Poets and Saints

…and the moms who try to be both.

Archive for Motherhood

Teddy Bear Tea Party

It was my daughter’s birthday on Saturday and she said she wanted a stuffed animal party.

“You mean a teddy bear party?”  I asked.

“Yes,” she replied.

And that’s how her teddy bear tea party arrived. We couldn’t find a card with anything remotely related to teddy bears or tea parties.  If you’re not interested in Hannah Montana or Dora the Explorer, then good luck. The only birthday party themes are commercial. Because of that, we staged our own picture and then made it into a card. This was the front of the card.

First there was bear bingo with teddy grahams as the bingo pieces.  My daughter played her own version, with her own homemade cards.

Then there was dress-up time with the stuffed animals and tea set.  We did get a little crazy.  And my daughter donned multiple costumes throughout the night.  Whatever the birthday girl wants, right?  All in all, it was  a fun party and I’m proud of my little girl picking a theme that was so girly and fun.

What We’ve Been Up To

DSC03810Playing outside in the Fall sunshine

DSC03915Our impromptu “flag-making” party.  A request from the little one.

DSC03925Finally, starting on the Halloween costume.  We are trying to do a homemade version of Princess Lolly from Candyland.  So that this..DSC03918…can be the model for my little girl’s costume.  Crown done.

DSC03927Now on to the dress.

Otherwise we’re enjoying the beauty of Fall and all the exciting things that come with it.  Hopefully we’ll soon have a baby to announce with our impending adoption.  Less than two weeks to go until the baby arrival and the date the costume needs to be done.  Which will get here first?  We’re wondering that same thing.

Freezer Meals

As the arrival of our newest baby draws near, I have been cooking, sauteing boiling, and baking. I’m trying to store up about three weeks worth of food. So that, for a few weeks at least, I can have a break from cooking and am just able to focus on baby.  It’s not that I mind cooking…I’m actually quite fond of it, but  in my dumbed down state of not sleeping and barely functioning after baby comes, I’d like to keep life as simple as possible.

So my life has been a frenzy of cooking including:

  • setting off the smoke alarm
  • walking around permanently smelling of roast chicken
  • pasta boiling over, not once, but twice
  • tomato soup in the blender splattering across the counter
  • piles of dirty pots and pans
  • my husband’s disappointment that the dish he smells is NOT what we’re having for supper–because it’s all going in the freezer.

I haven’t always been a fan of freezer cooking.  Some casseroles just turn out too dry or lose their freshness.  And let’s face it, who wants to eat casseroles for three weeks straight?  So I’m avoiding casseroles and going for delicious freezer meals that still taste good once you cook them–chief among them: soups, chicken dishes, pizza, and pasta.  I’ve discovered along the way my favorite freezer meals that warm up fabulously.  There are also a few new ones on the list as well.   It feels good to stock up on the winter pantry, knowing that we will reap the benefits later.

Creamy Corn Soup This soup warms up as good as the original.  If you use fresh sweet corn, you will enjoy the taste of summer long into the winter.

Stuffed Chicken We love these flavorful chicken cutlets filled with feta cheese, roasted peppers and olives.

Bean and Rice Burritos This tex-mex meal is a delicious and healthy dish.  No need to stop at your local burrito joint when these are in the freezer.

Vegetable Chowder Another fabulous soup that warms up well on a cold chilly day.

I’ve had a lot of success freezing soups.  Make a double batch of your favorite soup recipe and freeze half.  It’s really no extra work and you get another night off from cooking.  Hint: Avoid freezing cream/milk based soup as the cream tends to separate.  It’s not that you can’t freeze them (I freeze my milk after all), it’s just the appearance is not as appealing.

For even more ideas, check out all these freezer meal ideas.  Enjoy!

Falling Without Fear

The transition from baby to toddler is something of a metamorphosis.  First they are this helpless, squirmy thing, spitting up all over themselves while smiling at the ceiling fan.   Then they become a little person who throws their peas and dances in circles and tells you no when you try to join in.  This dance is all about them.

Young children are particular.  They change their minds.  One day they like fettucine; the next day they won’t touch it.  They are happy, then pleading; they dawdle, then run away from you when it is time to go.  They say amen after the itsy bitsy spider, not realizing amen is saved for prayers.  Perhaps the word amen is not only for the reverent times when our heads our bowed and eyes are closed, but it is for all of life.   Amen to the joyous times. Amen to the showers.  Amen to life.

The tomatoes are ripening and the vines are weighed low with the fruit.  The first one off the vine is a small green one, compliments of my daughter.  She picked it herself.  I’m trying to teach her that it is only the red ones we pick–the rest we leave hanging to ripen in the sun.  They are not ready–not yet–but she is.  She runs in the patio door, her hands full of tomatoes, exuberant in her find.  She hands me an orange one first.  We have made progress.  At least it is not green, or smashed, or half-eaten.  I cut them up and give her a taste.  More? she asks.   That night she eats all of them off her plate.  Amen for homegrown tomatoes.

Afterward, daddy chases her around the room and she comes barreling toward me, falling into my arms for safety.  There is no hesitation when she falls, it is full body forward with no fear.  There is something about that motion that is full of faith.  Not the kind of faith that reconsiders, or hems and haws, or doubts for a moment, but is the fully trusting, never wavering, falling in mid-air kind of faith.  It is the kind I’d like to have, and not just on my good days either, but even on the days when the news is bleak and the worry is bubbling up in me like a chemistry experiment gone awry. I want to fall, not hoping that someone will catch me, but instead, never doubting there was any other option but to be caught.

Amen for falling without fear.  Amen for the faith of a child.

*This blog originally appeared in August 2007.

Pizza Making for Dummies

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We love making pizza in our family. Not only is it delicious, but most other people like it too, so it’s great for company or delivering it to new moms, sick people or even freezing it for later (Sans toppings. More about that later.)

I used to make pizza very sporadically. I wasn’t very good at working with dough or getting the timing right when cooking it which made me feel like a pizza-making dummy. Frustrated that I couldn’t make a pizza like my mom (who is a pizza expert in my book), I started making pizza every Friday night a few years ago. Then when I felt like I had mastered it somewhat (no burned, undercooked, or totally terrible pizzas), I started inviting guests over to share our pizza night every few weeks. It’s now my standby for guests, so I never have to guess what to have when company comes or figure out a special menu. Pizza is great for everyone, unless your dieting and who’d want to do that when they’re invited out to eat?

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HOW TO MAKE IT:

Starting after lunch, I put all my ingredients for the dough in the bread maker. It takes an hour and forty minutes on my machine to knead the dough. I call this the lazy man’s way to make pizza. My husband thinks it’s brilliant. I’ll take his word for it.

As soon as the dough is done, I take it out immediately. In the past when I’ve left it in the bread maker long past the beep, it gets sticky. Sometimes it gets sticky anyway which may have to do with the heat and humidity outside. I’m not sure. All I know is dough is finicky, kind of like kids. If this is the case I just knead more flour into the dough and divide it into four balls, which will later become four pizzas.

Then using some flour on my counter top, I roll the dough out into a circle. This is probably the hardest part and takes a lot of practice. If the dough starts to stick at any point in time, I add more flour. If the dough gets too thin and starts to break, I either re-roll it or add a patch of dough where the hole is to repair it. If the dough is totally falling apart, I just start over. Sometimes that’s the best thing to do. Resist the urge to throw the dough against the wall, which is what you’ll feel like doing.

If you’re using a pizza stone (which I highly recommend), put corn meal over the surface to keep it from sticking. If you’re using plain old pizza pans, use shortening over the surface of the pan. It’s a waste to do all that work if your pizza is going to stick to the pan.

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It’s fun to let your kids make a “baby pizza” too. This is my daughter’s version above. Just give them some dough to smash and let them make it into a small round. Have them add the toppings they like even if they do what my daughter did: put all the toppings on and then add the sauce, right on top of everything. It’s their own creation and they’ll be proud of it.

Sometimes I like to throw and twirl my dough in the air like a real pizza maker. But I do not recommend this. Problem number one: You’ll drop it. Problem number two: You’ll break the dough with your hands. Problem three: You’ll have to start over. I have experience with this. DON’T DO IT–EVEN WHEN YOU’RE FEELING ORNERY.

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THE TOPPINGS: DON’T SKIMP ON THE CHEESE

Once I get the pizza rolled I move it to the pan and add all the necessary ingredients. I do make my own sauce, but store bought is fine too. It just depends on what you like.

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One thing I’ve learned about cheese is essential. Put a full two cups on every pizza. I used to skimp on the cheese and then couldn’t figure out what was wrong with my pizza. Then one day I went to a local pizza joint that makes the best deep dish pizza. I saw someone in the back grating this enormous pile of mozzerella cheese. It was like a cheese mountain–it was so huge. And it suddenly occurred to me that I had been a cheese-whimp. I didn’t want to use a whole 2 cup bag of cheese on one pizza, but I decided to try it. The result was scrumptious, cheesy and wonderful. Forget about calories, fat content and your high cholesterol and just pour the whole bag on it. I’m guessing that all of the major pizza joints put on lots of cheese which makes the pizza extra good. Just think of how much calcium you’ll be getting! My advice: Don’t skimp on the cheese department. It does make a difference.

As far as the rest of the toppings go, it’s really up to you. If you get the dough, sauce and cheese right, you can’t really go wrong on the rest of it. Unless you like anchovies. There is something really wrong about anchovies on pizza.

Then bake for 16-20 minutes in a 400 degree oven, until the cheese starts to brown and the crust turns golden. (Check on it often!) You’ll get the hang of finding out the perfect time in your own oven. Then enjoy some hot delicious pizza compliments of your own hard work. Then give yourself a pat on the back. Or a good massage. Or a bubble bath. Because after all that, you’ll need it.

(P.S. I like to freeze my pizza dough for quicker prep on busier Fridays. I don’t think it’s quite as good as fresh and it doesn’t rise as much, but it’s still a quick alternative. Don’t add toppings until you’re read to bake. Adding toppings before freezing only make the pizza mushier in my opinion and harder to determine when the pizza is done. Use a stone to get a crispier crust too.)

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You know what’s best of all? Pizza is easy to share with others and makes a perfect night with company. Just don’t forget to wipe the cheese off your chin when company comes over.

Chillin’ with Soups

One thing I am thoroughly enjoying this summer is chilled soup.  It’s refreshing and the preparation doesn’t heat up my kitchen.  We have enjoyed several delicious cold soups this summer including chilled tomato, potato leek, red pepper-beet, and curried zucchini. If you have never tried a chilled soup, get ready for a little change!  The consistency and flavors in the soups are different than when the soup is hot.  It is also a wonderful and healthy way to add veggies and get a refreshing meal too!

Our recent favorites:

I am looking for more cold soups to try while harvest season is coming on and can’t wait to experiment with more recipes.  It helps to have a good blender for pureeing and also make sure to leave time to chill the soup (since some of the soups need to be cooked on the stovetop before chilling.)

Enjoy a new soup while the veggies are plentiful!

Tomato Season

Tomato season is one of my favorite times of the year.  As a child I use to eat tomatoes like apples, fresh off the vine and lightly sprinkled with salt.  My daughter is a tomato-eater too, helping me pick tomatoes and dropping them into her sand bucket.

We have enjoyed lots of great tomato recipes this year.   I’m trying one this week called Grilled Tomato Linguine.  Pasta might sound like a hearty winter recipe, but when you use fresh tomatoes or other grilled veggies it turns the dish into a summer treat with a few simple ingredients.

Another great fresh pasta dish is Spaghetti with Tomatoes and Tarragon (or basil, depending on what you have on hand.)  I used a little of both fresh herbs. Mmm.  I’m getting hungry already and it isn’t even lunchtime.

One of our favorite tomato dishes is Tomatoes Stuffed with Grilled Corn Salad. This one is simply amazing.  The combination of fresh sweet corn and tomatoes with a simple vinaigrette over the top is a wonderful summer dish.   Be sure to use large beefsteak tomatoes for the shell and don’t add the bacon until the end or it will get soggy (you can even skip the bacon if you are counting calories). When I am pressed for time, I skip grilling the corn and throw it in a big pot of boiling water.  The only downside to this dish is you can only serve it when it is corn and tomato season–a very short time of the year.  That’s why I enjoy it so much–it’s like Christmas in August for my taste buds.

I will be enjoying lots of great tomato dishes before the season ends and I hope you will be too.  In fact, I think I’ll go have one right now–lightly salted of course.

Goodbye July, Welcome August!

Summer’s beautiful days don’t last long and we’ve been soaking up as much time outdoors as possible.  It’s almost a shame that we pack so much into three months: outdoor concerts and festivals, farmer’s markets, pool and splash park fun, zoo trips, picnics, bike riding….the list goes on.  All this fun means there is very little time to be bored.  Just plenty of time to watch the flaming colors of my flowers, sit in my hammock and enjoy a red ripe tomato fresh off the vine.  Ahh, summer.

DSC03142My little fish standing directly under a spray of water at the splash park.

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This one makes me feel old.  My baby riding a bike!  I don’t care if there are training wheels still on there, I’m going to go in a corner and sob my heart out.

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Loving the farmer’s market booth for children.  Art activity + fresh produce = one great morning.

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Summer brings new life and new nephews to hold.  Welcome to the world baby!  I just want to pinch those cheeks and hold that little tiny bundle of love. My heart is melting…

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That’s me up on that rope.  Just a little hobby of mine in my spare time.   (Okay. I couldn’t do that even if I were on the ground with a crew of spotters helping me.  Apparently my daughter was convinced of the same thing, because she told me that mommy could not do that, but daddy COULD.)  Our city’s first “Buskerfest” celebrated the street performer.  We enjoyed balloon sculpting, moving statues, stilt walkers, jugglers, live music, taiko drumming, hip hop dancing and more.  All for free.

DSC03136Enjoying blueberries from our local picking patch, under an umbrella, in the middle of our sidewalk.  Beautiful summer…please don’t end.

3 New Summer Recipes

You might have thought that I dropped off the face of the earth and fell into the hands of alien tribes.  I did for a month and my last brief post shows all the alien creatures I have been cavorting with over the summer holiday:  wedding aliens, beach aliens, and friendly aliens from a far off land who are not pictured due to their religious beliefs (or the fact that I did not post them in all my post-vacation haste).  In the midst of all my alien travels, I had to visit an alien doctor who announced me quite ill and prescribed me a host of alien medications.  I coughed and hacked and thought that my throat was going to explode with pain and hot lava, but the strange alien pills worked and now I am back on earth feeling better than ever. Except for that strange device implanted in my chest.  But anyhoo…

Traveling always gives me a nice break from cooking, but when I get back to real life and  finally drag myself kicking and screaming to the grocery store,  my cooking instincts kick in like Julia Child.  On one of my little travel jaunts, I splurged and bought myself the latest Everyday Food, which just about makes me drool when I read it.  So of course I had to cook up a storm.  That’s when spoons, bowls, and skillets went whizzing around the room at an alarming rate and I piled up a mound of dishes that looked a little like Mt. Everest. But I have been eating something good, oh yes, I have.

So here are my latest SUMMER RECIPE FINDS that are extra delicious just for you!

1. Grilled Pork Chops with Spice Paste. This recipe made the most delicious pork chops I’ve ever had.  Spicy hot paste is rubbed on the outside of the pork chop and then grilled.  The chops came off the grill tender and delicious. (Be sure to follow instructions about letting the meat rest for 5 minutes after grilling.  It really does make a difference in the cooking process as the meat continues to cook under the foil.)  If you are a bit shy about hot food, then I might pass on this recipe.  But if your palate tends towards the hot, be sure to add this to your menu.  You won’t be disappointed.

2. Soy-Marinated Flank Steak This delicious and simple recipe is full of flavor and yet so easy.  The flank steak is marinated in a soy concoction and then grilled.  Serve it with some grilled veggies dribbled with olive oil and balsamic vinegar and you have a exceptional gourmet meal.

3.  Chicken Tikka Masala The best Indian dish I have ever made and quite possibly one of my top five favorite meals that I have cooked….ever.  If you have never tried tikka masala it is a bit like chicken curry, but has some cream add to the sauce to make it less tangy.  But it still has the pungent Indian spices and that’s what I like about it.  So flavorful and it makes wonderful leftovers too. The key to this recipe is the garam masala spice blend, so if you don’t have it you either need to buy it from the store or borrow it from a friend.  An exceptional Indian dish. Many thanks to Pioneer Woman’s blog for the recipe.

Happy cooking!

The Beach and More

What we’ve been up to lately…

Wedding and flowergirl beauty,

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A bit of Scotland.  The men clad in kilts on a hot day…

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Off to the big lake for ziplining,

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walks on the sand dunes,

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and beach games– including water balloon launches and many attempts to catch it.

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Don’t forget the playground on the beach,

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penny fairs,

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and another trip to a much smaller lake to enjoy the watermelon seed spitting and pond swim.

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We are relaxing and enjoying ourselves.  Books have been read, bathing suits hung up to dry, and lots of summer meals outdoors with fresh garden produce.

Here’s hoping your summer is full of wonderful memories too.

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