
Season with pepper, and set aside to cool.Ĥ.

Cook until the spinach is heated throughout.

Add onions, and continue to cook until the onions are soft, but not browned.ģ. Heat garlic with cooking spray in a medium sauté pan over medium heat. Place a large baking sheet in the oven to preheat for about 10 minutes.Ģ. ġ tsp garlic, minced (about ½ clove) 1 small onion, minced (about ½ cup), 2 C frozen cut spinach, thawed and drained (or substitute 2 bags (10 oz each) fresh leaf spinach, rinsed), ¼ tsp ground black pepper, 8 slices whole-wheat bread, 1 medium tomato, rinsed, cut into 4 slices, 1 C shredded part-skim mozzarella cheese, and Nonstick cooking spray.ġ. It is concluded from the passage that Jacob. Even though he found a key ring, forty-seven cents, and all the bottle caps he could throw, he buried the metal detector in his closest. He beeped it around the park for a while, be he soon found out that no pirates had ever set sail in his neighborhood, and if they had they did not leave any treasure. By the time spring came, he had saved $200, and he purchased the Wonder-Sweeper 5000 metal detector. Then he shoveled driveways all winter, and he did not spend his money on candy and chips like his classmates. He saved it all in a shoe box in his closet. So he mowed lawns all summer and did not spend his money on ice-cream like his younger brother, Alex.

He took a few lessons, but strumming the strings hurt his fingers and he did not like holding the pick, so now the five-hundred dollar guitar lives under his bed.Īfter reading an ad in the back of one of his comic books, Jacob decided that he wanted a Wonder-Sweeper 5000 metal detector, so that he could find buried pirate treasure. He begged his mother for months for a guitar so that he could play Black Eyed Peas songs to Angie, a girl he liked, but after he finally got one for Christmas, he found out that guitars do not play themselves. As a result, he had gotten into a million hobbies and activities, but he never stuck with any of them long enough to get any good.

Jacob hated finishing things almost as much as he loved starting them.
