My kids get so much stuff for Christmas. Like - so much stuff. They have very doting grandparents, great-grandparents, friends, and teachers. I really have not felt like there was much I could do to compete with that, and in fact, for their birthdays and Christmases so far, I've not really gotten them anything! I will make whatever food they want on their special days, but I leave the material gift-giving to the professionals.
I started to feel a little guilty about this, though, and decided I would try out a strategy I'd heard about from friends: give them four types of presents.
1) Something they want.
2) Something they need.
3) Something to wear.
4) Something to read.
So, how did Christmas 2014 stack up?
I think it went pretty well! I decided to hand-make what I could, given my time constraints.
I knit Vicki a pair of soft socks in her favorite color (purple!) - so there is #3 for her. And Todd needed a cross-stitched cuff for his stocking, so there is his #2.
Here are the finished products! I'm really happy with them, and I'm glad I decided to stitch Todd's present, as I'd forgotten how enjoyable counted cross-stitch can be.
I also went to a local kids' gift store and bought a few items for them.
Here's the array: a got them each a few Schleich animals, which are my favorite. I got Todd a little Euro-style race car. Vicki got some new triangular crayons. One book for each of them. They each got a few of their favorite beautiful satsumas. You can see Vicki's socks and Todd's stocking topper here. Not pictured is another gift I gave to Vicki earlier in the week. She had been begging for a pink Thermos cup and soup container every time we went to Target. So I got them for her.
You can also see the hand-quilted and -stitched stocking my own grandmother made for me ("I Love Christmas"). I gave myself a couple of oranges too. :)
In years to come, I intend to knit and felt a Christmas stocking for each of them, cross-stitch Vicki a stocking cuff as well, and stitch the cuffs onto the stockings. But all that can wait until next year at least.
So, here's how it all broke out:
1) Something they want: Thermos cup and container for Vicki, race car for Todd.
2) Something they need: crayons for Vicki, stocking cuff for Todd.
3) Something to wear: socks for Vicki, didn't get around to this for Todd! Fail.
4) Something to read: a simple Christmas-related book for each of them.
They have really loved all of this, in addition to the many others toys and treats they have received. Funny enough, the thing they have loved playing with the most is our nativity! They like keeping the wise men far away and then moving them a bit closer each day until Epiphany. They also loved putting baby Jesus in the manger on Christmas Eve after church. I love how this set is wooden and durable, and I don't mind at all if they want to play with it! In fact, my heart just delights in hearing Todd lisp, "Baby Jesus!"
How have you approached gift-giving in your family?
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Monday, December 29, 2014
menu plan december v
Did you survive the holidays? We did - just barely. :) Here are the kids enjoying my big Christmas present from my grandmother-in-law:
Isn't it just like "parenthood" that within one day of getting an awesome new present, your kids think it's theirs? Ha!
We are traveling to my sister's once again this week, just as we did over Thanksgiving. My niece Sloane was born on New Year's Day (first baby of the new year at their hospital!), so her birthday party every year is a New Year's Day party. We are going up to spend some time with my sister, my brother, my stepdad, and others! Exciting. I'm also excited to pack our own food for travel, once again. That felt like a major triumph to me. So, here are the eats I have planned this week:
Sunday
-- lunch: we had hamburgers and fixings, homemade sourdough buns, and sweet potato fries,
-- supper: Calypso! My favorite neighborhood take-out. I have a post coming soon all about their callaloo. The kids and I shared a half dark chicken with jerk sauce, callaloo greens, black beans, rice, and fruit tea.
Monday
-- lunch: egg salad on sourdough toast, a big sour lacto-fermented pickle, a satsuma, and some kombucha.
-- supper: breakfast for dinner! Homemade biscuits, sausage gravy (we are trying the sausage from our recent half-hog purchase for the first time!), eggs, sweet potato & onion hash.
Tuesday
-- lunch: tuna salad on sourdough toast, pear sauce, kombucha
-- supper: meatloaf, turnip fries, maple-glazed carrots, sourdough dinner rolls
Wednesday
-- lunch: on the road! I'm packing acorn squash soup in a thermos, sourdough bread, raw cheese, kombucha, satsumas, and cookies.
-- supper: we will be at my sister's - no idea!
Thursday
-- lunch: New Year's Day! I'm bringing along some black-eyed peas and ham hocks we have in the freezer and fix this quintessential Southern dish for good luck.
-- supper: no idea, once again. Party stuff.
Friday
-- lunch: we will be back on the road. If we have any leftover squash soup I will pack that. Otherwise we may pack leftover black-eyed peas to eat alongside our bread, cheese, and fruit.
-- supper: we will probably grab a pizza from either 5 Points Pizza or Pizza Real, which tie as our two favorite neighborhood pizza joints.
Saturday
-- lunch: grilled cheese on sourdough, French onion soup, lacto-fermented pickles, satsumas
-- supper: roast chicken, green beans, sauteed cabbage, mashed potatoes, sourdough rolls
[Submitted to Menu Plan Monday 12/29/14, the Homestead Barn Hop 12/29/14, Fat Tuesday 12/30/14, the HomeAcre Hop 1/1/15, and Simply Natural Saturday 1/3/15.]
Isn't it just like "parenthood" that within one day of getting an awesome new present, your kids think it's theirs? Ha!
We are traveling to my sister's once again this week, just as we did over Thanksgiving. My niece Sloane was born on New Year's Day (first baby of the new year at their hospital!), so her birthday party every year is a New Year's Day party. We are going up to spend some time with my sister, my brother, my stepdad, and others! Exciting. I'm also excited to pack our own food for travel, once again. That felt like a major triumph to me. So, here are the eats I have planned this week:
Some notes: we literally always have one of two things for breakfast if we are at home.
1) -- scrambled eggs from our Mennonite hens
-- homemade sourdough toast/English muffins/biscuits
-- raw butter we have been making from our Mennonite cow cream
-- local raw honey or homemade preserves (green rhubarb lately - yum!)
-- seasonal fruit from our CSA or satsumas (in the winter)
2) -- pancakes
-- raw butter
-- real maple syrup
-- seasonal fruit
Vicki usually requests #2. If we have time, I'm happy to oblige. If I do any sourdough baking, though, we will use the excess starter to have sourdough pancakes.
Since it is so monotonous, I'm not going to put breakfast on the menu plan.
For drinks, we always have raw milk on hand. We also drink Berkey filtered water, kombucha, or homemade soda from our ginger bug. I would love to start messing with water kefir soon.
Finally, I try to make one dessert-ish item that we nibble on all week for snacks and desserts. The kids and I made some coconut macaroons over the holiday, so we are eating those up!
-- homemade sourdough toast/English muffins/biscuits
-- raw butter we have been making from our Mennonite cow cream
-- local raw honey or homemade preserves (green rhubarb lately - yum!)
-- seasonal fruit from our CSA or satsumas (in the winter)
2) -- pancakes
-- raw butter
-- real maple syrup
-- seasonal fruit
Vicki usually requests #2. If we have time, I'm happy to oblige. If I do any sourdough baking, though, we will use the excess starter to have sourdough pancakes.
Since it is so monotonous, I'm not going to put breakfast on the menu plan.
For drinks, we always have raw milk on hand. We also drink Berkey filtered water, kombucha, or homemade soda from our ginger bug. I would love to start messing with water kefir soon.
Finally, I try to make one dessert-ish item that we nibble on all week for snacks and desserts. The kids and I made some coconut macaroons over the holiday, so we are eating those up!
Sunday
-- lunch: we had hamburgers and fixings, homemade sourdough buns, and sweet potato fries,
-- supper: Calypso! My favorite neighborhood take-out. I have a post coming soon all about their callaloo. The kids and I shared a half dark chicken with jerk sauce, callaloo greens, black beans, rice, and fruit tea.
Monday
-- lunch: egg salad on sourdough toast, a big sour lacto-fermented pickle, a satsuma, and some kombucha.
-- supper: breakfast for dinner! Homemade biscuits, sausage gravy (we are trying the sausage from our recent half-hog purchase for the first time!), eggs, sweet potato & onion hash.
Tuesday
-- lunch: tuna salad on sourdough toast, pear sauce, kombucha
-- supper: meatloaf, turnip fries, maple-glazed carrots, sourdough dinner rolls
Wednesday
-- lunch: on the road! I'm packing acorn squash soup in a thermos, sourdough bread, raw cheese, kombucha, satsumas, and cookies.
-- supper: we will be at my sister's - no idea!
Thursday
-- lunch: New Year's Day! I'm bringing along some black-eyed peas and ham hocks we have in the freezer and fix this quintessential Southern dish for good luck.
-- supper: no idea, once again. Party stuff.
Friday
-- lunch: we will be back on the road. If we have any leftover squash soup I will pack that. Otherwise we may pack leftover black-eyed peas to eat alongside our bread, cheese, and fruit.
-- supper: we will probably grab a pizza from either 5 Points Pizza or Pizza Real, which tie as our two favorite neighborhood pizza joints.
Saturday
-- lunch: grilled cheese on sourdough, French onion soup, lacto-fermented pickles, satsumas
-- supper: roast chicken, green beans, sauteed cabbage, mashed potatoes, sourdough rolls
[Submitted to Menu Plan Monday 12/29/14, the Homestead Barn Hop 12/29/14, Fat Tuesday 12/30/14, the HomeAcre Hop 1/1/15, and Simply Natural Saturday 1/3/15.]
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
an advent prayer
You know it's still Advent, right? The season of waiting and preparation. And, depending on your tradition of numbering days, it will remain Advent until either sundown tonight, or midnight tomorrow morning. Each year, my mentors, dear friends, and incredibly special people Blair and Doug Meeks send an Advent Prayer that Blair writes. She is a talented liturgist who spent years writing and editing liturgies. Dr. Meeks was my professor and a huge champion of mine at seminary. I'm thrilled to be spending more time with him as I dive into a doctoral program next month (more on that later!). Blair and Doug send her Advent Prayer out to all his students, present and former, and their friends. I've posted it here below because it spoke to me powerfully this morning. I hope it can bless you as you culminate your time of waiting this evening.
Prayer for Healing and Peace
God of all creation, you sent your Word to live among us.
This same Word was with you at the beginning:
and all things came into being through him.
Give us grace to honor all that you have created,
to live wisely and manage well what you have made.
Open our eyes to the carelessness that threatens the earth;
let us hear the sighs of creation for your saving grace.
Teach us to care for all living things,
as you care for us and make us your children.
Grant to the earth healing and peace.
God in your mercy,
Hear our prayer.
God of the little ones, you sent your Son to be born as a
baby,
the Holy child of Bethlehem: Hear the cries of your children
everywhere,
the homeless, the orphans, the sick, the hungry, and those in
constant danger.
Hear the cry of Rachel weeping, grieving with mothers in all
places
whose children have no chance at life.
Give us courage to share the abundance of your good gifts.
Grant to the suffering healing and peace.
God in your mercy,
Hear our prayer.
God of the oppressed,
Jesus, your Son, comes to release the captives
defend the needy, and crush the oppressor:
As you showed the magi Herod’s treachery, open our eyes to powers of death.
As you showed the magi Herod’s treachery, open our eyes to powers of death.
Make us agents of your life-giving power.
Teach us to speak truth and live with grace in the name of
Jesus, lover of life.
Grant to the hopeless healing and peace.
God in your mercy,
Hear our prayer.
God of the peacemakers,
Your son was born in a country at war, and yet he is Prince
of Peace.
Help us to see his star, the light of life, the light of hope
and joy.
Free us from foolish pride and empty dreams
and lead us to find our hope in you alone.
We give you thanks that we have seen Jesus,
whose love will destroy the power of death.
Keep us faithful as we wait for his coming again.
Grant to the world healing and peace.
God in your mercy,
Hear our prayer.
Amen.
(copyright Blair Meeks 2014)
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
todd: 19 months
Well, he's officially not "baby Todd" anymore. I was worried the poor guy was going to be called baby Todd until he went to college. Now, thanks to Vicki Jo's deep, deep obsession with Mickey Mouse Clubhouse, he is called "Toodles." If you don't know what I'm talking about, please just count yourself lucky. Here's what Todd's been up to this last month:
He's really into spinning around and around until he falls down like a drunkard. Here he is showcasing his skills at the ice cream shop.
The poor, poor dog. Sweet pup is the longest-suffering member of our family, by far.
He did really well on our long car trip to my sister's, then to Chicago area for a wedding, then back home. This is in a rest stop in Indiana somewhere.
At my sister's he experienced real snow for the first time! This is one of my complaints about Nashville - no winter. Playing in the snow was a quintessential element of my Kansas childhood, so I'm glad they could do it, if just for one day.
Giving his Christmas jammies a spin, in preparation for Christmas Eve. :)
He is also talking like crazy. I was fully prepared for him to take longer to talk a lot, as Vicki is unusually loquacious and boys typically take longer. But nope - he's jabbering up a storm. "Read book," "no puppy," "big car," and other phrases are his recent additions.
He's really into spinning around and around until he falls down like a drunkard. Here he is showcasing his skills at the ice cream shop.
The poor, poor dog. Sweet pup is the longest-suffering member of our family, by far.
His favorite lounging position for a stroll. He and Vicki both also insist on taking along a drink for every walk and car ride. So funny because their dad has always done the same thing.
He did really well on our long car trip to my sister's, then to Chicago area for a wedding, then back home. This is in a rest stop in Indiana somewhere.
At my sister's he experienced real snow for the first time! This is one of my complaints about Nashville - no winter. Playing in the snow was a quintessential element of my Kansas childhood, so I'm glad they could do it, if just for one day.
Giving his Christmas jammies a spin, in preparation for Christmas Eve. :)
He is also talking like crazy. I was fully prepared for him to take longer to talk a lot, as Vicki is unusually loquacious and boys typically take longer. But nope - he's jabbering up a storm. "Read book," "no puppy," "big car," and other phrases are his recent additions.
Monday, December 15, 2014
menu plan december iii
Anyone out there? I'm having a hard time keeping up my motivation to blog. The one thing that I want to keep doing is the weekly meal plans - mostly for myself! I love the idea that if I keep this up for a year, I will essentially have made myself a year-long seasonal/local template for menus. Great resource.
Huge news this week - our order of a naturally-foraging half-hog will be in! So, I'm anticipating some chops or ribs or a roast later on this week, for sure. Sometimes I feel like my whole life revolves around sourcing, preparing, cooking, and enjoying amazing homemade food. And the really crazy part is that I enjoy it and don't feel that it is abnormal. Lol. Does this mean it's a calling?
On to the food!
Huge news this week - our order of a naturally-foraging half-hog will be in! So, I'm anticipating some chops or ribs or a roast later on this week, for sure. Sometimes I feel like my whole life revolves around sourcing, preparing, cooking, and enjoying amazing homemade food. And the really crazy part is that I enjoy it and don't feel that it is abnormal. Lol. Does this mean it's a calling?
Christmas jammies brought to you courtesy of Grandpa Mark and Grandma Rosalie. |
Some notes: we literally always have one of two things for breakfast if we are at home.
1) -- scrambled eggs from our Mennonite hens
-- homemade sourdough toast/English muffins/biscuits
-- raw butter we have been making from our Mennonite cow cream
-- local raw honey or homemade preserves (green rhubarb lately - yum!)
-- seasonal fruit from our CSA or satsumas (in the winter)
2) -- pancakes
-- raw butter
-- real maple syrup
-- seasonal fruit
Vicki usually requests #2. If we have time, I'm happy to oblige. If I do any sourdough baking, though, we will use the excess starter to have sourdough pancakes.
Since it is so monotonous, I'm not going to put breakfast on the menu plan.
Lunches are pretty much always leftovers. If I do some actual cooking for lunch, I will put it in the plan. If not, just assume it's something unexciting.
For drinks, we always have raw milk on hand. We also drink Berkey filtered water, kombucha, or homemade soda from our ginger bug. I would love to start messing with water kefir soon.
Finally, I try to make one dessert-ish item that we nibble on all week for snacks and desserts. This week I made maple marshmallows from scratch, which we are also using as part of our Christmas gift baskets. I will post a recipe this week! Super easy and very satisfying.
Sunday
--lunch: I made a meatloaf, braised kale, mashed turnips, and sourdough rolls
--supper: Family Dinner! It was our week to bring appetizer, so I did a caramelized onion dip. I'll do a recipe on this soon, too. Easy and delicious. Served with kohlrabi sticks and kettle chips.
Monday
--lunch: leftover kale pizza, home-canned cranberry sauce, kombucha
--supper: black bean soup (minus chicken) with cheese quesadillas (raw cheese, homemade tortillas), home-canned salsa, sour cream, avocado, etc
Tuesday
--lunch: Living Word Sunday school class Christmas party luncheon! Can't wait. One of the great perks of my job is getting invited to about 134890235 Christmas parties with awesome food.
--supper: Korean beef with cabbage, steamed rice, homemade extra-spicy kimchi
Wednesday
--lunch: out with some lady friends at PF Chang's! Lettuce wraps here I come.
--supper: salmon fillets with ginger butter, honey-glazed carrots, sauteed kale, sourdough dinner rolls
Thursday
--lunch: leftover meatloaf, turnips, sourdough roll, kombucha
--supper: pork chops!! With home-canned pear sauce, sauteed cabbage, roasted potatoes, and sourdough rolls
Friday
--lunch: egg salad, sourdough toast, home-canned cranberry sauce, kombucha
--supper: acorn squash pizza on sourdough crust (sub goat cheese for gorgonzola) with homemade mozzarella cheese, ginger bug sodas
Saturday
--lunch: tomato soup, grilled cheese on sourdough toast, homemade lacto-fermented chili-garlic dill pickles
--supper: roast chicken, mashed potatoes, green beans from the freezer, garlicky kale salad, sourdough dinner rolls
What are you eating? Anything amazing to share?
[This post submitted to Menu Plan Monday 12/15/14, Homestead Barn Hop #188, Fat Tuesday 12/16/14, Real Food Wednesday 12/17/14, and Pennywise Platter 12/18/14.]
-- homemade sourdough toast/English muffins/biscuits
-- raw butter we have been making from our Mennonite cow cream
-- local raw honey or homemade preserves (green rhubarb lately - yum!)
-- seasonal fruit from our CSA or satsumas (in the winter)
2) -- pancakes
-- raw butter
-- real maple syrup
-- seasonal fruit
Vicki usually requests #2. If we have time, I'm happy to oblige. If I do any sourdough baking, though, we will use the excess starter to have sourdough pancakes.
Since it is so monotonous, I'm not going to put breakfast on the menu plan.
Lunches are pretty much always leftovers. If I do some actual cooking for lunch, I will put it in the plan. If not, just assume it's something unexciting.
For drinks, we always have raw milk on hand. We also drink Berkey filtered water, kombucha, or homemade soda from our ginger bug. I would love to start messing with water kefir soon.
Finally, I try to make one dessert-ish item that we nibble on all week for snacks and desserts. This week I made maple marshmallows from scratch, which we are also using as part of our Christmas gift baskets. I will post a recipe this week! Super easy and very satisfying.
Sunday
--lunch: I made a meatloaf, braised kale, mashed turnips, and sourdough rolls
--supper: Family Dinner! It was our week to bring appetizer, so I did a caramelized onion dip. I'll do a recipe on this soon, too. Easy and delicious. Served with kohlrabi sticks and kettle chips.
Monday
--lunch: leftover kale pizza, home-canned cranberry sauce, kombucha
--supper: black bean soup (minus chicken) with cheese quesadillas (raw cheese, homemade tortillas), home-canned salsa, sour cream, avocado, etc
Tuesday
--lunch: Living Word Sunday school class Christmas party luncheon! Can't wait. One of the great perks of my job is getting invited to about 134890235 Christmas parties with awesome food.
--supper: Korean beef with cabbage, steamed rice, homemade extra-spicy kimchi
Wednesday
--lunch: out with some lady friends at PF Chang's! Lettuce wraps here I come.
--supper: salmon fillets with ginger butter, honey-glazed carrots, sauteed kale, sourdough dinner rolls
Thursday
--lunch: leftover meatloaf, turnips, sourdough roll, kombucha
--supper: pork chops!! With home-canned pear sauce, sauteed cabbage, roasted potatoes, and sourdough rolls
Friday
--lunch: egg salad, sourdough toast, home-canned cranberry sauce, kombucha
--supper: acorn squash pizza on sourdough crust (sub goat cheese for gorgonzola) with homemade mozzarella cheese, ginger bug sodas
Saturday
--lunch: tomato soup, grilled cheese on sourdough toast, homemade lacto-fermented chili-garlic dill pickles
--supper: roast chicken, mashed potatoes, green beans from the freezer, garlicky kale salad, sourdough dinner rolls
What are you eating? Anything amazing to share?
[This post submitted to Menu Plan Monday 12/15/14, Homestead Barn Hop #188, Fat Tuesday 12/16/14, Real Food Wednesday 12/17/14, and Pennywise Platter 12/18/14.]
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
simple baked apples
Are you starting to feel a little overwhelmed by the holiday indulgences? I love a good pumpkin or pecan pie as much as the next girl, especially when made from scratch from whole ingredients. But sometimes you want something to satisfy the sweet tooth, without all the hullabaloo. This is it!
We did our annual order of a bushel of apples in October, and I have a few lingering in the crisper drawer. Also, our winter CSA has begun, and we got several beautiful, crisp apples in our box. So, for Family Dinner last night, I whipped up some baked apples! My Grandma Joy, who died when I was in sixth grade, used to make these a lot, so it's a happy food memory.
The recipe is adapted from one of my trustiest sources - a Better Homes & Gardens cookbook I received at one of my bridal showers.
Simple Baked Apples
6 baking apples (Granny Smith, Jonathan, Rome - something that will hold its shape. I used Cameos)
1/4 C sucanat or other evaporated cane juice product
1/2 C raisins or other dried fruit (cut into raisin-sized pieces if large)
1/2 t nutmeg
1 t cinnamon
pinch salt
1 C freshly-squeezed orange juice
Oven 350
Core the apples, leaving them intact. Use a paring knife to cut away the ring of skin around the top core. Place the apples in an oven-safe baking dish.
Combine sucanat, raisins, nutmeg, cinnamon, and salt in a bowl. Stuff the mixture into the holes in the apples. Place any excess stuffing mixture into the baking dish with the apples.
Pour the orange juice into the baking dish. Use a spoon to scoop some juice over each apple.
Bake for 45 minutes, or until apples are tender. Baste 2-3 times during baking, using a spoon to scoop juice over each apple.
Serve plain, with whipped cream, or with vanilla ice cream. Make sure to spoon a little of the sweet syrup over the apples and ice cream!
Serves 6
[This post submitted to Fat Tuesday 12/9/14.]
We did our annual order of a bushel of apples in October, and I have a few lingering in the crisper drawer. Also, our winter CSA has begun, and we got several beautiful, crisp apples in our box. So, for Family Dinner last night, I whipped up some baked apples! My Grandma Joy, who died when I was in sixth grade, used to make these a lot, so it's a happy food memory.
The recipe is adapted from one of my trustiest sources - a Better Homes & Gardens cookbook I received at one of my bridal showers.
Simple Baked Apples
6 baking apples (Granny Smith, Jonathan, Rome - something that will hold its shape. I used Cameos)
1/4 C sucanat or other evaporated cane juice product
1/2 C raisins or other dried fruit (cut into raisin-sized pieces if large)
1/2 t nutmeg
1 t cinnamon
pinch salt
1 C freshly-squeezed orange juice
Oven 350
Core the apples, leaving them intact. Use a paring knife to cut away the ring of skin around the top core. Place the apples in an oven-safe baking dish.
Combine sucanat, raisins, nutmeg, cinnamon, and salt in a bowl. Stuff the mixture into the holes in the apples. Place any excess stuffing mixture into the baking dish with the apples.
Pour the orange juice into the baking dish. Use a spoon to scoop some juice over each apple.
Bake for 45 minutes, or until apples are tender. Baste 2-3 times during baking, using a spoon to scoop juice over each apple.
Serve plain, with whipped cream, or with vanilla ice cream. Make sure to spoon a little of the sweet syrup over the apples and ice cream!
Serves 6
[This post submitted to Fat Tuesday 12/9/14.]
Monday, December 8, 2014
menu plan december ii & real food challenge updates
December is in full swing! The Real Food Challenge has also been going strong. There was just one night in the past week when no one had thought about what we were going to have for dinner. Someone brought home some fast food, and I went for it. Bad idea. Within hours, my stomach felt upset. In the morning, I felt like my insides had rusted. Also, my fingers and feet were swollen. I've noticed that I'm very sensitive to holding water on my hands and feet if I'm not eating correctly. It's kind of like my instant inflammation-meter. Throughout this week, as I've been focusing on only putting things in my mouth and my body that will support health, my fingers have been been slim, and my shoes have started to be a little more loose!
So - onward and upward! I've started giving away my homemade Christmas baskets. My sister's family got theirs first, when we were there for Thanksgiving, and the church staff got theirs on Friday at our Staff Christmas Party. I'll do a full post on them soon, but they have been so fun to put together. I've been organizing them around a theme (Afternoon Snack, Chip & Dipper, Easy Entertaining, etc.) and including plenty of homemade and home-canned goodness.
Let's get to this week's eats.
So - onward and upward! I've started giving away my homemade Christmas baskets. My sister's family got theirs first, when we were there for Thanksgiving, and the church staff got theirs on Friday at our Staff Christmas Party. I'll do a full post on them soon, but they have been so fun to put together. I've been organizing them around a theme (Afternoon Snack, Chip & Dipper, Easy Entertaining, etc.) and including plenty of homemade and home-canned goodness.
Let's get to this week's eats.
Some notes: we literally always have one of two things for breakfast if we are at home.
1) -- scrambled eggs from our Mennonite hens
-- homemade sourdough toast/English muffins/biscuits
-- raw butter we have been making from our Mennonite cow cream
-- local raw honey or homemade preserves
-- seasonal fruit from our CSA or something I canned like peaches, pears, or applesauce
2) -- pancakes
-- raw butter
-- real maple syrup
-- seasonal fruit
Vicki usually requests #2. If we have time, I'm happy to oblige. However, for the month of the Real Food Challenge, I'm probably going to stick to eggs. If I do any sourdough baking, though, we will use the excess starter to have sourdough pancakes.
Since it is so monotonous, I'm not going to put breakfast on the menu plan.
Lunches are pretty much always leftovers. If I do some actual cooking for lunch, I will put it in the plan. If not, just assume it's something unexciting.
For drinks, we always have raw milk on hand. We also drink Berkey filtered water, kombucha, or homemade soda from our ginger bug. I made a cranberry soda last week that is amazing.
Finally, I try to make one dessert-ish item that we nibble on all week for snacks and desserts. For this week, I'm making a big batch of baked apples. I used a standard recipe from my BH&G cookbook, but subbed sucanat for the brown sugar. I'll do a recipe for it soon!
Sunday
-- lunch: we had chicken wings! I brought sweet potatoes to make oven fries, and carrot sticks with ranch dressing on the side.
-- supper: Family Dinner. We've had a few weeks off, and I'm excited to be reunited with everyone. I'm bringing baked apples, as shown above.
Monday
-- lunch: egg salad, homemade sourdough bread, cranberry ginger bug soda, home-canned pear sauce
-- supper: Moroccan-style stuffed acorn squash (this has been a huge favorite lately!), kale salad
Tuesday
-- lunch: same as Monday except with tuna salad and homemade sourdough pita
-- supper: hamburger corn pone. I will do a recipe on this soon, but it is a Southern dish that I was unacquainted with before moving to Nashville. Basically think: shepherd's pie, except with chili on the bottom and cornbread on the top. It's ridiculously good. Plus a vinegar slaw on the side.
Wednesday
-- lunch: carrot ginger soup, grilled cheese on homemade sourdough with pepper relish
-- supper: home-fried fish & chips with cod and roast potatoes, roast broccoli
Thursday
-- lunch: same as Monday except with chicken salad (sensing a theme!?)
-- supper: pork carnitas soft tacos with sourdough tortillas, home-canned salsa, sour cream, cheese, avocado, pickled cabbage & onion salad
Friday
-- lunch: same as Monday, maybe with some home-canned cranberry sauce if I finish the jar of pear sauce
-- supper: kale pizza with homemade mozzarella and sourdough crust, roasted sweet potatoes
Saturday
-- lunch: leftovers
-- supper: roast chicken, mashed turnips, sauteed turnip greens, maple-glazed carrots, homemade sourdough rolls
[This post submitted to Menu Plan Monday 12/8/14.]
-- homemade sourdough toast/English muffins/biscuits
-- raw butter we have been making from our Mennonite cow cream
-- local raw honey or homemade preserves
-- seasonal fruit from our CSA or something I canned like peaches, pears, or applesauce
2) -- pancakes
-- raw butter
-- real maple syrup
-- seasonal fruit
Vicki usually requests #2. If we have time, I'm happy to oblige. However, for the month of the Real Food Challenge, I'm probably going to stick to eggs. If I do any sourdough baking, though, we will use the excess starter to have sourdough pancakes.
Since it is so monotonous, I'm not going to put breakfast on the menu plan.
Lunches are pretty much always leftovers. If I do some actual cooking for lunch, I will put it in the plan. If not, just assume it's something unexciting.
For drinks, we always have raw milk on hand. We also drink Berkey filtered water, kombucha, or homemade soda from our ginger bug. I made a cranberry soda last week that is amazing.
Finally, I try to make one dessert-ish item that we nibble on all week for snacks and desserts. For this week, I'm making a big batch of baked apples. I used a standard recipe from my BH&G cookbook, but subbed sucanat for the brown sugar. I'll do a recipe for it soon!
Sunday
-- lunch: we had chicken wings! I brought sweet potatoes to make oven fries, and carrot sticks with ranch dressing on the side.
-- supper: Family Dinner. We've had a few weeks off, and I'm excited to be reunited with everyone. I'm bringing baked apples, as shown above.
Monday
-- lunch: egg salad, homemade sourdough bread, cranberry ginger bug soda, home-canned pear sauce
-- supper: Moroccan-style stuffed acorn squash (this has been a huge favorite lately!), kale salad
Tuesday
-- lunch: same as Monday except with tuna salad and homemade sourdough pita
-- supper: hamburger corn pone. I will do a recipe on this soon, but it is a Southern dish that I was unacquainted with before moving to Nashville. Basically think: shepherd's pie, except with chili on the bottom and cornbread on the top. It's ridiculously good. Plus a vinegar slaw on the side.
Wednesday
-- lunch: carrot ginger soup, grilled cheese on homemade sourdough with pepper relish
-- supper: home-fried fish & chips with cod and roast potatoes, roast broccoli
Thursday
-- lunch: same as Monday except with chicken salad (sensing a theme!?)
-- supper: pork carnitas soft tacos with sourdough tortillas, home-canned salsa, sour cream, cheese, avocado, pickled cabbage & onion salad
Friday
-- lunch: same as Monday, maybe with some home-canned cranberry sauce if I finish the jar of pear sauce
-- supper: kale pizza with homemade mozzarella and sourdough crust, roasted sweet potatoes
Saturday
-- lunch: leftovers
-- supper: roast chicken, mashed turnips, sauteed turnip greens, maple-glazed carrots, homemade sourdough rolls
[This post submitted to Menu Plan Monday 12/8/14.]
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
vicki jo: 3 years and 8 months
Today, Vicki adds another month to her life. Baby girl is not such a baby anymore. As we think through our school decisions for the year(s) to come, I'm reminded that she is growing every day. Here's what the last month held:
Getting a ridiculously bad bang trim. Uhhh . . . sorry kid, hairstyling ain't Mom's forte!
Going on a field trip to TPAC with her Encore class to see a play, then having lunch downtown with me. I'm so happy that she loves urban centers as much as I do . . . (hey Vicki, remember you're a legacy to Columbia!)
Dancing her face off at Julianne and Parth's wedding, until someone stepped on her foot and it was all over. She also got to see her old friend Remy, which was amazing. They remembered each other like it was yesterday.
Getting too grown to ride in the stroller anymore. Until she gets tired.
Verrrry occasionally taking a nap at the same time as her brother. Like blue-moon frequency.
Getting some super-sweet new kicks from her cousin Sloane.
Also spending Thanksgiving with her Aunt Nelle, Uncle Matt, and cousins Sloane and Elliott. I always wish my sister and I lived closer together so our kids could hang out all the time.
Being my super-helper with Bubba on our 8-hour drive home from the wedding. (Thank God for good weather and rest areas with playgrounds!)
Enjoying the climbing wall at Izzy and Jamie's house, down the road from Memaw's.
Isn't she lovely!?
Monday, December 1, 2014
menu plan december i & real food challenge!!
I'm back!! Thanksgiving and the wedding were awesome. I will do a full recap this week, but here is a sneak peak of the kids at our lunch break on the way to my sister's house. I got wise and packed a cooler full of awesome, nourishing foods. The weather was merciful and we were able to get out at a rest stop, run and play and stretch our legs, and enjoy some raw cheese, homemade sourdough bread, raw milk, kombucha, satsumas, and veggie beef soup. Way more satisfying than fast food. And probably even faster. :)
I think I caught Todd mid-chew. He's usually much cuter than this. |
Before I get into our meal plan for the week, I want to announce my challenge, and invite others to join in! I strive for a diet free of processed foods. A diet that is supportive of health and also responsible to our environment and local farmers. But we all know that life gets in the way. I am not in control of every bite that goes into the mouth of my family. And, to be honest, if I were - I would get a little crazy, I think. I have that perfectionistic streak.
However, I am in control of everything that I eat. By that I mean that no one is holding a gun to my head and making me eat chips or popsicles or candy or whatever. And for this month, I want to be extra-mindful of what goes into my mouth. I have two main areas that cause me to struggle in this:
1) I work full-time and often have to scramble to find something to eat for lunch.
2) We eat most evenings with my amazing grandmother-in-law. She is always open to me cooking, but getting all the ingredients there and prepped and ready after a long day can be challenging.
So, for the month of December, I'm doing a Real Food Challenge! Every bite that goes into my mouth this month will be carefully considered. You can read about what I believe constitutes real food here. I would love to lose some weight and also feel healthier this month. Does anyone want to join me!? I know this is a hard month to do this kind of challenge, but it just felt like the right time. Comment below if you'd like to join in for accountability. :)
Now, on to the food!
Some notes: we literally always have one of two things for breakfast if we are at home.
1) -- scrambled eggs from our Mennonite hens
-- homemade sourdough toast/English muffins/biscuits
-- raw butter we have been making from our Mennonite cow cream
-- local raw honey or homemade preserves
-- seasonal fruit from our CSA or something I canned like peaches, pears, or applesauce
2) -- pancakes
-- raw butter
-- real maple syrup
-- seasonal fruit
Vicki usually requests #2. If we have time, I'm happy to oblige. However, for the month of the Real Food Challenge, I'm probably going to stick to eggs. Unless I make pancakes from sourdough starter. (Sidenote: I really need to update you on my sourdough journey! It has changed a lot since that last link.)
Since it is so monotonous, I'm not going to put breakfast on the menu plan.
Lunches are pretty much always leftovers. If I do some actual cooking for lunch, I will put it in the plan. If not, just assume it's something unexciting.
For drinks, we always have raw milk on hand. We also drink Berkey filtered water, kombucha, or homemade soda from our ginger bug. Lately I've been drinking the buttermilk left after butter-making - yum!
Finally, I try to make one dessert-ish item that we nibble on all week for snacks and desserts. For this week, I will make a brown rice pudding from some soaked rice.
Sunday
-- lunch: we were on the road! We had leftover Thanksgiving ham, raw cheese, sourdough bread, raw milk, satsumas, homemade cranberry sauce, and some leftover pumpkin-sorghum pie.
-- supper: we had just arrived home and ate some leftover BBQ pork, potato salad, white beans with pepper relish, potato chips, and God knows what else.
Monday
-- supper: ham & white beans, soaked cornbread, pepper relish
Tuesday
-- supper: beef soft tacos with homemade taco seasoning, whole wheat sourdough tortillas, sour cream, raw cheese, pickled cabbage salad (going to adapt Deb's recipe a little), avocado, chopped tomato (can you believe I still have a few little green tomatoes that ripened on the counter!?)
Wednesday
-- supper: shrimp in Thai red curry peanut sauce (recipe coming soon!), Asian green beans, soaked brown rice
Thursday
-- supper: pork chops and cabbage braised in apple cider, mashed sweet potatoes, pear sauce
Friday
-- supper: ham & pineapple pizza on sourdough crust with homemade mozzarella, marinated tomato salad
Saturday
-- supper: roast chicken, roasted spiced cauliflower and oven fries, leftover pickled cabbage salad
What are you going to eat!?
[This post submitted to Menu Plan Monday 12/1/14, the Homestead Barn Hop 12/1/14, and Fat Tuesday 12/2/14.]
-- homemade sourdough toast/English muffins/biscuits
-- raw butter we have been making from our Mennonite cow cream
-- local raw honey or homemade preserves
-- seasonal fruit from our CSA or something I canned like peaches, pears, or applesauce
2) -- pancakes
-- raw butter
-- real maple syrup
-- seasonal fruit
Vicki usually requests #2. If we have time, I'm happy to oblige. However, for the month of the Real Food Challenge, I'm probably going to stick to eggs. Unless I make pancakes from sourdough starter. (Sidenote: I really need to update you on my sourdough journey! It has changed a lot since that last link.)
Since it is so monotonous, I'm not going to put breakfast on the menu plan.
Lunches are pretty much always leftovers. If I do some actual cooking for lunch, I will put it in the plan. If not, just assume it's something unexciting.
For drinks, we always have raw milk on hand. We also drink Berkey filtered water, kombucha, or homemade soda from our ginger bug. Lately I've been drinking the buttermilk left after butter-making - yum!
Finally, I try to make one dessert-ish item that we nibble on all week for snacks and desserts. For this week, I will make a brown rice pudding from some soaked rice.
Sunday
-- lunch: we were on the road! We had leftover Thanksgiving ham, raw cheese, sourdough bread, raw milk, satsumas, homemade cranberry sauce, and some leftover pumpkin-sorghum pie.
-- supper: we had just arrived home and ate some leftover BBQ pork, potato salad, white beans with pepper relish, potato chips, and God knows what else.
Monday
-- supper: ham & white beans, soaked cornbread, pepper relish
Tuesday
-- supper: beef soft tacos with homemade taco seasoning, whole wheat sourdough tortillas, sour cream, raw cheese, pickled cabbage salad (going to adapt Deb's recipe a little), avocado, chopped tomato (can you believe I still have a few little green tomatoes that ripened on the counter!?)
Wednesday
-- supper: shrimp in Thai red curry peanut sauce (recipe coming soon!), Asian green beans, soaked brown rice
Thursday
-- supper: pork chops and cabbage braised in apple cider, mashed sweet potatoes, pear sauce
Friday
-- supper: ham & pineapple pizza on sourdough crust with homemade mozzarella, marinated tomato salad
Saturday
-- supper: roast chicken, roasted spiced cauliflower and oven fries, leftover pickled cabbage salad
What are you going to eat!?
[This post submitted to Menu Plan Monday 12/1/14, the Homestead Barn Hop 12/1/14, and Fat Tuesday 12/2/14.]
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