Wally and the Beav
December 17, 2025
Stumbled across this ancient family photo, taken circa 1934… (I’m guessing, based on how old Aunt Ellie looks, and extrapolating from there.)
I think Uncle Vic and Dad look like Wally and Beaver.
From L to R: Aunt Ellie (1932-2019), Grandma Mary (1898-1995), Edward Short (Grandma’s dad, 1868-1936), Uncle Vic (1922-2014), Hattie Short (Grandma’s mom, 1871-1949), dad (1927-2000), Grandpa Pete (1894-1981).
I loved Grandma and Grandpa so so much.

~~~~
Then… I started down a rabbit hole……
I dug this up on my great grandparents:
Hattie and Edward Short are buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Cedar Falls, Black Hawk County, Iowa.
- Hattie Dellavon Brinkley Scott Short (1871–1949): Buried at Greenwood Cemetery.
- Edward Short (1868–1936): Buried at Greenwood Cemetery after passing away in Cedar Falls Township.
Aunt Bonnie took Matt and me to visit the Greenwood Cemetery in 2017 when we were in Iowa for a visit. We saw Great Grandma Hattie and Great Grandpa Edward’s gravesite. It was fantastic to see this.

I dug deeper…..
This was my great grandmother Hattie…

And my great grandfather Edward…

More on him:


This is a great photo of Hattie, Edward and 7 of their 8 children. Hattie Zoe didn’t come along until 9 years after Ethel (oops!), which is why she’s not pictured here. I’m guessing this photo is taken in about 1910.
L to R: Martha, Hattie, Ethel, Leone, Romeo, Cynthia, Vera, Edward, Mary

Jim, Matty and I will be traveling to Grinnel, Iowa this coming summer to celebrate Aunt Bonnie’s 95th birthday (she’s Dad’s first cousin, and Cynthia’s daughter). Maybe we’ll get back out to Cedar Falls. There is a lot of history in that town on Dad’s mom’s side of the family!
Learned a Few Things Today
December 7, 2025
It was Dror’s 70th birthday. He’s the third or fourth cousin in our Frame cohort to turn 70. Well, now that I’ve said that, let’s really count: Teresa was the first, then Chad, then Jim, then Marie, then Marty.. and now Dror (he’s the sixth, as it turns out). Then it will be me, then Alan.. and so it will go (Monica, Mark, John, Maita, probably in that order). (Someone correct me if I’m wrong on that.)
Back to the topic of this blog post: Dror’s birthday. And more specifically, the baking of his requested birthday cake.
First thing I learned: Dror’s favorite cake is Black Forest.
Never made one of those. Wasn’t even sure what it was.
Researched some recipes, found one from a site called Liv for Cake. Seemed definitive, got great reviews. She said it was an easy cake. I’m not sure I would say that. Each part is easy, but there are a lot of parts and it took all afternoon to make the thing.
So.. you make the cake (that is easy). You divide the batter between two 8″ or 9″ cake pans. It has to cool completely before going to the assembly phase, so that takes some time. While that’s happening, you make some cherry syrup (sugar, water, and Maraschino liqueur, or Kirsch). That was easy. Then you make what will become thin dark chocolate bark. That was easy, too, but required watching a video for its clever technique. Then you make some whipped cream. Also easy, but yet another step.
Okay.. so here’s the cake, it was really good cake in its bare state:

I asked Jim to do the honors of cutting each cake into two layers, for a total of four. Look at that concentration.

You put a layer on a cake plate, generously spread cherry liqueur syrup over it, add a layer of whipped cream..

… and then add cherries. Cherries are not in season so I used frozen and sorta splayed them across the layer. One could (maybe should) use Maraschino cherries. But I just couldn’t. These were a blend of sweet and sour cherries, so I added a bunch of sugar to them to sweeten them up.

Then you repeat this for each layer. You end up with a four-layer cake. I usually top out at two-layer cakes.. so this was kind of new.
You then frost the entire outside of the cake with the whipped cream:

One can then decorate it in all kinds of ways. Most folks do puffs of whipped cream on top with a cherry on top of each puff. Some sprinkle with shaved chocolate (that’s what we did). Some do both.
For extra excitement, Liv for Cake suggested surrounding the cake with chocolate bark. That seemed fun.. so I learned how to make bark. You heat some good dark chocolate in the microwave, stirring in 20 second increments until just melted. Then spread in a thin layer on a sheet of parchment paper. Then roll the parchment into a roll about 1.5-2″ in diameter. After it has chilled in the refrigerator for about 30-60 mins, it is ready to be unfurled, and as you do that, shards fall off in curved lengths. I made two of these, and I gotta say: fantastic!

This is what we did with them:

The chocolate shavings on top came from grating a bar of dark chocolate w/ the cheese grater. Also pretty cool; hadn’t done that before either.
Here is Dror blowing out the candles… which resulted in a hurricane of shaved chocolate flying around the kitchen, surprising everyone. I learned that maybe you forgo the blowing out of birthday candles when you have shaved chocolate on top of your cake.
This is just pre-shaved-chocolate-hurricane. I was too shocked to snap a pic just seconds later.

Last thing I learned: I’m not really a fan of Black Forest cake. Mostly I don’t like my cakes soggy (the cherry syrup layer gets absorbed and makes things heavy and wet). I also am not really a fan of whipped cream as a cake frosting. I am not a wet cherry fan, either. The whole thing tasted okay.. but it was heavy, rich, wetter than I like and a lot of work. You can keep tiramisu, as well. Not my thing.
I did like that thin dark chocolate bark, though. We had a bunch left over and they are very fun to eat.
Time for the Brazilians to Go Home
December 1, 2025
That is a Frame family saying and harks back to a time long ago when the two Piedmont Frame families (two sets of parents and eight kids) hosted a steady stream of family visitors from Brazil (where Jim’s mom and aunt were from). There would come a point in a visit when the kids were done with family, done with Portuguese, done with having to be on best behavior.. and would implore their parents to clear the house of Brazilians.
Jim and I use that phrase a lot .. like at the end of a marathon holiday gathering (for example). It’s great to have family around; it’s great when they all go home.
The last of our TG guests left today:

And then Jim got to making turkey/ham soup.

And with that, Thanksgiving 2025 is a wrap.
Last Day of Hanging Out
November 30, 2025
I know… just a few more Thanksgiving week pics. These are on the last day of hanging out and kind of define the week. It was incredibly cold, grey and gloomy, buried as we were under tule fog for 7-8 straight days. We spent a LOT of time in the living room with the fire going.
We ate out more than I thought we needed to (having a huge supply of leftovers), but I was content not to pull dinners together and clean up afterward! Tonight, Sunday, we ate at Janet’s.. that was a nice change of venue. (We also ate at Burma twice, Mikuni’s, Burgers and Brew, and Bernardo.. hit all the Davis haunts over the course of a week).


We set up a Chihuly jigsaw puzzle.. which proved to be tedious and difficult.. not sure I’ll finish it, but here’s Betsy’s and my start on the thing:

Gin
November 29, 2025
Requisite Day After Shots
November 28, 2025
Breakfast of champions….

Lunch of champions…

And, our first departure. Chris and Pam were last to arrive (Wed) and first to leave (Fri). Here’s a nice just-about-to-part shot of Chris…

I will say this about Chris: Since mom started going downhill .. (heart surgery in 2009 and then 8 more years of pretty challenging health), Chris has been on the scene. He’s always been on the scene (if unconventionally and on his own terms), but he really stepped up and became ever present in those years. The importance of family really clicked in for him and we noticed, and appreciated it. He has become somewhat of a family spark plug, a Jay whisperer, someone who seems not to hold grudges and floats among all the difficult family members without the complicated burdens some of us can’t seem to shed. After mom died in 2017, he remained family-committed, in fact his urgency to be a regular part of the clan increased. He has become sort of the spokesperson for tradition, and upholding our parents’ legacy (a term he uses a lot with loads of sentimentality) now that they are both gone. He had his own health scare in 2020 with a heart attack (while surfing, of all things), which intensified his need for connection. Pam’s coming on the scene (I want to say sometime around 2019?) has formalized his role in the family. She is the consummate in-law (though they aren’t officially married just yet), ensuring that not only do they show up, but they do it with a hot dish (or two), a bottle of wine, flowers… and then help clean up. She has introduced social protocols to his world and I think he actually likes it.
I’m just amazed and grateful they agree to come all the way up here every year for Thanksgiving. He thanks ME for being the one to make it all happen. His toasts about us kids needing to hang together because that’s what mom and dad would want are from the heart and emotionally delivered.
And that’s what Thanksgiving and family should be all about, ya?
One more.. this one with Pam (I wonder if I’ve mentioned that they have been engaged since last Christmas?):

The Perfect Combo
November 27, 2025
I was pleased about two things today (among dozens of things, actually): smooth logistics and warm vibes.
As a host person, the logistics are always on my mind. It is important to me that the day is well orchestrated: that our house is comfortable to be in and festive; that there is food when people are in a mood to eat, well spaced out throughout the day, but not too much; that the dinner is full of yummy dishes, all ready to serve at the same time, hot and beautiful. Those kinds of logistics..
Exhibit A

This was one of many lists that kept me on task from Monday to Monday of Thanksgiving week.
As fastidious as I am about all that, I have to remember that the reason for the season is the other part… the feels: good conversations, flowing gratitude, love, fun, laughing. I feel like we had a ton of that this year. And the table toasts were just the best.
Yay for all of that.
A few pics on the day:
Those are green beans I’m holding up.. and Matt’s mashing pototoes.

Annual photo just before eating.. (Janet took this one):

Serving it up…

P and J:

About to consume…isn’t this nice?

Chris and Pam..
Conversation with Michael who wasn’t here…
Chris and Peter have been playing chess together a long time…


And… dessert that few had room for, but scarfed down anyway..

Truly awesome.. the whole day.
Tuesday is Birthday Cake Baking Day..
November 25, 2025
Now, That’s a Power Couple
November 23, 2025
This is our niece Maia and her life’s partner Tim. They own a Brazilian jujitsu studio near Washington, D.C. and not only do they teach and train others, they train together and both compete in international tournaments. This is a photo taken seconds after Maia won her final match to place first in a very big competition this past week (we understand that she is now ranked #13 in the world in her weight class). Tim is also Maia’s trainer.. both were extremely stoked.
When not jujitsu’ing, they are raising a darling daughter, Diana, who’s a very plucky pre-schooler.
Not sure who to credit for this photo. It was passed along to me by Maia’s mom, who’s a wee proud.





