Wednesday, October 17, 2012

We Have House Guests

We have new house guests. Fairy house guests to be clear. At least we think we have fairy house guests, We aren't sure they have moved in just yet. But we did find a fairy door and both girls are convinced that a fairy has moved in. Which, of course, was the whole idea.

Here's the scoop. We bought a door from our local hobby store (the lobby kind) and painted it white. We then glued door trimming around it and glued door furnishings on (also bought at the hobby store). We then used double side tape (of the 20 lb variety) to hold it in place. This is what it looked like in the end:


We then waited until the girls saw it and asked us about it. It took all of 24 hours for them to see it. And let me tell you, they LOVE the idea of a fairy living in our house. We told them that they couldn't pull on the door because fairies sleep during the day and don't like to be disturbed. If we bug them, they might get angry and move out.

Here is D waiting for the fairy.

 And waiting...

 And waiting.

I finally convinced her that it was time for bed, but she is determined to see the fairy. =D


The plan now is to begin decorating the fairy door for holidays and provide convincing evidence that fairies have moved in.

I can't wait!!! Don't worry I'll keep posting with updates.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

When Mother Nature Gives You Fall... Make soup

Ah soup. It is the purpose of fall. OK. Maybe not THE purpose. But it certainly is one of the better parts of Fall and Winter to me. And after 7 years in Phoenix where "Winter" is a relative term, I am thrilled to be able  to make soup and not have Sweet and Charming complain that the house is too hot.

During one of my many stints in food service I learned about soups. Glorious soups that intrigued the palate and satisfied the soul. One of my favorites is a Green Chilli Cheese Soup. It has potatoes at its heart and begs to be dipped with crusty breads. For those of you that are in a soup mood, here you go:


Green Chili Cheese Soup

2 Tbs olive oil
2 stalks celery
1 medium onion chopped
2 cloves garlic
2 medium potatoes peeled and chopped
1 cup of montery jack cheese, shredded
3 oz cream cheese
4 cups of chicken stock, or veggie stock
4 ounces fire roasted green chilies (mild)

In a large soup pot, saute the onion and celery over medium heat util the onions are soft, about 5 mins. Add the garlic and saute until fragrant about 45 seconds. Add stock and potatoes and boil until potatoes are tender (15- 20 mins depending on how small they are).   Ad cheese and stir until it's melted. ad chilies and blend until smooth. Serve garnished with cilantro. Or if you are like my husband and the Munchkins, with bacon. :)



Monday, October 15, 2012

Cookies!!!



My family loves cookies. But cookies from a bag or a box are not desirable to any of the other people that share my house (except Oreos. Oreos are always welcome... but not the birthday cake ones. Those are gross). What that means for me is that I have to make cookies. A lot. Now I do not have the time nor the energy to make a batch of cookies when the cookie fancy strikes Sweet and Charming or the Munchkins. So I make a bunch and freeze the unbaked dough in gallon bags. This way if someone wants a cookie or two all that has to be done is grab a few frozen cookie balls and throw them in the oven! I can be free of the kitchen in no time.

Not every cookie takes well to this approach. But here are a few of my favorites that I keep "in stock"-

Chewy Crinkle Molasses - makes about 18 cookies using my #30 disher
This is my #2 most requested cookie. (#1 is snicker-doodles,  but those are a family recipe that I am not ready to give to the internet)


1/2 cup butter softened
1/4 cup molasses
1 cup sugar
1 egg
1/4 tsp salt
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp allspice
1 tsp powdered ginger
2 cups white flour
1/4-1/2 cup of raw demerara sugar (or large baker's sugar)


Cream the butter, sugar, and molasses on high. Add egg and mix well. Mix the spices, salt, baking soda, and flour in a separate bowl. Add the butter mixture and beat until incorporated.

Put remaining sugar on a plate and keep close at hand. Scoop dough and roll into balls with your hands. Then roll the ball in the sugar.

To bake: 350 degrees for 13-15 mins. Rotate them 3/4 of the way through for even baking. These cookies should be firm on the edges but soft in the middle. They firm up when they cool, so if they are firm when you get them out, they will be HARD when they cool.

To freeze: Put balls in a mini muffin tin (this makes sure they retain their shape and don't smoosh each other  It also keeps them from rolling about while in your freezer. I can't tell you how many times I've had a cookie dough rainfall when I put cookie sheets in there.... Place tin in the freezer until the dough is hard (about 10 mins). Then transfer to a bag and freeze. They will last a few months in the freezer. The longest we've done is about 3 months and they were still great! Follow baking instructions above adding a minute of baking time due to the freezing.


Heavenly Chocolate Chip- makes about 2 dozen with a #30 disher

1 cup butter
1 cup packed light brown sugar
1/2 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups flour

1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt

1 Tbs instant coffee granules
2 cups chocolate chips (dark chocolate is the best for this recipe, but semi sweet is fine)

Cream the butter and sugars on high. Add egg one at a time and mix well. Add vanilla. Mix salt, baking soda, coffee, and flour in a separate bowl. Add the butter mixture and beat until incorporated. Fold in the chips.


To bake: Put dough balls in the fridge for 10-15 mins. This will help them stay gooey and soft after baking. Then put them in a 350 degree oven for 13-15 mins. Rotate them 3/4 of the way through for even baking.

To freeze: Put balls in a mini muffin tin. Place tin in the freezer until the dough is hard (about 10 mins). Then transfer to a bag and freeze. Follow baking instructions above adding a minute of baking time due to the freezing.



Dark Chocolate Peppermint Cookies-  makes about 2 dozen with a #30 disher


1 cup butter
1 cup packed light brown sugar
1/2 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
3 tsp peppermint extract
2 cups all-purpose flour
2/3 cups cocoa powder
3/4 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
2 cups dark chocolate chocolate chips

Cream the butter and sugars on high. Add egg one at a time and mix well. Add peppermint. Mix salt, baking soda, cocoa, and flour in a separate bowl. Add the butter mixture and beat until incorporated. Fold in the chips.


To bake: Put dough balls in the fridge for 10-15 mins. This will help them stay gooey and soft after baking. Then put them in a 350 degree oven for 13-15 mins. Rotate them 3/4 of the way through for even baking.

To freeze: Put balls in a mini muffin tin. Place tin in the freezer until the dough is hard (about 10 mins). Then transfer to a bag and freeze. Follow baking instructions above adding a minute of baking time due to the freezing.



Hope you enjoy them!

Sunday, October 14, 2012

How You Know It's Loved

Many years ago I bought a cookbook. At the time I bought it because it was cheap (on discount at Borders) and it had pretty pictures. Little did I know that this random purchase would become one of my all time favorite cookbooks. It's Good Housekeeping Baking- More than 600 recipes for homemade treats (1999).

Well today, my cookbook died. It has been long in the tooth for sometime. The pages are worn and some stuck together from spilled extracts or remnants of frosting that jumps from the bowl as it gets mixed. But today it fell from its home on top of the fridge and shattered. I know. I know. It's a book. How can it
shatter? But it did. It hit the ground and nearly every page went splashing out all over the kitchen. So sad. See?


Luckily all the pages are still there and readable. But still, I am sad. My very sweet husband looked up the book to see if he could get me another copy (What a sweet guy! I am so lucky.). I told him no. There is something about this one, this copy. This book that I bought over a decade ago when my cooking skills were in their infancy. Something about my 19 year old self thumbing through this book and thinking of all the dinner parties I would have someday and treats I would make for my future husband and children.

I do not remember the exact day I bought this book, but I do remember wanting to fill my house with the kind of yummy food that invites sense memories and begs to become tradition. Somehow I thought that filling my kitchen with cookbooks could do that for me. What can I say? I was young.

Funny enough, I rarely use cookbooks now. Recipes at all for that matter. When I do they are more like guidelines or suggestions. I have gotten rid of most of my cookbooks as a result. But not this one. Many of the recipes in this cookbook (and a few rare other recipes) have been so good that there is no need to change them. In fact changing them at all would be a terrible injustice.

Maybe one day I'll want to get another copy. But not today. Today I will go through this old book page by page and tape it back together. Remember the times I've made the treats contained in its pages and look forward to the next time I bring it out with my Kitchen-aid.

For those of you that are curious enough to find this book here's a link to Amazon's page for the book.


For those of you that just want a really good recipe, here's the Fresh Berry Tart  from page 248 (Yes this post was originally about brownies, but apparently I posted about that recipe already. You can find it HERE.) But don't worry, this Cream Tart is faint-in-your-chair good. I have never had anyone eat just one piece. Ever. Try it and you will know what Heaven in a pastry crust is like.

Please note: This is not a make in advance dessert. After more than 3 hours the cream seeps and the sugar absorbs into the berries. It still tastes AMAZING, but leaves something to be desired for looks.



For the crust:

1 1/2 cups of all-purpose flour
1/4 cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
10 TBS COLD butter cut up (no margarine! Only real. life. butter.)
1 large egg yolk
1/4 cup cold water

Mix together the flour, sugar, and salt in the bowl or a food processor. Add butter and pulse until the butter is cut in and resembles coarse crumbs (you can also do this with knives or a pastry blender, but using a food processor is so much easier. Don;t use a blender though. It doesn't work. Trust me. I know.) Beat yolk and water together and add to butter/flour mixture. Pulse again until the dough just forms a ball. Shape into a disk, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate at least an hour or overnight. (Now you can cheat a little here and put it in the freezer for 15-20 mins if you are in a rush. But if you do so, make sure your dish is pretty thin. This is not ideal, but life happens! The idea is that the dough needs to get cold so it doesn't get greasy.)

Once out of the fridge, let it sit on the counter for about 5 mins and then roll into a 14" circle on a floured surface turning often to prevent sticking. If the dough becomes too soft, put it back in the fridge to firm up. Place in a tart pan with a removable bottom and form to edges. A really easy way o do this is to run the rolling pin over the top of the tart pan. It will cut the dough right along the scalloped edges! So easy. Ifyour dough cracks, press it back together gently. Refrigerate or freeze for 15 mins. Then prick all over the bottom. Line the tart shell with foil, fill with dry beans or pie weights and bake for 20 mins at 375. Then remove weights and foil and bake additional 7-10 mins or until golden brown. Remove from oven and let cool.

For the creme filling:

3 large egg yolks
1/3 cup granulated sugar
2 TBS cornstarch
1 cup milk
2 TBS butter
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 cup heavy cream
2 cups each of blueberries, strawberries, and raspberries. ( I have also used: peaches, nectarines, and blackberries.
powdered sugar for dusting

Make sure tart crust is baked and cooled. In a small bowl, beat the egg yolks and granulated sugar with a wire whisk until blended. Stir in cornstarch and mix until smooth. in a 2 qt saucepan heat milk over medium heat until simmering. While constantly beating with a wire whisk pour about 1/2 the milk into the egg yolk mixture. Then pour the egg-yolk mixture back into the pan and whisk constantly until it has thickened and boiled. Reduce heat and cook while stirring for 1 minute. Remove from heat and stir in butter and vanilla. Transfer to a bowl and place a piece of plastic wrap directly in the surface of the pastry cream. This will prevent a nasty skin from forming. Refrigerate until cold about 2 hours, at least.

Up to 2 hours before serving, beat heavy cream until stiff. Whisk pastry cream until smooth and fold in whipped cream. Spoon pastry cream mixture into tart shell and top with berries. Sprinkle with powdered sugar.


:)

For the record, you may want to make 2. One for your guests and one for you to eat while hiding in a closet away from everyone else.

Monday, April 2, 2012

It's Coming To An End...

My time as a Stay At Home Mom that is.  I've been home with my girls since June 10th. And it has been the best and (at times) most harrowing time I've ever had. I've gotten to see them all day, make their lunches, do art projects, sing songs, put them down for their naps. I've also been totally maxed out, touched out, near tears, and totally overwhelmed. But I love it. Every minute of it.

What can I say? I'm totally mixed about this. I know that I am a better mother if I work. Really I am. It's important for me to use my grown up brain and to engage in an intellectual way with other adults.  I've known for a long time that I do better with my girls when I am working. But I just want to stay home. And there's the guilt...

I feel guilty about knowing that I'm better if I work. That I can manage their meltdowns and their personalities easier. I have time to miss them. I have time to do things with out them *literally* climbing all over me. But I want to be with them and I think,  I think if I could fold them up and put them back inside me to take along, I would. I'm not sure how I'd manage my wardrobe or my body image, but I would. 

Maybe I'm getting ahead of myself. I mean I don't have a job offer yet, just interviews. So the end is drawing nearer, but it's not here yet. Soon though. And sooner than I want it to be. 


Sunday, January 1, 2012

The Enemy: Diaper Rash

My littlest miss has a diaper rash. The really terrible kind that makes kids scream every time they pee. It's terrible. I feel so bad for her. 

A long time ago I had a small beauty and health product business. I made all sorts of things. My favorite to this day is the "Intense Moisturizer". I use it on my hands all the time. In the winter my hands get so dry that they crack an the skin across my knuckles breaks. Bah!

The other amazing use for this fabulous little lotion is for diaper rash and eczema. Things that happen around here pretty frequently. 

Important note: Do not use essential oils for babies under the age of 6 months. Just leave it out, no need to substitute. 


 Ingredients
o   ¼ Cup Cocoa Butter
o   ¼ Cup Sweet almond oil (or Grape seed oil)
o   ¼ Cup Olive oil 
o   1 Tbs Beeswax
o   5-6 drops Essential oils 

Melt the cocoa butter, almond oil, olive oil, and beeswax over a double boiler or in the microwave heating in 30 second intervals. Stir well. Add the essential oils and pour into an airtight container. It will harden together as it cools. 

You only need a small amount for great results. It absorbs super fast and isn't greasy. Good stuff!

Saturday, December 31, 2011

The $250 Challenge

Tomorrow is the start of something new for my little family.

Hm. That was a little more punny than I intended.... Bummer.

But really. Tomorrow Hubster and I are embarking on a financial challenge to get our financial heads on straight and get a little more cash in our savings accounts. Here's the scoop:

We are allotted $250 cash for the month of January to spend on all incidentals and non-planned monthly expenses. You read that right. Our family of 4 will spend a mere $250 on diapers, wipes, food, gas, toiletries, eating out, haircuts, and everything else that is not a regularly scheduled monthly bill.

There are a few outside rules:

  • Medical expenses: We have a medical flex account that covers doctor visits, prescriptions, dentists etc. We will use that if there is need. If it is not a flex-eligible expense, it comes out of the $250. 
  • If I get a full time job during the month of January (it could happen), and there are NECESSARY expenses that come with it, those will be excluded from the $250. 
  • Prepaid expenses will not be included. For example, Hubster has a massage on Monday we bought it with a Living Social deal like 4 months ago, so it doesn't count against the $250. The tip does. (o.0)
  • There will be no purchasing items with Christmas money until February. Gift cards are OK as they are under the "Prepaid Items" clause. For the record we don't have any gift cards...
  • All moneys not used for monthly bills will be directly funneled into our lowest credit card balance. After that has been paid off the rest will go directly into savings. 

I'm a little nervous about this. But more than that I'm excited. I'm curious to see what we will miss, but I'm more interested in what we don't miss.

So here we go!