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Cream of Corn Soup With Bacon

November 22, 2015 by Carolyn Bickford

cream of corn soup with bacon
This would be a great leftover soup to make after your holiday feast. This one of those soups you could make last minute. Even for someone that isn’t a great cook, I have all the items in my pantry at all times. Except for bacon, but I might start freezing it as Heidi from Food Doodles does.

Click here on Food Doodles for the recipe and directions.

We love Bacon here at Craftgossip, in face we actually created a Pinterest board just for Bacon. THE WORLDS BEST BACON RECIPES.

Crazy about bacon? So I was looking around for new Bacon recipes and guess what I came across?

No, seriously you will never ever guess. A Bacon Scratch and Sniff cookbook!  I know you are as curious as me right now and that is why I just had to buy it too as a gift for my bacon-loving husband.

The Bacon Scratch & Sniff Cookbook promises to sway even the most hardened vegetarians with its forty bacon-centric recipes (not to mention its nifty scratch-and-sniff feature on the book’s cover)—from piggy snacks, including caramel bacon popcorn, candied bacon strips, and bacon-wrapped sweet potato wedges, to heartier main dishes like bacon-covered mac-and-cheese burgers, smoky bacon tacos, and the ultimate pasta carbonara. Did we mention dessert too? You’ll also find bacon and pecan ice cream, choc-bacon cookies, and everything bacon imaginable. It’s time to pig out, because everything is better with bacon!

 

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Have you read?

How Much Do You Really Need? A No-Stress Party Drinks Guide for Real Women Who Host

If there’s one thing I’ve learned over years of hosting everything from kids’ birthdays to backyard 50ths, it’s this: running out of drinks will haunt you forever, and overbuying means staring at a fridge full of lukewarm mixers for the next six months. Neither is fun. So I finally sat down—cup of tea in hand, Aloo asleep at my feet—and pulled together the no-nonsense drinks calculator I wish I’d had years ago.

This guide is written for the woman who does it all: planning, prepping, pouring, smiling through the chaos… while trying to make the whole thing feel effortless. Whether you’re throwing a birthday bash, retirement party, holiday get-together, or the classic “just because we need a night with the girls,” this calculator will take the guesswork out.

Let’s keep it simple, doable, and totally stress-free.

The 3-Rule Party Drink Calculator
(You can literally plan your whole bar with this.)

  1. Assume 2 drinks per guest in the first hour
    People arrive thirsty. They mingle. They top up.
  2. Then 1 drink per guest per hour after that
    This is where the pace naturally slows.
  3. Multiply by your party length
    Done. No apps, no math headaches, no complicated charts.

Quick Cheat Sheet: What to Buy for 10, 20, 30, or 50 Guests

For a 3-hour party:

10 Guests
– Wine: 3–4 bottles
– Beer/Cider: 12–18 bottles
– Spirits: 1 bottle vodka or gin + 2 mixers
– Soft drinks: 4–6 litres
– Water: 4–6 litres

20 Guests
– Wine: 6–8 bottles
– Beer/Cider: 24–36 bottles
– Spirits: 2 bottles + 4–5 mixers
– Soft drinks: 8–10 litres
– Water: 10 litres

30 Guests
– Wine: 10–12 bottles
– Beer/Cider: 36–48 bottles
– Spirits: 3 bottles + 6–8 mixers
– Soft drinks: 12–14 litres
– Water: 12–16 litres

50 Guests
– Wine: 15–20 bottles
– Beer/Cider: 60–80 bottles
– Spirits: 4–5 bottles + 10 mixers
– Soft drinks: 20 litres
– Water: 20–25 litres

If You’re Serving Mostly Wine
Go 60% white, 40% red unless it’s winter, then flip it.

For afternoon parties, rosé counts as a white—buy a couple bottles because someone always wants it.

If You’re Serving Cocktails
Stick to one signature cocktail plus a basic spirit (vodka or gin) with soda or tonic. Trust me, nobody needs a full bar unless you’re running a hotel.

For a 20-guest gathering:
– 2–3 bottles liquor for the signature cocktail
– Enough mixer to match (lemonade, juice, ginger beer, etc.)
– Garnishes: limes, lemons, mint, berries
– 2kg ice for shaking and topping

If You’re Serving Beer Drinkers
Plan for 1.5 bottles per person per hour if beer is the star of the show.
Beer-focused gatherings are thirstier gatherings. It’s science.

Don’t Forget Ice — Seriously
Ice is the one thing everyone underbuys. You need more than you think.

Ice Guide:
– Small gathering (10 guests): 3–4 kg
– Medium (20–30): 6–8 kg
– Large (50): 10–12 kg

If it’s summer, add another 20%.

Essential Mixers That Always Get Used
– Soda water
– Tonic
– Lemonade
– Cola
– Cranberry juice
– Orange juice
– Ginger beer
– Fresh citrus (honestly the unsung hero of any bar)

Keep it simple; nobody needs lychee cordial at a 60th birthday unless you really love lychee.

Water, Water, Water
Your future self will thank you. Hydrated guests dance more, complain less, and recover beautifully.

Plan for 1 litre per person minimum.
More if it’s hot, outdoors, or includes dancing (my favourite cardio).

When in Doubt, Buy a Little Extra
You can always send guests home with leftover cans and bottles. It doubles as a quiet nudge to clean your fridge.

The only time I truly regret buying extra is when Aloo gets into the recycling bin the next day and has the time of his life spreading cans around the backyard.

Hosting Made Easier
Once you’ve used this drinks calculator once or twice, it becomes instinctive. And honestly, when you’ve got the drinks sorted, the rest of the party feels lighter. No frantic runs to the bottle shop, no panic when the rosé runs out. You get to relax, enjoy, and actually be present at your own gathering—what a concept.

 

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