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Author: Mama

Pantry Cooking Series Week 2, Chicken Soup

Pantry Cooking Series Week 2, Chicken Soup

Welcome back to my pantry cooking series!  As I mentioned in week one, cooking from the pantry helps us minimize grocery store runs, and take-out meals, as well as being handy if we just don’t want to leave home.  One thing I find worth mentioning though, […]

Sneaky Beginning Phonics Ideas

Sneaky Beginning Phonics Ideas

My five year old daughter, Araya,  has always been a dream student.  I started teaching her at home early on and she has always thrived on traditional methods.  It’s no surprise that she spits out ten-dollar words and complicated but correct sentence structures almost daily.  […]

Pantry Cooking Week One- Whole Wheat Biscuits

Pantry Cooking Week One- Whole Wheat Biscuits

One of my personal goals has been to learn how to cook from my pantry.  It really helps us to be able to shop less often, which cuts out many impulse purchases. It also helps us eat fewer box and bag type meals.

I thought it’d be fun to share some of the recipes I am able to make from my pantry and long term food storage.  So for the next few weeks I’ll be doing a pantry cooking series.

I thought I’d start with my recipe for Whole Wheat Biscuits.  Breads are a nice way to round out a lighter meal, and biscuits will even double as dessert if you add a little jam, or mashed fruit and whipped cream.

  • 2 C whole wheat Flour
  • 3 tsp baking Powder
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1/2 C shortening – Ive also substitued butter, or shortening powder (add extra liquid)
  • 1 C (generous) warm milk – fresh or reconstitued dry milk work equally well, or substitute warm water

In a medium bowl mix dry ingredients, then cut in shortening to small pea sized chunks. Over working the dough will result in stiff biscuits.  Stir in milk to make a sticky dough and drop by spoonfuls, or spread entire dough into greased pan.  I use my 10 inch cast iron skillet.  Bake uncovered at 400 degrees for around 15 minutes until golden brown.

These biscuits turn out light and fluffy.  If you prefer to roll out and cut biscuits you can add just a tad less milk, and roll out and cut.  I just spread my dough out in the pan and cut it like cake when it’s done.  This recipe will also make nice fluffy dumplings, just drop by spoonfuls into simmering chicken soup and cover for 7-10 minutes.

Yummy with soup, as breakfast, or to round out most any meal.

I think next week we’ll make that chicken soup.

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Facebook Woes

Facebook Woes

So I’ve tried, many times, and without succes, to add a Facebook Like Box to my sidebar.  Thanks to Google, I know it’s a common problem among wordpress users, and when I figure it out I’ll smack my forehead and groan with shame.  Until then, I’ll […]

Friday Already?

Friday Already?

Wow! This week has flown by, and I didn’t get as much finished as I had hoped.  Does that ever happen to you? After the winter storm two weeks ago we had a cold spell, but it has been relatively warm and breezy this week. […]

Denim Child’s Apron

Denim Child’s Apron

My children decided pretty early on that they were too old for bibs.  Lucky for me (and thier shirt fronts) they think aprons are pretty cool.  Is there anything more adorable than a little girl in an apron? Well, perhaps a little girl in an apron and a sun bonnet. 

This adorable apron isn’t my original idea.  I don’t remember where I first saw it, but it’s probably been floating around since jeans started wearing out.  If your sewing supplies are already organized and you have a pair of worn out jeans and some bias tape around you can probably whip one out in about an hour.  I had a hard time finding bias tape I liked, so I used homemade bias tape. 

First cut the leg off of a pair of jeans, and open the outside seam.

Next hold the resulting piece of fabric up to yourchild to determine my length and width.  I didn’t follow any pattern here, just fold it in half and cut it out free form.  After making a couple I’ve decided to err narrow on the bib part to prevent gapping when the kid wears it.  Also, avoiding sharp corners makes it so much easier to attatch the bias tape. 

Attatch bias tape,(I prefer the cheating method) beginning with a short piece for the top hem, followed by a longer piece for the neck ties and apron body trim. 

Finally, cut and finish two pieces of bias tape to use as waist ties and attatch them at the waist of the apron.  If you’d like a fancier apron you can attatch pockets cut from the jeans, or sew your own. 

My girls love to wear these to eat, help mama in the kitchen or garden, and do art projects.  One less stain to treat, one less pair of worn out jeans laying around and mama gets to do a sewing project.  Works for me! 

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Thank You!!

Thank You!!

As a new blogger I’ve been very excited to watch my readership grow and am happy to announce that today I topped 100 page views for the day!  I know in “real” blogger terms this is still small, but to me it’s huge. Thank You to […]

Prepping – Call Me Crazy

Prepping – Call Me Crazy

Well folks here it is. I secretly love the idea of The End Of The World As We Know It. Truth be known I’d probably love the actual scenario a lot less than the idea.  However I’ve spent the last couple years trying to boost […]

Organization

Organization

If ever anyone had an Achilles heel…

This is the time of year when many of us begin looking around wondering where all this stuff came from.  And where should we put it all?  First, let me say organization is just about my biggest challenge.  There are days when I live in fear of the doorbell, because our house looks a bit like, well, THIS:

This is actually looking pretty good for our back hall... is there a shame font?

I have never been well organized in my personal life.  I do, oddly, manage to stay organized at work where I don‘t keep much stuff.  Also there was a period of about six months a few years back when everything had a home and lived in it.  Unfortunately this was the result of a house fire which left us with almost nothing.  Its easy to organize and tidy just a few items.  Which brings me to my point.  I’ve realized that there is no number of neatly labeled storage totes or cute shelves that can tame the beast named Too Much Stuff.  So I’ve started a three part campaign against the accumulation of unused or otherwise annoying items in my home.

First, I’ve set the goal, and stuck with it so far, that one box or bag of items we’re not using gets given away each week.  So far I’ve sent about a third of my clothes, a tiny dent in the toys, and a bunch of kids clothes and shoes to thrift stores or directly to new homes.  The kids clothes are a bit of a sticky subject since I try to run most of them through both kids before I send them away, and I buy for the biggest kid a couple sizes ahead if I find a great deal, so we use a bunch of storage on waiting clothes.  Still, I plan to stick with sending things away until all the clothes and toys can be put away at the same time.  Do any of you always have clothes in the laundry room because there isn’t enough closet space for it all to be clean and put away at the same time?  Are you truly short on closet space, or do you just have too much stuff?  The same idea could apply to kitchen cabinets or basement storage spaces.

Second, I’ve started to get just a little ruthless about which items come into the house.  Let me explain.  My kids currently own, oh, about a million or so toys which they may or may not play with.  I’m not sure.  The toys are certainly making their way out of the toy room and into the rest of the house, I just never actually see a child in possession of any of them.  As a result I’ve decided that the majority of gifts I purchase for my kids and others will be consumable, not toys.  I try to buy things that get used up and don’t add to the clutter.  I love crayons, paper, paint and coloring books for this purpose.  The kids love them, use them up and they can always use more, but since they do get used up there aren’t a ton of them lying around.  As an added bonus these things encourage creativity.  I’ve also adopted this pattern in buying for adults.  For instance, I’ll be getting my husband ammo for his birthday (which he’ll love, and will magically disappear) instead of yet another funny tee shirt. Obviously there will be times when this doesn’t work, but even half time it makes a difference.

Third, I’m trying to eliminate accumulation bottlenecks.  Simply put, if there isn’t a coffee table, there won’t be a stack of mail, drink cups and magazines on the coffee table.  Same goes for that table I thought I’d use to fold laundry in the mud room.  It turned into a place for us to dump whatever we needed to get out of the car in a hurry.  There were coats, backpacks, and basically anything we didn’t want to actually put away.  So one day I dug in, cleared it off and got rid of it.  Right now we’ve got a major bottle neck in our back hall, which I’m slowly whittling down.  It started as a coat rack and baby-changing table.  Now it’s a massive heap of junk, all of which has a home somewhere else in the house, but which we were too lazy, busy or impatient to put away.  This one is also a matter of changing habits, UGH…that’s another post.

Also, while it doesn’t get much out of the house, I’ve started asking my husband and children to spend ten minutes tidying up while I cook dinner. It is amazing how often they fail to realize it’s been more than ten minutes and keep cleaning until I call them to the table.

I’m sure there is plenty more one could do, but this is a start and often a start is just what we need to reach the finish.

What do you do to eliminate clutter and stay organized?  Seriously, I need the input!

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Easy Whole Wheat Artisan Bread

Easy Whole Wheat Artisan Bread

My sister asked me to post this recipe, but I think some of you will like it too.  If you’ve never made bread this one is almost goof proof.  I’m sorry there’s no picture, it’s usually eaten before I think of taking pics. You’ll need a […]