Jackson County is turning 200, and the city is hosting a Bicentennial Celebration Festival on August 13th. The Festival will include food trucks, games, live music, a farmers’ market, history, inflatables, vendors, and more! Entry to the festival is free, as are the games. However, be sure to bring money for the food trucks, farmers’ market, and merchandise vendors. Parents, please note that some kid-friendly activities involve water – plan accordingly. For more info: email darbyshired@jacksoncountyfl.gov or contact the County Administration at (850) 482-9633.
Wausau Funday & Possum Festival
The Wausau Funday and Possum Festival is coming to Wausau this Friday and Saturday, August 5-6th! The event will be held at 3116 Possum Palace Dr Wausau, Florida 32463. The Festival will feature a pageant, four different concerts, a parade, a 5k run/walk, pancake breakfast, and more. There will also be kid-friendly activities such as inflatables and pony rides. Call (850) 638 – 1781 with questions or visit the Wausau Possum Festival website here.
Farm, Garden & Craft Swap
Mid-South Lumber Co is hosting its first Farm, Garden & Craft Swap on Saturday, August 6th. The event is FREE and will go from 8 am – 2 pm. Tex Kitchen will have a food truck on site. There will be additional food vendors and a variety of local vendors including but not limited to Jonesing 4 Cookies, Coastal Crafts, Tina Parrish’s canned goods, Southern Glitter Girls, Beachside Bakery, Wolf Feather Works, Sandhills Native Nursery, and more! Come support local individuals and businesses while fulfilling your needs for fresh produce, baked items, canned good, hand-made arts & crafts, plants, and small animals. If you have any questions, please contact Nikki Sullivan @ 850-722-5335
Concert in the Park
Visit Blue Springs Park today from 5:30-7 pm to enjoy a FREE concert! There will be an ice box and food truck also available. Come enjoy the swimming, music, food, and fun for the whole family!
Wausau Possum Festival
The Wausau Possum Festival is coming to Washington County on August 6th! This unique festival was founded by Dalton Carter over 50 years ago to celebrate the possum. Friday night will kick things off with Cory Keefe & the Hwy 20 Band performing beginning at 6 pm. Following their opening, the Possum King & Queen Contest will begin at 7 pm. Interested in being part of the Possum King & Queen Contest? Register by calling (850) 768-4578. There will be a $200 prize for First Place and $100 for Second Place. There will be a gate fee of $5 for the evening (children 16 and younger enter for free).
Saturday will begin with a pancake breakfast provided by the Masonic Lodge from 6-9 am. The breakfast will be followed by the Possum Trot 5K Run/Walk at 7 am. A parade through downtown will begin at 10 am. After the conclusion of the parade, there will be a variety of things to do at the Possum Palace including pony rides, inflatables, arts and craft vendors, great food, games, and live entertainment. To view a detailed itinerary and stay up-to-date with event announcements, visit the festival website here.
National Cheesecake Day
Did you know that National Cheesecake Day has been celebrated on July 30th since 1985?! That’s over 30 years of the classic sweet treat being honored. Looking for a fun Florida-flavored cheesecake to enjoy today? Try the following Florida Orange Cheesecake recipe:
Ingredients:
- 2 cups of (finely ground) vanilla wafer cookies
- 1/3 cup of golden brown sugar
- 6-7 Tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
- 4-6 Florida oranges (or 1 cup of fresh orange juice)
- 1 cup of sugar, divided
- 2 Tablespoons of finely grated orange peel
- 4-8 ounce packages of cream cheese, room temperature
- 1 container 8-ounce sour cream
- 3 Tablespoons of all-purpose flour
- ¼ teaspoon of salt
- 5 large eggs, room temperature
- 2-3 oranges, sliced into 1/4 inch slices
- 1 1/2 cups of water
- 1 1/2 cups of sugar
- 1 vanilla bean, split lengthwise
Directions:
- 2 hours prior to baking, remove the 4 packages of cream cheese and 5 eggs from the refrigerator to bring to room temperature.
- Set the oven at 350 degrees and position the rack in the middle of the oven.
- Finely grind 2 cups of nilla wafers. Add wafers to a medium bowl. Add 1/3 cup of packed golden brown sugar. Melt 6-7 Tablespoons of butter. Add 6 Tablespoons to the mixture. If the mixture is still dry add 1 more tablespoon.
- Press the mixture together with your fingertips, combining the three ingredients. The mixture should be damp.
- Press the crust mixture on the bottom of the pan and create a 1” border up the side of the pan.
- Bake the crust at 350 degrees for 20 minutes or until set and the edges are golden brown. Allow the crust to cool.
- Wrap 4 layers of foil tightly around the outside of the pan so that it is completely waterproof as it will be put in a water bath.
- While the crust is cooling, make the filling. Zest 2 Tablespoons of orange zest from the skin of the oranges. Then juice 4 medium oranges to create 1 cup of orange juice – alternatively, use 1 cup of boxed orange juice.
- In a medium saucepan, combine 1 cup of orange juice, ¼ cup of sugar, and 2 tablespoons of orange zest and bring to a boil, stirring until the sugar dissolves. Reduce the heat to a simmer. For 10 minutes, let the mixture simmer reducing to ¾ cup. Chill until cool.
- Meanwhile, using a mixer, beat the 4 packages of (room temperature) cream cheese and ¾ cup of sugar until smooth. Then mix in 1 cup of sour cream, 3 tablespoons of flour, and ¼ teaspoon of salt. Beat in the 5 eggs one at a time. Finally, mix in the cooled orange juice mixture.
- Pour filling into the cooled crust.
- Next, take a large roasting pan and place the aluminum foil-lined spring form pan inside. Then, pour hot water around the spring form pan, so that water rises halfway up the sides of the pan.
- Place in the oven. Bake for about 1 hour and 30 minutes.
- Remove the cake from the roasting pan and discard the foil. When it is cool, cover the cake and place in the refrigerator overnight.
- *Optional step. To make the orange topping, slice 2-3 oranges, in 1/4 inch thick slices.
- Combine 1 1/2 cups of water and 1 1/2 cups of sugar in a saucepan. Take the vanilla bean, split it open lengthwise, and scrape the seeds into the water and sugar mixture. Stir over medium heat until sugar dissolves. Add the orange slices and simmer until translucent, typically around 25 minutes. Remove the oranges from the heat and let cool on a paper towel.
- When oranges are cool, arrange them on top of the cake.
- Take a pastry brush and dab some of the remaining syrup on top of the oranges and over the surface of the cake to create a shiny coating.
On This Day in History
On July 29th in 1958, the National Aeronautics and Space Act (NASA) was established. The establishment of NASA was largely a response to the launch of Sputnik and the beginning of the ‘space race.’(1) In the 1960s, NASA had the budget, the political will, and the momentum provided by the Cold War to create a moon program that lead to Americans landing on the moon in the small span of eight years. Nowadays, there are a few motivations driving the interest in American space travel: national prestige, geopolitical power, economic opportunity, and scientific knowledge.
Unfortunately, the private sector of space travel (think Jeff Bezos and Elon musk) is receiving more funding than the public sector aka NASA. This is largely due to an increasing sense of ambivalence towards space travel amongst the majority of America; space travel is subjected to the whims of politics and there are more immediate concerns planetside for citizens to worry about. However, NASA does have a number of exciting research programs and missions in place. Additionally, there is a current moon effort named Artemis. NASA recently announced that they are aiming to send a crew to orbit the moon in May 2024, and land astronauts on the surface in 2025. American astronauts haven’t been on the moon since 1972, and Artemis is designed to allow them to plant another flag, build habitats, and apply new knowledge of the lunar surface to use for future missions to Mars.
Vendors Wanted for Sugar Cane Festival
The Sugar Cane Festival will be coming to Historical White Springs, FL on November 12th. The festival is currently looking for vendors to take part in the event. The festival will be held in conjunction with the Community Street Sale. Admission is free for the community however vendors must pay a $35 fee to hold their spot. Alongside vendors, they are looking for hands-on demonstrators who would like to participate in this event. Stop in, message, or send Suwannee Hardware and Feed an email for a vendor application – they are currently offering a discount for vendor preregistration! Their contact info is as follows:
Suwannee Hardware & Feed
10572 Bridge St. White Springs, FL 32096
386-397-2551
www.suwanneehardware.com
suwanneehardware@gmail.com
Caffe Del Mundo
Caffé del Mundo is located in the Cove at 101 S. Bonita Ave., Panama City Beach. It was opened in November 2021 by Marta and Jimy Thorpe. The location includes a coffee and Sangria bar. It is a cozy space with plenty of table space, seating, and outlets for computer work. They welcome local groups to hang out in the space, even offering a bookcase of board games.
They are open Monday through Saturday from 6:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. The cafe offers espressos, teas, nitro-infused cold brews, gourmet smoothies, snacks, and baked goods. In the afternoon they offer sangrias, wine, and beer alongside their standard menu. The sangria flavors include Ethiopian Coffee, Processco Peach, and Classic Spanish. Their coffee beans are imported and freshly roasted every day at the Mill City Roaster.
Monarch Butterflies Now Endangered
On Thursday, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature added the migratory monarch butterfly to the “red list” of threatened species.(1) One of the most recognizable butterflies in the world, the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) is famous for its seasonal migration. Millions of monarchs migrate south from the United States and Canada to California and Mexico for the winter.(2)
It has distinctive orange wings with black lines and white dots. Monarchs live an average of 6-8 months, weigh under 0.001 ounces, and have a medium wingspan of 3.9 inches. Their move to the endangered list means they are just two distinctions from extinction. The primary causes of their move to the red list are loss of habitat and climate change. Want to help the monarch population during this critical time?
The number one thing you can do is plant native milkweed and supplementary plants. There is a number of native milkweeds to choose from – visit UF|IFAS’s Milkweed Species Native to Florida for the complete list. However, there are milkweeds that are essential for monarch butterflies to be able to complete their life cycle within your garden. Female monarchs prefer to lay on swamp milkweed (Asclepias incarnata) and common milkweed (A. syriaca).(3)
Milkweed is crucial to the diet of monarchs; their distinctive coloring is not an invitation to be eaten but a warning to predators that they are poisonous. They have evolved to not only tolerate but use the toxicity naturally occurring in milkweed to protect themselves by storing it in the veins. Monarchs will feast on all milkweed varieties however, butterfly weed (A. tuberosa) is native to Florida, widely available, and has beautiful flowers.
Supplementary plants are plants of other species that should be planted around milkweed to assist in a healthy ecosystem. These are plants that should be chosen based on each individual location’s soil, sun, and water retention rates as well as hardiness zone. Please remember to always choose native plants to increase the health of your soil and the natural benefits of your garden.