Thursday, January 19, 2012

More Stitching envy

My mom and grandmother just got this ready to go out to be finished (backing, etc) so it will be ready for next year. So awesome.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

I can knit SOCKS!!!

Ok, so these are yoga socks, so there are no heels or toes, but still... I can do it!! Double pointed needles are my best buddies. Knitting has now moved to the next level. Are you excited? I'm excited. The world of things I can knit has just exponentially increased.

I'm going to need more sock yarn, wrah ha ha ha!!!

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Yoga Sock, number one.

I still have to make number two, but since it goes on my foot and feels sock-esque, I'm feeling like there is a real chance I can get into this sock-knitting thing. Oh, and little double pointed needles and I, formerly awkward acquaintances, are now good friends. Not best buds yet, but we hang out.

Two gnome friends

Nature gnome and Wizard. Or daytime, nighttime. Or hot and cool. For sweet Luc's third birthday tomorrow. Love!

Friday, January 13, 2012

Little gnome buddy

Nature gnome for a little friend's birthday Monday. He will have a wizard friend before long... I love making gnomes, it's true.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

My Warm, Fuzzy, Go-To Dinner Plan

In our house, we try to eat local. We try to eat whole, real foods. We try to be really back to basics, and enjoy the process of cooking together and sharing our meals. We mostly succeed, at least when it comes to making food ourselves and eating together. We sometimes cheat, and order food or use prepped foods. We sometimes get a little cranky about making dinner, losing the joy of the process. OK, I get cranky about that part.

I do have a go-to meal that stretches across days with variations and healthy options, and it's my favorite thing ever. I love taking a whole chicken, and seeing it through roasting, extra meals of chicken salad or similar, and then hearty, healthy soups from whole ingredients.

I've started loving variations on the soups and chicken salads, changing up the sides with the roast chicken, and playing with the herbs that make the crispy skin delicious.

Here are my tricks, which I encourage everyone to try. Taking good, whole, local ingredients and creating healthy, hearty meals is good for you and everyone who breaks bread with you. Oh, and my sweet husband is in charge of the bread making, so encourage your dinner-mates to bake bread, especially for soup!

Rosemary and (optional) Lemon Roast Chicken

1 whole chicken (2-6 lbs.)
1/2 lemon, cut in quarters (optional)
2 large sprigs rosemary
apx 3 Tbs olive oil
coarse salt (I prefer kosher)
fresh ground pepper
dried thyme

Preheat oven to 350, and set racks low in the oven (second lowest or lowest rung).

Get a whole, good quality chicken (with skin) and remove the innards and neck (in the cavity) and discard. (NB, You can use neck and innards for stock or gravy if you wish.) Wash inside and out, and pat dry with paper towels.

Rub skin with olive oil, coating bird. Place bird, breast up, on a roasting rack set in a roasting pan.

*You can also cut large slices of onion, place them in the bottom of a roasting pan - or any 9x13" pan - and set the bird directly on top. I like the roasting pan because it's easy clean up - also line the pan with aluminum foil to catch the drippings for easy clean up.*

Pull the small arms of the bird back behind the neck, and tuck in. (Like the chicken was lying on its back with it's hands behind its neck - it just tucks the wings down so they don't overcook pointing directly at the heat source)

Place the rosemary and lemons (optional) into the cavity of the bird. Just shove it all inside, whatever fits.

Sprinkle bird with coarse salt, thyme, and ground pepper. You can also add other dried herbs, etc. if you want to add other flavor to the crispy skin.

Cook for about 25 minutes per pound - this means that if you have a 4 pound bird, it's in the oven for about 90 minutes or so. *Use a meat thermometer to check the temp in the thickest part of the thigh, but don't hit the bone. It should roast to a temp of 165 - 170.

Remove from oven and LET IT REST for about 10 minutes BEFORE cutting it open. This will keep in the juices and make less mess, and make for a tastier meal!

Serve the breasts with sides of choice (you can roast veggies, steam veggies, make brown rice, a salad...etc.) I roast potates (fingerling, red, or even sweet) in a jelly-roll pan on the very bottom rack so it all roasts together - just cut up potatoes into little pieces (1-2" pieces), toss in olive oil, salt, pepper, fresh chopped and dried rosemary and any other dried herbs of choice, spread out on an olive-oiled pan and pop in the oven for about 45 min. For a nice brown I throw them on the rack on broil for about two minutes after the chicken comes out of the oven. Savory sweet potatoes are damn good and perfect in winter when they are abundant!

SAVE all the bones, skin, etc., and the leftover meat for additional meals -- see below. You can keep them ior aluminum foil, Pyrex, ziplock, or other storage in the fridge for a couple of days. (you can also freeze for making stock later, should you need a break.)

---

Chicken Soup, with variations

First, and mist importantly, Stock:
leftover bones/carcass from roast chicken
water
rubbed sage
dried thyme
one very large onion (or 2-3 small onions) peeled and quartered
4 carrots, cut into large pieces
4 stalks celery, no leaves, cut into large pieces (discard the white ends)
5 large cloves garlic, peeled and chopped in large pieces or crushed
1-2 bay leaves
sea salt or kosher salt

Fill a very big pot with several cups of water. This will turn into your stock, so make enough for your soup, and any extra you may want (for rice and that sort of thing). I usually use a huge stock pot. Must hold enough to cover the carcass. Be sure you also have a container large enough to receive the strained stock when you are done (two large pots are the best things to use for the process, but you can improvise)

Put water on high heat on stove. Put in a large pinch or two of salt, a large pinch of sage, a large pinch of thyme. bay leaves. Toss in all the veggies.

Pull all the edible meat off the carcass, and set aside (refrigerate). Get our hands dirty doing this, you can get a lot of meat off! This will go into the soup in the end, yum.

Discard skin, or toss into stock. Toss all bones into stock and stir it up.

Bring to rolling boil. Reduce heat to med-low. Cover and allow to simmer for several hours (apx 3 - 4 hours) stirring every once in a while.

Strain into a large pot or other container(s). You can seal and refrigerate stock for about a week, or freeze. Use in rice, soups, etc. I like to make soup right away, so I strain into a big pot. (See below)

Chicken soup (with many options)

Note: Use as much or as little stock as you wish. If you want to cut the fat, you can cool it, and scoop off the congealed fat from the top of the stock since it rises and hardens. If you like very soupy soup, use more stock. Use more if you are adding pasta or white rice. If you are adding brown rice, use A LOT of extra stock.

Standard soup:
Chicken stock
chopped carrots
chopped celery
chopped onions
chopped garlic - four cloves
chopped potatoes (optional)
lentils (option)
rice (option)
pasta (option)
ripped kale, without the middle veins (in small pieces) (optional)
chicken in bite-sized pieces
rubbed sage
thyme
sea salt and pepper to taste
(for funky soup: sweet potatoes, potatoes, fresh dill, tomato paste)

Put a large pot of stock on the stove, at medium-high heat. Chop the veggies, using as many or as few as you need to fit the pot. Generally for a large pot, you will use about three medium carrots, three stalks of celery, one large onion. Put chopped veggies into pot, with herbs and seasonings, cover and bring to boil. Reduce heat to medium, or med-low, and allow to simmer, covered, for about an hour, stirring occasionally.

If adding kale, add first to allow more cooking time. Use about two cups of ripped up kale.

If adding potatoes, add early to allow more cooking time. Cut into bite-sized pieces.

If adding rice, only add about half a cup of dry rice, and be sure to have plenty of extra stock since the rice will soak up lots of liquid. Brown rice will soak up about twice as much liquid. You can add about a cup of pasta since it doesn't grow as much.

Add one or two bay leaves if desired. Add about one tablespoon of rubbed sage and one tablespoon of dried thyme. Either can be left out if desired. Add sea salt to taste (less salty is good to start, add more at the end)

Funky options for soup:

Add oil to large pot, fry up onion, garlic, herbs. Add other veggies, but not potatoes. Add stock and bring to boil. Add several cubed sweet potatoes and/or potatoes, and one tablespoon tomato paste, and simmer at low boil for 20 minutes, until potatoes cooked through. With immersion blender, blend until about half potatoes are creamed, leaving several for texture. Chop up fresh fill and add a small handful about two minutes before end of cooking. Delightfully different soup!

So you have my playbook now. Go forth and conquer a few meals a week!

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Well, here we are in 2012, listening to hateful white men talk about hating gay men and keeping contraception away from people. What a rad start to the new year (I deleted the news apps from my phone. It's better that way, at least during the election cycle, I promise.)

In mama news, Henry is solidly potty trained. It's a hot-damn miracle. Toby, not so much. But to have just one kid pooping himself is so awesome, I can't adequately express the joy it brings.  Henry has also progressed in his ability to play in a group, interact with peers, and socialize generally with many different kids in many different situations. It's Phenomenal. He's phenomenal. He is building wacky Rube Goldberg machines everywhere he can, or at least setting up marble runs and dominoes to be knocked down. He will school you on the periodic table, but he will also come give you snuggles and love you like no other.

Toby is a maniac. He is doing great with his eyes - good pressure, good reflexes - but he has a thing about wearing contacts. He's gotten touchy about it since we switched to the RGP lenses, and his glasses are starting to fall apart. We have to check in about all of that and make sure everything is cool, and find out if strapping him down to get contacts in is a worthwhile endeavor...


Bret has been working hard at getting everything together for our home renovation, and it's awesome. He has done a lot of hard work clearing things out and getting things together, and now we begin the nitty gritty process of whittling down a number so we can sign a contract, and commit to the months of work that are to come.

I've been off again, on again sick. At the moment, I feel OK, but have absolutely no voice. And a nice cough to boot. Crimping my resolution style - no yoga for me while breathing and head down mean extreme discomfort, but thanks. Soooooon. I have managed to organize projects so that one thing gets my attention at a time, and a million projects aren't in progress or sitting in the box ready to pop out, since really only one at a time is a reasonable thing.I will make Bret his cardigan by the end of the year.

I've decided to grow my hair out for Locks of Love, since it's long (accidentally) already and I might as well have a purpose for just being lazy about the mane. Ans a reason not to on the fly go in and get it hacked off.

I'm making plans to run a 5k in July. Making plans to clean the hell out of this house and Waldorf-ize it asap. I'm going to learn more stitching, and get freaky good at that. I am going to make felt and wool toys for my kids, and for the Morning Meadow store. I a, going to create a fantasy gnome village in my playroom for Toby to enjoy, and hope Henry gets on board. I am going to make the underside of the bunk bed into a adorably stitched Solar System, and male the Alphabet for their walls. Eventually, I will get to making Henry the periodic table I promised last year.

I also plan to teach Henry how to play more games - like chess - that his Aspie friends like to play. I think it would be a great tool for him to learn to think strategically in that way, and also a good way for him to experience losing (the other kid is WAY good) and being a good sport.

So for now, we are reassessing. We are rearranging. We are prioritizing.

For me, canning jam and pickles and tomatoes and other things is way at the top of the list. But so is being present for our kids, creating things for them that are special, and engaging them on a level that is impossible when the dreaded TV is on. We are working on it. Working hard. It always feel like I'm a few steps behind my aspirations, which should be an impetus to keep moving, but has become, of late, an easy way to say, whatever. Getting past that whatever, getting into life fully, embracing my inner hippy, and finding the beauty and love that is in this community we are so lucky to have - those are my resolutions.

I also resolve to get back here more - I will revamp the schedule, but I believe that there will be a minimum of three posts a week - a homey/crafty/yummy one, a simple moment captured, and a post reflecting on motherhood, for me , and all that means. This I have to tweak as I am still setting up our family rhythm chart, and my work here has to fit into that rhythm as well. I'll be talking more about that, possibly here, possibly on a new blog chronicling our implementation of KJP Simplicity Parenting into our home and lives - have to decide what I can handle in terms of upkeep. But it will be a journey, nonetheless.

So, Happy New Year. Blessed Epiphany (how does one say that?). Welcome to the slow introduction of 2012, where things in my life and community are awesome, and where I have decided to shun all news of the nonsense playing out in crazy towns across America right now.

Love and peace, V