, but somehow this one works): MAC's Made With Love (seen in this outfit post from last May).



3. Favourite style of dress for spring? Something lightweight, immensely feminine, and very likely floral print (like the 1950s Horrockses stunners above!).




4. Favourite spring flower? There's sooo many to love and appreciate. How does one narrow it down to a single favourite. Hard, so hard! :) For the sake of their sublimely pretty scent alone, I think that lilacs may very well emerge as the winner for me in this camp, but I'm also partial to roses, hydrangeas, sweat peas (my mom's favourite flower), tulips, and lilies.





5. Favourite springtime (fashion) accessory? A great vintage straw hat and/or handbag (extra bonus points if flowers are involved with either), as they really symbolize the end of winter and return of warmer, milder weather and the gorgeous fashions that this chapter of the year entail.





6. What spring trends are you most looking forward to? Given that us vintage wearing folks usually make our own trends, this question isn't per se that applicable to my wardrobe, but in general some elements of springtime fashion that I adore and get excited for each year include the aforementioned straw accessories and floral dresses, pastel and/or sparkly jewelry, open toed shoes, capri pants, sheer (chiffon, silk, etc) scarves, lightweight mid-century blouses, and a royal garden's worth of hair flowers.





7. Favourite spring candle? Ooohh, good question! I'm a very avid candle buyer and user and definitely enjoy pairing many of my choices with the different seasons. When it comes to spring, I'd say probably something light and floral or subtly sweet, such as a jasmine (Voluspa, whose entire line of products I madly adore, makes an especially sublime jasmine candle, pictured above), lemon, rose or peach scent.




8. Favourite perfume/body spray for spring? For the past about 14 – 15 years now, my go-to warm weather scent has been Romance from Ralph Lauren. It's a truly beautiful classic that I will keep reaching for each spring and summer for as long as it's on the market.




9. What is spring like where you live? It generally starts around the beginning of April, when we hop from snow to rain that will usually last into May. From that point onward, the days generally start to heat up quite quickly as we live in one of the warmest parts of Canada, and by the beginning of June, it's not uncommon to feel like summer is here already.




10. What is your favourite thing about spring? That it means winter is over! :D I'm only half kidding there, but more seriously, hmmmmm, there's so much to adore about spring! From the return of yard sale season to the dipping one's toes in the lake (or ocean) again to the seasonal produce, a bevy of blooms everywhere to the spring's various holidays, and of course all of sweet, gorgeous warm weather vintage fashions themselves, too!




11. Are you a spring cleaner? Majorly so! We did a lot of our spring cleaning and around-the-house DIY jobs back in January, but you can bet your bottom dollar that I'll be busting out the ol' elbow grease at various points this spring, too.





12. Any plans for spring break or upcoming vacations? None at the moment (boo!!!), but one never knows what exciting travel adventure is waiting for them next, and even if a bigger getaway isn't in the cards this spring, I suspect Tony and I will try to get in a weekend road trip or two now that roads are becoming a lot safer to drive on again.




I'm not going to tap anyone specifically, so all means, if you'd like to play along, too, please do!

Spring is a stellar season and one that doesn't necessarily get as much love on the blog/YouTube video tag front as the other three, so I say we shower it with an April shower’s worth of blog tag answers this time around. :)



{To learn more about a specific image used in this post, please click on it to be taken to its respective source.}






Here's to the start of April and what I hope will be a brilliant fourth month of the year for everyone! I have oodles of fun things in the works for both this month and the rest of spring - including lots of exciting warm(er) weather outfit posts - and can hardly wait to share such happenings here with all with you.

First though, I'm off to celebrate the birth of the woman who gave me life. My sweet mama, who I love, cherish and am grateful for beyond words - and whose birthday has always ensured that April kicked off on an especially happy note for our family.

July 13, 2013

Time for some much needed weekend R&R


At the risk of sounding like a broken record (a similar sentiment kicked off my last entry), this isn't the post I'd had planned for today. The other has already been written and could have gone live, but somehow it just didn't seem right for this easygoing, sun-drenched mid-July Saturday. The subject matter is a bit serious (it's about USPS's steep rate hikes earlier this year), and though I'm sure it will pop up here sooner or later, again, after such a fun filled, enjoyable week, it just didn't seem like today was well suited to it.

This week has been a hectic one, compounded with the fact the fact that I've not been doing too terrific on the health front this month (I was actually really not feeling well on my birthday, and wasn't able to dress up and/or do an outfit shoot that day as a result - but with the help of a mid-afternoon nap, I was able to get through the day and truly enjoyed every low-key moment of it), which stems at least in part from a very heavy new medication that I started last month.

As such, I've had next to no time to spend online so far this week, and I must apologize if I haven't made it to your own lovely blog in a few days. I suspect next week will be more in keeping with the usual ebb and flow of things, and that I'll be online a bit more.

The basement flood situation that I discussed here is progressing positively. In the wake of having to move everything out of our storage room down there (which was actually the point of entry for the water) because of it, we've decided to rent a small storage unit to house most of what was tucked away in that room (such as seasonal decor, old paper work, luggage, etc) and to transform that room into a home gym for Tony, once the flooring situation has sorted out. 


There's nothing to say we wouldn't have done this had we not been hit with a basement flood, but I'm sure it was a big push in that direction, and I must say, I'm excited to transform that room isn't something that I know my husband is truly going to love having under our roof.

And speaking of adding things to our home, last week (spurred on in no small part by the heat wave that rolled through town around the start of July) we had central air installed in our lovely little condo and are so exceedingly grateful that we won't have to rely on fans and window AC units to get us through another roasty-toasty Okanagan summer.

As I've touched on here and there in posts over the years, as much as I adore this season, the heat can be an extra challenge for my health (I hold up much better in the winter in this respect - and sometimes joke, as a result, that I'm going to up and more to the arctic because of how much better I fare in cold weather!), but with any luck, having central air will help significantly in this respect.

Between the heat (outside), the busyness of this week, and not feeling like a million dollars at the moment, I'm pretty spent as we kick off the weekend, which means its high time for some much needed rest and relaxation.

It's too early in the summer to throw in the (beach) towel entirely - there's easily a couple more solid months of sizzling Okanagan summer ahead of us, so stopping to recharge my batteries as often as possible, so to speak, is a definite must.



 photo 227460920-17140959_zpsdcc49b8d.jpg

{Much like actor Alan Ladd and his wife in this 1950s photo of the couple taken by Bill Anderson, my weekend is slated to be as serene and laid back as possible - completely with plenty of outdoor lounging, reading, and time to unwind. Image source.}


Cold drinks, snuggles with Annie (who, hard as it is to believe, will be six months old next week) and Stella, cozying up with a good book (Claire McCardell's 1950s classic, What Shall I Wear?, to be exact), catching up on some of the week's many emails, and perhaps a Netflix movie or two are the name of the game today and tomorrow.

Whether you've got an itinerary so action packed it would tire Indiana Jones out, are planning to join me for some peaceful relaxation, or find your schedule falls somewhere in between, I truly hope that you each have a splendid weekend, my dears!


*PS*

Thank you again, everybody, not only for your awesomely lovely birthday wishes (all across the web), but for each and every one of your blog comments here this week (it was such a joy to read about some of your own fabulous memories of the 1980s).

July 9, 2013

29 things I love about the 1980s


Generally speaking, when peering back at the past this blog, we keep thing squarely to a pre-1965 timeframe, however today we're going to deviate from the norm for a little while and spend a few minutes getting reacquainted with the the exciting world of the 1980s.

“Why, Jess?” I hear you asking, no doubt just as curious about that point as you are about why I went with the seemingly completely random number "29" for the number of entries on this list, instead of rounding up to, say, thirty. The reason for both of these things can be found in the fact that tomorrow is my 29th birthday and that, on a scorching hot July day, I was born in 1984.

Given that I only got to experience six years of this decade, I won't even begin to claim that I can remember every last detail of it with crystal clarity, nor that I was able to experience all of its highs and lows firsthand. However, from about the age of three onwards, I do recall quite a lot of what I lived during the enjoyable eighties and thought that today, on my birthday eve, it was high time I paid tribute to some of the things that I adore most from this decade.

The 1980s were many things to many people, but for most - at least in society's overall perspective - they were a positive time. By and large, the middle class was still thriving, technology was making huge strides, fashion was fun as all get out, brunch was the king of meals, music was toe-tappingly cool, and there was absolutely no shortage of toys, TV shows, movies, books, and even clothing lines (OshKosh B'Gosh, anyone?) centered at children.

By the eighties many of the people who had been born during the immediate post year wars of 1945-1960 had come of age, started their careers, settled down and begun to raise families of their own. These parents were often markedly different than the generation that had proceeded them. Many mothers began working outside of the home, and the era of the latchkey child was in full swing.

Kids - at least where I grew up - still played outside all around the neighborhood, walked to school alone, decided to see their friends on their own terms (the notion of scheduled play dates was scarcely alive yet), and usually had a wish list of toys about ten miles long. We had sleepovers, Scholastic book fairs, penny candies, ALF, and a whole lot of Molly Ringwald movies.

Our parents might have been yuppies, our older cousins Valley Girls, and our teenage babysitters, New Romantics. Everyone, it seemed, tried to fit into one group or another (not that there was anything terribly new about this point in the 80s, of course), and - for the most part - the bulk of these different cliques got along pretty well (despite what many a teen flick of the time might have you believe).

When I think back to the 1980s, it was often sunny (at least where we lived), people were happy, groceries (and gas) were still affordable, and there was always a great song on the radio (or new fangled CD player).

While, of course, I would have loved to have been alive during the mid-twentieth century, I'm grateful that I still got to partake of the tail end of this incredible part of human history.

The 1980s weren't all sunshine, rainbows, and sparkly unicorn stickers, and I don't claim for the a second that such was the case, but when all is said and done, there's a lot to love about this decade.

Therefore, today, just hours before I enter the last year of my twenties, I'm going to share a list of 29 of my favourite (completely random) things, celebrities, movies, TV shows, and foods from the awesome eighties with all of you (note that not while not all of these listings were invented or first rose to fame during the eighties, they were certainly big hits throughout the decade).



1. Pastels





2. Big (permed) hair




3. Miami Vice




4. Super Mario Brothers Nintendo games




5. Power Suits




6. Making mix tapes




7. Cabbage Patch Kids dolls




8. Ferris Buellers's Day Off




9. Michael Jackson's music




10. Oregon Trail (computer game)




11. The Golden Girls




12. Alphie II toy




13. Super lacy bridal fashions




14. The Sony Walkman




15. Muppet Babies




16. Orange Julius drinks




17. Preppy fashion (and it's UK counterpart, Sloane Ranger fashion)




18. Babysitter Club books




19. Popples




20. Gelly Bracelets




21. Barbie and the Rockers




22. Anything Lisa Frank (from stickers to Trapper Keepers to clothes)




23. Paint With Water coloring books




24. The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles




25. Bubble Tape chewing gum




26. Scratch and Sniff (Smell) stickers




27. Jump Rope for Heart




28. Stick On Earrings




29. Color Me Beautiful books and "draping" consultations




{To learn more about a specific image, please click on it to be taken to its respective page.}



♥ ♥ ♥


Now, if this list doesn't make you want to tease your bangs, toss on some slouch socks, pop a Lean Cuisine in the microwave, and head on down to the video store, I don't know what will!

As I look back at the 1980s with adult eyes, I realize that they were akin to my (and I'd imagine many peoples') twenties. A time of highs and lows, scads of changes, plenty of loud music, fab fashion, and a certain sort of youthful spirit that I know I will always regard with a special kind of fondness.

Neither was perfect (by a long shot), but I'm truly grateful for both spans of time, and am looking forward to starting the last year of my twenties tomorrow, every bit as much as I am about the prospect of kicking off my thirties in a mere year and a day from now.

I hope that you all enjoyed this quick peek back at one of the most energy packed, fun filled, ever-changing decades of the last century, as I did putting it together (I'd love to hear about some of the things you adored most about the 80s as well).

While I'm a child of the eighties and I'll always reflect on this decade with oodles of love, my wardrobe and greatest passion for the past lie in earlier decades, which we'll be returning to (as per usual) in the next post here.

Right now, I'm off to whip up a yummy gluten-free cheesecake, narrow down the list of possible outfit choices for tomorrow, and crank up some Michael Jackson - after all, you can take the birthday girl out of the 80s, but you can't take the 80s out of the birthday girl! :)

August 1, 2012

Ten seriously scrumptious vintage chocolate desserts

Given the hefty heat wave that much of the world is melting away under right now, the first day of August might not seem like ideal time for a post about chocolate desserts. Valentine's, Easter, or Halloween perhaps, I hear you say, but I have good reason for busting out the vintage chocolate as we launch into the eight month of the year, sun a blazing away wildly over head.

You see, next Monday, the 6th, just happens to my sweet husband's birthday, and Tony is a chocoholic if ever there was one! Though he's the first to admit he has a sweet tooth in general, chocolate has always been his dessert passion and culinary guilty pleasure of choice, so in honour of Tony's 32nd birthday, I thought it would be oodles of fun to gather of ten vintage chocolate based desserts that I've been stashing away to use in recipe posts for some time now.

As it's a birthday that we'll soon be toasting, there you'll find several cakes amongst the list, but there are also mouth-watering recipes for splendid looking pies, a silky cream roll, and a comforting chocolate bread pudding, too. It's safe to say that there's at least one recipe here to please nearly every chocolate fan!


{Chocolate Chip Cake}

1940s Betty Crocker Chocolate Chip Cake recipe, vintage desserts



{Chocolate Pear Cream Pie}


Vintage Chocolate Pear Cream Pie recipe



{Chocolate Bread Pudding}


Vintage Chocolate Bread Pudding recipe



{Checkerboard Cake}

Vintage 1930s Checkerboard Cake recipe



{Chocolate Fudge Pie}


Vintage Chocolate Fudge Pie, Magic Chocolate Pie recipe



{Choco-Walnut Potato Cake}


Vintage Chocolate Walnut Potato Cake recipe



{Chocolate Meringue Pie}


Vintage Chocolate Meringue Pie recipe, Cadnury's Bournville Cocoa ad



{Chocolate Almond Cream Roll}

Vintage Chocolate Almond Cream Roll Cake recipe



{One Bowl Chocolate Cake with Chiffon Frosting}


Vintage One Bowl Chocolate Cake with Chiffon Frosting recipe



{Double Chocolate Marble Cake}


Vintage Double Chocolate Marble Cake recipe





{All vintage recipe images above are from Flickr. Please click on an image to be taken to its respective Flickr source.}

♥  ♥  ♥


While August often dictates frozen desserts, iced coffees, and no-bake cheesecakes, should you happen to have a birthday or anything else important that you're planning to celebrate this month, I hope you'll find one or more awesomely yummy yesteryear chocolate recipes from amongst this selection that will fit the bill for your special event to a tee.

Though Tony's big day is still nearly a week away, I can't help but feel giddy with excitement about it already! Now though, the real question becomes, which of these sweet, sinfully fabulous chocolate desserts should I make him?


*PS*

Tony's not the only one who's in line to receive a delightful treat soon. If you haven't already, be sure to enter Chronically Vintage's giveaway this week for a $40.00 gift certificate from Malta based etsy vintage fashion seller Fairyfiligree, and you too could see soon be celebrating with a fantastic new gift of your own!