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It will be updated as soon as possible….
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7-8 lbs. pork roast (Do a 3-4 lb pork roast if you are just doing your family)
4 cups root beer
1/2 cup cider vinegar
4 (8oz) cans tomato sauce
4 T molasses or honey
3 tsp. minced garlic
½ tsp. salt
2 – 3 cups brown sugar
pepper to taste
4 tsp. cumin
Other seasonings to taste (chiles, paprika, etc.)
Recipe Note: The above sauce makes a lot! So if you have a 3-4 lb pork roast, half the sauce.
Salt and pepper roast and cook in crock pot 8 hours or overnight on low in water. In the morning remove the roast from the crockpot and pull apart with fork, removing fat. Drain all the water in the crockpot. Don’t over-shred the pork or it will turn mushy. Add the rest of the ingredients to the crockpot and add shredded pork. Cook another 4 hours in crockpot on low.
I like this served with coleslaw on a kaiser roll with a side of steak fries. ![]()
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1 pound ground beef (or ground turkey)
1 package low-sodium taco seasoning
4 ounces cream cheese
20 jumbo pasta shells
1 1/2 cups salsa
1 cup taco sauce
1 cup cheddar cheese
1 cup Monterrey jack cheese
For toppings:
3 green onions
Sour cream
Preheat oven to 350°.
In a pan brown the ground beef; add taco seasoning and prepare according to package directions. Add cream cheese, cover and simmer until cheese is melted. Stir together and mix well. Set aside and cool completely.
While ground beef is cooking, cook the pasta shells according to package directions; drain. Set shells out individually on cutting board or baking sheet so that they don’t stick together.
Pour salsa on bottom of a 9×13 baking dish. Stuff each shell with 1-2 tablespoons of the meat mixture. Place shells in 9×13 pan open side up. Evenly cover shells with taco sauce. Cover dish with foil and bake for 30 minutes.
After 30 minutes, add shredded cheese and bake for 10-15 more minutes with the foil removed. Top with green onions or olives if desired. Serve with sour cream and/or more salsa.
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If you’ve been out of work for a while, or are just plain tired of the work you’ve been doing for years, you may be thinking of starting a business…. If so – get ready to embark on an exciting, rarely dull, often nerve wracking journey.
To call it “perilous” may be stretching things since perilous is defined as “dangerous”. However,” peril” means “exposure to risk or harm”, and starting a business can certainly be risky and is definitely challenging.
Since writing challenges down seems to make them easier, let’s look at the obstacles you’re about to face.
1. Time Mis-management
This is one of those issues that create problems for many of us who start new business ventures. Either you spend all of your time working, or you can’t quite keep yourself on a schedule.
Many businesses fail within the first year because the owner couldn’t get a handle on work time vs. “the rest of life” time. Rule Number One: You can’t spend every waking minute on your business. You still need to have a life. Otherwise you’ll burn out.
2. Organizational Skills
If you’ve got them, you’ve just passed a major hurdle. Being disorganized not only means wasting time as you dig around trying to find something, but it also makes focus difficult. Which leads to Peril Number #3.
3. Focus (or rather “lack of”)
One of my friends decided to close his business and focus on consulting. Seemed like a good idea. He knew his field and had a lot of hands-on experience. He also had a fully equipped home office and no kids or spouse around for distraction.
Unfortunately, the idea was better than the venture. Why? He couldn’t focus without the structure of an office environment. Working at home seemed like some sort of part-time job. Instead of being at his desk every morning at a certain time, he’d find other things to do. Lunch hours often turned into taking the afternoon off. It was a “sort of” business – not a serious one.
4. Fear of Failure
Failure and entrepreneurship go hand-in-hand. If you’re not fully aware that your business could fail – or if you’re terrified of failure – go to work for someone else. Because if you’re not willing to take calculated risks, you shouldn’t be in business for yourself.
Risk means stretching, taking chances, trying new tactics, making mistakes and learning how to work through them.
Do some reading about successful entrepreneurs. You’ll find that most have had failures along the way – either companies that didn’t succeed or ideas that failed. Didn’t stop them from starting again. Call it “gumption.”
5. Lack of Marketing
Most new businesses simply don’t have large marketing budgets. However, that’s no excuse for not marketing. Because if you’re not getting your name out there, someone else will… only it will be their name, not yours.
There are a host of inexpensive marketing tools. Networking is my number one favorite for new businesses (and old). The cost is minimal. Your investment is in time. Find some.
Join networking groups, chambers of commerce, or industry organizations. Attend events where you’ll meet new people. Craft a thirty second “elevator speech” about your company (benefit-focused). Carry your business cards – always! Talk to people when you’re out. I’ve picked up business by chatting with people at social events. You never know who might be a potential customer… or who might know someone who might be.
Other cost-effective marketing tools include direct mail (very targeted), direct e-mail, e-newsletters, a web site (takes the place of a printed brochure) and public relations. It’s not necessary to have a formal advertising campaign. It is necessary to do something!
6. Not Staying on Top of Your Game
Technology has radically changed the way we do business. Information is disseminated immediately via the Internet. You need to be able to make decisions quickly. The same technology that makes our lives easier also requires that we work harder.
So stay current on what’s going on in your particular industry. Find some industry leaders and read their newsletters and books.
7. Forgetting to Have Fun
Perils aside, as an entrepreneur, you control your destiny. You’re not at the mercy of a company down-sizing and eliminating your job. And if you lose an account here or there (it happens), you can go out and get more. You can be as busy as you choose to be.
So enjoy what you’re doing. Get up in the morning knowing that you’re (hopefully) doing what makes you happy… And, have fun.
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